6:47 minutes
Taking its title from the eponymous mythological creature—famously featured as sea nymphs in Homer’s Odyssey. Sirens exist in literature across many cultures including Ancient Greece and India, described as part bird and part woman, or like a mermaid. They were said to charm men by their song, and, having first lulled them to sleep, tear them to pieces. Those who lived in the sea lured nearby sailors with their enchanting music and singing voices to shipwreck on the rocky coast of their island. Paul Kos’s film Sirens presents four hallucinatory scenes, lush and deceptive environments authored by a mischievous agent. Mocking laughter periodically erupts, disturbing implicit assumptions the viewer may hold about the properties of nature. The landscape is instead revealed to be a construction, a hoax of grand scale orchestrated by a taunting faceless overseer. As each peaceful scene is eventually destabilized, one tries to make sense of why it’s all happening. But as the viewer tallies the reasons the earth may want to take revenge, to see its human inhabitants suffer discomfort and distrust, it becomes somehow easier to embrace the shame of embarrassment inherent to the historical treatment of our environment.
Paul Kos works with everyday materials and video to enact a playful conceptual engagement with life and the world. He responds to simple, humble materials and the indigenous elements of specific sites, which he mines for their physical properties and metaphoric possibilities. Throughout these pieces, Kos’s work uses humor to relate the stuff of life back to larger questions of time and spirituality.
Code switching: How Fotomsuseum Winterthur became digital-first - 1854 Photography Subscribe latest Agenda Bookshelf Projects Industry Insights magazine Explore ANY ANSWERS FINE ART IN THE STUDIO PARENTHOOD ART & ACTIVISM FOR THE RECORD LANDSCAPE PICTURE THIS CREATIVE BRIEF GENDER & SEXUALITY MIXED MEDIA POWER & EMPOWERMENT DOCUMENTARY HOME & BELONGING ON LOCATION PORTRAITURE DECADE OF CHANGE HUMANITY & TECHNOLOGY OPINION THEN & NOW Explore Stories latest agenda bookshelf projects theme in focus industry insights magazine ANY ANSWERS FINE ART IN THE STUDIO PARENTHOOD ART & ACTIVISM FOR THE RECORD LANDSCAPE PICTURE THIS CREATIVE BRIEF GENDER & SEXUALITY MIXED MEDIA POWER & EMPOWERMENT DOCUMENTARY HOME & BELONGING ON LOCATION PORTRAITURE DECADE OF CHANGE HUMANITY & TECHNOLOGY OPINION THEN & NOW With the physical space closed for renovation, Fotomuseum Winterthur’s digital curator reveals how ASMR livestreams and ‘sludge content’ are keeping online momentum high Marco De Mutiis, digital curator at Fotomuseum Winterthur, wants the photography world to “stop whining”...
Political artist, painter, writer, performer, photographer, David Wojnarowicz, who died of AIDS in 1992 in New York City, was one of the leading figures of the New York Downtown artistic scene of the 80s...
In Captain X , Star Trek’s Captain Kirk, played by William Shatner, is limply draped over a large boulder in what looks like a hostile alien environment...
American Express explores the meaning of play | Wallpaper The Miami installation debuting Play by American Express Platinum during Miami Art Week 2023 (Image credit: Courtesy American Express) By Tilly Macalister-Smith published 12 December 2023 In celebration of Design Miami and Art Basel Miami , American Express has commissioned four young artists and designers - Eny Lee Parker, Surin Kim, Serban Ionescu, and Kumkum Fernando - to reinterpret childhood toys into iconic limited edition collectibles...
Bath Time by Sharif Waked is a short video based on the tragi-comic outcome of the Israeli Blockade and the wars in Gaza...
The Royal House of Allure is a name of a safe house on mainland Lagos where members of the queer community in need of boarding, due to various circumstances, live together...
The Possibility of the Half by Minouk Lim is a two-channel video projection that begins with a mirror image of a weeping woman kneeling on the ground...
Frequencies of Tradition, Monthly film screenings at The Roxie Dates: Wednesdays, April 20, May 18, June 15, July 13, 2022, 6:45 pm (doors open 6:15 pm*) Location: Little Roxie Theatre, 3117 16th Street, San Francisco, CA 94103 Fiona Tan, Ascent (2016), 80:00 mins Wednesday, April 20, 2022, 6:45 pm (doors open 6:15 pm) Ascent (2016) reflects on Japan’s Mount Fuji and its great significance to the country and its people...
The film Sometimes It Was Beautiful by Christian Nyampeta poetically addresses the systemic conditions leading and emerging from the 1994 Rwandan genocide, which had lasting and profound effects on Rwanda and neighbouring countries like Congo...
Lynn Hershman Leeson Women Artists in KADIST’s and Videobrasil’s Collections An Online Video Exhibition streaming at videobrasil.online from September 27–November 28, 2021 From early on, the work of Lynn Hershman Leeson (1941, Cleveland, USA) anticipated the impact of technological developments on our lives and has explored how women’s identities are coded and decoded by them...
Indra’s net: Imagining new forms of interconnection , A4 x KADIST Video Library Screening Amapola Prada, Enrique Ramírez, Fiamma Montezemolo, Guan Xiao, Jane Jin Kaisen & Guston Sondin-Kung, Kiran Subbaiah, Moe Satt, Nguyen Trinh Thi, and Randa Maddah In Buddhist philosophy, before the heavenly temple of the god Indra, there is a protective net made up of many beads, called Indra’s net...