workshop

EX VOTO

Ana de Almeida & Valeria Pechena

Friday, 08/05/2026, 5-7 pm
Saturday, 09/05/2026, 5-7 pm
Register at info@philomena.plus by 07/05/2026

Venue: philomena+, Heinestraße 40, 1020 Vienna

Ana de Almeida & Valeria Pechena, Ex Voto, 2025, Photo: Igor Tyshenko.

Ana de Almeida and Valeria Pechena hold a two-parted workshop and invite the participants to create mini-sculptures using clay, silicone, and paraffin.

Inspired by the artists’ collaborative practice of care and making, this workshop invites you to work with the processes of the Ex-Voto — a small wax object made meant to carry, transform and release anxiety, pain, hope, longing. Ana de Almeida and Valeria Pechena translate this tradition into a contemporary sculptural language: paraffin forms that hover between body fragment and abstract shape, each one holding a personal and collective charge.


In this workshop, you are invited to bring your own experiences — of care, displacement, memory, or desire — and to shape them into a small amulet or Ex-Voto of your own. Working with simple materials and guided by the artists’ process, you will explore how an object can hold what is difficult to say, and what it means to ritually make, carry, and perhaps release it.

Attending both days is encouraged, but each day also stands on its own.
All levels of experience are welcome. 

 

The workshop Ex Votois part of the project Mothering Ecologies, supported by Shift Basis Kultur Wien.

artists

ANA DE ALMEIDA

(*1987 in the Czech Republic, lives in Vienna) works at the intersections of memory, family narratives, and macro-political processes. Her projects have been shown at Camera Austria (2024), Belvedere 21 (2023), Kunsthalle Wien (2023), House of Arts Ústí nad Labem (2021), and Tabakalera San Sebastián (2020), among others.

VALERIA PECHENA

(*1987 in Schambyl, in Kasachstan, lives in Traunkirchen) explores questions of embodiment, migration, and collective experience through sculptural and installation-based forms. In collaborations, she develops modes of shared labor that connect individual affects with processes of societal transformation.

Supported by