Exhibition Tour: The Right to Home

Exhibition
All audiences
Talk

A walk through the exhibition The Right to Home: Diaries of Limassol’s Gentrification together with the artists and curator, exchanging insights and reflections on the works and themes of the project.

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In recent years, a combination of geopolitical shifts and state policies has brought a surge of foreign investments, businesses, and residents to Cyprus, with Limassol arguably at the centre of these developments. As a result, the city has undergone unprecedented urban change, triggering rapid gentrification and a prolonged housing and living crisis. While dominant discourse celebrates an exciting new future for Limassol, many long-term residents, particularly members of vulnerable communities and disadvantaged socioeconomic groups, face displacement and financial instability due to skyrocketing rents and living costs. They grapple with the radical transformation of their neighbourhoods, the dismantling of social bonds, and the urgent need to renegotiate identity and belonging. Limassol’s art scene has also been deeply affected, as insufficient state and institutional support has put artists in a precarious position, with many having already left the city or witnessing their communities fragment.

The Right to Home bears witness to the struggles of staying, resisting, and imagining the future in Limassol amid rapid urban development and gentrification. Focusing on voices among the city’s local creative communities and bringing together over twenty artists, academics, activists, journalists, and social practitioners, the programme unfolds around a group exhibition that serves as the stage for screenings, performances, concerts, open discussions, workshops, podcasts, and publications. Hosted at EKA Group’s landmark garage and the Synergeio Performing Arts Centre, the project bridges Limassol’s contemporary cultural scene with its artistic and industrial legacies.

Contributions range from personal testimonies to critical dialogue, addressing issues of precariousness and survival, displacement and belonging, resignation and resilience, and positioning Limassol both as a local case-study and as a node within global conversations on violent urban change. Together, participants trace Limassol’s layered histories, document a present marked by loss yet sustained by community, and attempt to envision more just and sustainable futures in the place they call home but can no longer live in, making The Right to Home a collective diary and living archive of a city, and its people—in transformation.

Curator: Androula Kafa(The Island Club)

Participants: Ria Alexandrou, Eleni Anastassiou, Adonis Archontides, Franc Archive, Aggela Ioannidou, Androula Kafa, Kalaqs, Koullou|Makka (Angela Stavrou, roz), Danae Laou, Mava, MUSHA (Kalaqs, Shuffle, Marinos), Christina Papakyriacou, Marios Pavlou, Nnocxela, Phivos Philitas, Elena Savvidou, Something Messy (Sara Ioannou), ΚαππαΧι.

THE RIGHT TO HOME is presented by The Island Club in the framework of the Art Explora Festival and this year’s edition of Limassol Art Walks.

Eleni Anastassiou

Practical information

Address

EKA Group parking and Synergeio Performing Arts Centre, Eleftherias 91, Limassol 3042

Accessibility

The venue is accessible and includes an accessible toilet

Dates and times

Saturday, November 1, 16:30 - 17:30

Safety

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

EXPERIENCES On board

Immersive exhibition "Présentes

Created with the exceptional collaboration of the Musée du Louvre, this exhibition highlights female figures in Mediterranean civilization, thanks to the digitization and modeling of part of the Louvre's collections. A two-stage experience: an introductory film to provide context, followed by an immersive experience in a 16-meter-long tunnel covered by 120 m2 of LED screens.

Discover the exhibition

A sound journey through the Mediterranean

An immersive sound experience designed by Ircam, inviting the public to explore the richness and diversity of the Mediterranean through headphones equipped with spatialized sound.

Discover sound travel

© Elisa Von Brockdorff

The artists

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Partners

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Frequently asked questions

Is access to the boat free?

Yes, the boat is freely accessible on site. However, you can pre-book your time online on our website.

Is there a specific dress code for visiting the museum boat?

For reasons of safety and preservation of the boat, high heels and stilettos may not be worn on the boat.

How do I get on board the museum boat?

The museum boat is open to all free of charge. To find out on which quay it will be moored, or to pre-book your slot, consult the page dedicated to your town.

Is the museum boat accessible to people with reduced mobility?

Appropriate facilities have been set up on the Festival site for the reception and access of people with reduced mobility. The boat is equipped with a 1m-wide ramp, accessible to people with reduced mobility, but may require the accompaniment of a third party due to its gradient of over 6%. Access to the aft deck and immersive exhibition is possible. However, the upper deck is not accessible. Please inform us in advance of any special accessibility requirements, so that we can make the necessary arrangements.