8:13 minutes
Gated Commune , a video by Camel Collective, is a critique of the complex, and often obtuse, language used to describe sustainable development projects. To construct a future scenario in the imagination of the viewers, a voiceover narrates two perspectives of futuristic practices in architecture and social behaviors: neo-primitives on one hand, who value organic materials and design based on geometric forms, and futurists on the other hand, who value organic forms and computer design. In this constructed universe, both perspectives lead to societal structures that malfunction due to issues with their design, which are not in line with their users’ needs. There is a so-called free play only in assigned spaces; there are no places to rest, and no corridors or lobbies where serendipitous encounters can happen. Instead of well-designed order, there is chaos everywhere. Sourcing imagery from various online sources, the artists visually collage still and moving images to construct this narrative. The work makes use of the complex branding language of these sustainable projects to demonstrate how inaccessible design can be, although it’s meant to be super accessible in its function. Gated Commune criticizes the problematic approach of the anthropocene—which centers human experience as the core concern of contemporary life—and invites the viewer to think about emerging technologies of sustainable development, and what their language means and who it really serves.
Camel Collective comprises the artists Carla Herrera-Prats (Mexican, photographer and conceptual artist) and Anthony Graves (American, painter), who began working together in 2005 during a fellowship at the Whitney Independent Program. However, the origins and evolution of the collective has drastically changed over the last decade. First, it was a larger research and discursive group organized to question ideas around labor, affect, and collectivity. At the time, in the context of the Bush administration and the Iraq War, the group was primed with artists, along with a few architects, writers and curators developing their careers in political discourse and cultural opposition. Mapping a unique artistic trajectory, their agenda also interrogated the history of artist collaboration, and sought out projects to support artist’s rights and potential unionization of artists. It wasn’t until 2010 the group condensed to only Herrera-Prats and Graves, who have focused their individual practices under Camel Collective to address the problems of contemporary work and collaboration through performance, video, sculpture, and photography.
Citing Silencing of Arab Voices, Artists Cut Ties With Art Canada Institute Skip to content Rana Nazzal Hamadeh, "Untitled" (2020), color digital photograph, inkjet on vinyl, 60 inches x 120 inches (image courtesy of the artist) A number of artists and curators have said they are cutting ties with Art Canada Institute (ACI) after the arts nonprofit was accused late last month of attempting to suppress the voices of a group of Arab and Muslim artists...
Natalia Jaime-Cortez — Hier j’ai vu une baleine dans la Seine — Espace d’art contemporain Camille Lambert — Exhibition — Slash Paris Login Newsletter Twitter Facebook Natalia Jaime-Cortez — Hier j’ai vu une baleine dans la Seine — Espace d’art contemporain Camille Lambert — Exhibition — Slash Paris English Français Home Events Artists Venues Magazine Videos Back Previous Next Natalia Jaime-Cortez — Hier j’ai vu une baleine dans la Seine Exhibition Drawing, installation, mixed media Hier j’ai vu une baleine dans la Seine 2023 Natalia Jaime-Cortez Natalia Jaime-Cortez Hier j’ai vu une baleine dans la Seine Ends in about 2 months: February 3 → March 30, 2024 Le travail de Natalia Jaime-Cortez se déploie, ou plutôt se déplie, et relève d’un engagement corporel de l’artiste dont les papiers suspendus viennent dessiner des lignes dans l’espace...
Hague Court Cuts Kosovo’s Commander Cali’s Sentence by Four Years - Prishtina Insight Home Kallxo Jeta në Kosovë Drejtësia në Kosovë Gazeta JNK Log In Subscribe News Features Opinion Guide Big Deal Archive Follow @prishtinsight Former Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) Commander Salih Mustafa (R) appears for the first public hearing before the Kosovo Specialist Chambers, in The Hague, The Netherlands, 09 June 2021...
Anne Deguelle — L’Arctique fantôme — L'ahah Moret — Exhibition — Slash Paris Login Newsletter Twitter Facebook Anne Deguelle — L’Arctique fantôme — L'ahah Moret — Exhibition — Slash Paris English Français Home Events Artists Venues Magazine Videos Back Anne Deguelle — L’Arctique fantôme Exhibition Photography Upcoming Anne Deguelle, Glacier, 2014, 40 × 53 cm © Adagp, Paris, 2023 Anne Deguelle L’Arctique fantôme In about 2 months: January 27 → February 17, 2024 vernissage le 27.01.24, 17h → 21h exposition du 27.01 → 17.02.2024 L’ahah #Moret 24-26, rue Moret, 75011 Paris L’ahah est heureuse de présenter cet hiver en L’ahah #Moret une série singulière de photographies dans l’œuvre de l’artiste Anne Deguelle ...
The short film I Can Only Dance to One Song by Arash Fayez features a series of people from the migrant community in Barcelona singing along or dancing to songs of their choosing...
Yoneda’s Japanese House (2010) series of photographs depicts buildings constructed in Taiwan during the period of Japanese occupation, between 1895 and 1945...
TeamLab Borderless, Tokyo interactive digital art museum, makes a comeback with boundary-breaking installations | South China Morning Post Advertisement Advertisement Asia travel + FOLLOW Get more with my NEWS A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you Learn more TeamLab co-founder Toshiyuki Inoko stands inside the “Bubble Universe” installation at the new teamLab Borderless, an interactive digital art museum in Tokyo’s Azabudai Hills development in Japan...
Aesthetica Magazine - Curator Interview: 130 Years of Native Photography Curator Interview: 130 Years of Native Photography In Our Hands: Native Photography, 1890 to Now is a major exhibition at the Minneapolis Institute of Art, spanning 130 years of work by First Nations, Métis, Inuit, and Native American photographers...
The brutal examinations of "Constellation of Violence" | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Hideto Maezawa October 8, 2019 By Patricia Tobin (561 words, 4-minute read) Constellation of Violence consists of a very simple setup: a giant screen on stage, a historian, two artists and a group of individuals...
Like many of Pascal Shirley’s photographs, Oakland Girls aestheticizes a dingy rooftop and a cloudy sky...