2025_12_03_WNF_credit-artist_main

Wednesday Night Fever with Lynn Kelders: Identity in Print, a zine making workshop

Wednesday Night Fever with Lynn Kelders: Identity in Print, a zine making workshop

With: Lynn Kelders

Framework: Eleanor Antin: A Retrospective

Language: LU/FR/DE/EN

Access: Free

.

No experience nor material is required

Booking:

No booking required 

t +352 453785-531


On these very special Wednesday evenings, Mudam invites its visitors to reclaim the museum in fun, convivial and joyful ways and rediscover the building by taking part in our Night Fever activities. Through collaborations with local collectives, Mudam connects with Luxembourg’s communities, inviting them to co-host unique events. Free and open to the public, everyone is invited to join and engage in these communal and interactive gatherings and expand their museum experience!

.

For this edition, Mudam invites the artist Lynn Kelders to host a zine-making workshop. Zines are small, self-made publications that anyone can create. No rules, no gatekeepers. They’ve been used to share underground ideas, document movements, explore personal stories and imagine other worlds.

Who are you in the context of your community? How do identities shape the world? Should we focus on the individual or the collective?

Mix truth and fiction, collage and text, manifesto and doodle: your zine can be a mirror, a mask or a megaphone. Take on a role, create an alter ego, or tell your own story in this activity where we invite you to re-create yourself and to share your creation with whomever you’d like.


Biography:

Lynn Kelders is a genderqueer artist currently based between Berlin and Luxembourg. Their practice is shaped by a queer-feminist and community-oriented approach that moves between illustration, painting, sculpture, stage and costume design. While studying art history in Berlin they became active in the collective Richtung22, as part of which where they founded the queer-feminist working group and started publishing annual zines on shifting feminist topics. For Kelders, zine-making is both a creative practice and a way of building community. A space where voices, stories and identities can be shared, questioned and reimagined.