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DAVID SHONGO CAFÉ KUBA
Ungoing 2025 – 2026

David Shongo Cafe Kuba

DAVID SHONGO
CAFÉ KUBA

Ungoing 2025 – 2026

Café Kuba is a cinematic installation concieved by David Shongo. At its center is a mobile coffee cart, a familiar presence on the streets of Kinshasa, which Shongo has repurposed into a discreet recording tool. In doing so, he transforms an everyday object into a cinematic device of listening and observation, able to move unnoticed through the city and capture its fragile political and social choreography.

The film was shot in Kinshasa just before the anticipated assault on the capital following the M23 rebel group’s capture of Goma in February 2025. Against this backdrop of renewed violence, Shongo documents the emotional landscape of the city, where daily conversations are carried out under the shadow of war. The work resonates with Congo’s long and turbulent history — assassinations, coups, wars, looting — and with the enduring instability that continues to shape the lives of its residents.

In addition to its documentary dimension, Café Kuba incorporates fictional elements inspired by Kinshasa’s popular culture. Shongo introduces the spectral image of the Mercedes 2027 buses, nicknamed “Spirit of Death”, as a symbol of the violence unfolding in the East. Alongside them appear three mystical masked figures holding fragments of electronic waste and car license plates — a poetic trilogy pointing to the true roots of Congo’s war: the global competition over strategic minerals essential for technological progress and ecological transition.

Through this hybrid approach, Café Kuba opens a sensory space where memory, history, and contemporary conflict converge. The cart itself becomes the protagonist of the film, not only recording but also activating the city. Its trajectories produce a drifting archive of urban movement, voices, rhythms, and silences, drawing attention to what usually remains unnoticed or unheard. The work transforms simple acts of observation into an urgent form of political resistance.

As Shongo explains in his artist statement, the project is inseparable from the unstable conditions in which he lives and works: “My personal and professional life is directly and increasingly affected by Congo’s unstable political and social climate. The ongoing conflict in Eastern Congo has created a national atmosphere of insecurity and psychological trauma that resonates throughout the country, including in Kinshasa, where I reside.” In this context, the act of making a film becomes at once an artistic practice and an existential stance.

The Ars Electronica jury underlined this in their statement: “Against the backdrop of war, colonial aftershocks, and economic exploitation, Shongo invents a ‘fugitive cinema’ — a practice of radical listening forged in movement, concealment, and survival. In a moment when visibility is dangerous and silence is imposed, this work dares to listen.”For the jury, Café Kuba is both a poetic and political gesture, mapping Kinshasa as a body marked by trauma and resistance, while also pointing toward the unfinished struggle for justice in Congo and beyond.

Finally, as the Ars Electronica press release notes, Shongo’s project offers viewers not only an immersive cinematic experience but also a vital form of testimony: “The central starting point is Café Kuba — a converted coffee cart from the streets of Kinshasa, which David Shongo has transformed into a mobile recording device to capture the sounds, voices, and social fabric of the city along its route. This immersive approach creates a sensory archive of resistance — one that understands listening as a political practice.”

With Café Kuba, David Shongo contributes a singular voice to contemporary art and cinema, crafting a work of both poetic beauty and political urgency. His practice demonstrates how art, even in times of collapse, can invent new ways of listening, remembering, and resisting.

Café Kuba (2025)
A film By David Shongo

Written & Directed by David Shongo
Produced by Tommy Simoens Gallery & Studio 1960
Executive producers: Tommy Simoens & David Shongo

Production management : Olga Sherazade Pitton
Assistant directors : Kevine Booto & Divin Kayanga
Cinématographie: David Shongo

DOP: Kevin Booto
Costume design: Divin Kayanga
Sound recording: Djoe Wamba
Sound engineering: David Shongo
With: Christian Tamba, Celeo, a.o.

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David Shongo Café Kuba III, 2025 Essaie d’une contre-fiction Digital print on Classic Bariet 47,5 x 36,5 cm Edition 3+2AP

David Shongo’s Café Kuba awarded Main Prize at Ars Electronica 2025 and official selection DOK Leipzig


Tommy Simoens is proud to announce that artist and composer David Shongo has been awarded the Main Prize State of the ART(ist) at Ars Electronica 2025. His new installation Café Kuba will be on view at the Ars Electronica Festival from 3 to 7 September, in the exhibition PANIC yes/no at Postcity, the festival’s central venue in Linz.

The prestigious State of the ART(ist) prize honors artists who face threats to their existence, whether through political repression, war, environmental disaster, or economic precarity. It recognizes practices that persist despite adverse conditions and celebrates voices that bring global urgencies into focus through art. In awarding the prize to Shongo, the jury emphasized the precision, conceptual clarity, and courageous engagement of his project.

At the same time, Shongo is preparing his participation in the Singapore Art Museum (SAM) Residencies, one of Asia’s most comprehensive international residency programs for interdisciplinary artistic and curatorial practices. For this residency, he will extend his ongoing exploration of silence in relation to memory and social inequality, conducting research into the Battle of Singapore in 1942 and its historical connections to the Congo under Belgian colonial rule. Drawing on oral histories and archival materials, Shongo will further develop his cross-cultural inquiry into trauma, resilience, and the politics of remembrance.

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About David Shongo

David Shongo is a composer and contemporary artist from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. His practice focuses on and observes the interaction between sound and image, emphasizing the movements and poetic impact they generate together.

His work questions the impact of colonial fiction on the composition of both individual and collective memory, particularly in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. From this reflection, he deconstructs and reveals complex dynamics, both historical and political/economic, as well as the traumas and cultural dissonances that result. Shongo’s practice spans various mediums, including sound, cinema, digital collage, and visual art, creating immersive experiences that provoke dialogue on historical erasure, collective memory, and the contemporary repercussions of past injustices.

In parallel, he questions the notion of absence not as a void but as a political strategy aimed at silencing history and memory. A significant part of his artistic approach is also influenced by his personal family history, marked by the absence of a father who did not acknowledge him at birth.

Shongo has presented his works in numerous institutions and international festivals. In 2024, he participated in the 4th Bangkok Art Biennale (BAB2024: Nurture Gaia) with the project Suskewiet Visions, created in collaboration with Belgian artist Filip Van Dingenen. In 2023, he presented the project Interviews of Silence at the Venice Music Biennale.

His films have been shown at various international festivals. In 2023, his works were presented at Ars Electronica in Austria, the KIKK Festival in Namur, the Vues d’Afrique Festival in Montreal, and DOK Leipzig. In 2020, one of his films was screened at the Locarno Film Festival.

In addition to his artistic practice, Shongo has been invited as a guest lecturer to address themes of archives and memory. Institutions that have hosted him include the University of Abu Dhabi and the International Congress for the History of Art in Zurich.

Since 2021, Shongo has been the founder and artistic director of the Pianos de Kinshasa Festival. He is also a co-founder of Studio1960, an artistic and research platform that explores the intersections of art, technology, and community. Shongo was also featured on Nils Frahm’s Piano Day, Volume 1 in 2022.