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"Phantom Sightings"

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Grabador Fantasma (Phantom Recorder)
© » KADIST

Adrían Balseca

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The project Grabador Fantasma (Phantom Recorder) consists of a communally constructed technological device in Sarayaku ancestral territory. Adrian Balseca’s site-specific composition is an “ecología del paisaje sonoro”, an artifact that collects sounds produced by different organisms, amplifying the complex historical plot of the area. From a traditional Sarayaku Peracian Dacryodes Copal wood barge with a solar cell panel system, an electric motor, a gramophone, and a recording system wireless audio, the specific characteristics of the soundscape are registered and transformed.

wombmate!
© » KADIST

Mithu Sen

Installation (Installation)

wombmate! by Mithu Sen is part of a project called AºVOID. In this fragmented mental map, the landscape is fleeting, embossed, and ethereal; there are moments of recognition and also a near-violent sudden emptying of memory.

home, a temporary place
© » KADIST

Mithu Sen

Installation (Installation)

home, a temporary place by Mithu Sen is part of a project called AºVOID. In this fragmented mental map, the landscape is fleeting, embossed, and ethereal; there are moments of recognition and also a near-violent sudden emptying of memory. Bodies are skeletal, nature is in entropy, context is removed.

The Organ of Destiny
© » KADIST

Pratchaya Phinthong

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Pratchaya Phinthong’s work has explored the mineral and karmic economies of Laos, a country that shares language, beliefs, and a long border with his own native region of Isaan (Northeast Thailand). The most bombed nation on earth, Laos still bears the physical and mental scars of the U. S. military’s epic aerial offensive, launched largely from bases in Isaan, during the Second Indochina War. Between 1964 and 1973 the US dropped an estimated 250 million cluster bombs on Laos.

Almohada
© » KADIST

Mateo Lopez

Installation (Installation)

Mateo Lopez uses paper as a medium to conjure personal experiences. The artist creates drawings and trompe l’oeil objects, ranging from apples to clothing hangers to doors. These props are part of a performance; he often sets up his studio in public and uses cues from his own journeys as the inspiration for his work.

Mother's Tongue
© » KADIST

Wingyee Wu, Lap-See Lam

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Chinese restaurants have been a familiar feature of Swedish cities since the late 1970s, embodying the foreign and the exotic. Lap-See-Lam started the project by documenting the interiors of several Chinese restaurants in Stockholm at a time when many of them were about to be taken off the map. Her own family was selling their business in 2015.

Third Realm Venice Series #2
© » KADIST

Jompet Kuswidananto

Installation (Installation)

Third Realm (2011) grew out of the artist’s long-term research of Indonesia’s colonial history and the processes of modernization and urbanization that have taken place there. Kuswidananto describes the nation as perpetually in an “in-between” state of transition. Thus he has developed the concept of a third reality, third space, or third body—an identity specifically for Indonesia that reflects its spatial realities and national character.

Sentimentite (Invasion of Ukraine 38/100, from Chapter 4: Reshaping World Order)
© » KADIST

Agnieszka Kurant

NFT (NFT)

For Sentimentite Agnieszka Kurant collaborated with Justin Lane, CEO and Co-Founder of CulturePulse, to gather global sentiment data that has been harvested from millions of Twitter and Reddit posts related to 100 seismic events in recent history. Kurant’s fictional mineral-currency is at once data visualization, a sly commentary on global markets, and a speculative narrative about the connection between technology and geology (for example ‘conflict minerals’ used in smartphones). Inspired by the way natural forces shape rocks, landscape, and planets over time, Sentimentite ’s evolving forms are shaped by dynamic social and political ruptures in the 21st century.

Sentimentite (COVID-19 Global Lockdowns 53/100, from Chapter 6: The Pandemic)
© » KADIST

Agnieszka Kurant

NFT (NFT)

For Sentimentite Agnieszka Kurant collaborated with Justin Lane, CEO and Co-Founder of CulturePulse, to gather global sentiment data that has been harvested from millions of Twitter and Reddit posts related to 100 seismic events in recent history. Kurant’s fictional mineral-currency is at once data visualization, a sly commentary on global markets, and a speculative narrative about the connection between technology and geology (for example ‘conflict minerals’ used in smartphones). Inspired by the way natural forces shape rocks, landscape, and planets over time, Sentimentite ’s evolving forms are shaped by dynamic social and political ruptures in the 21st century.

Sentimentite (First death caused by self-driving car 84/100, from Chapter 9: Tech Futurism)
© » KADIST

Agnieszka Kurant

NFT (NFT)

For Sentimentite Agnieszka Kurant collaborated with Justin Lane, CEO and Co-Founder of CulturePulse, to gather global sentiment data that has been harvested from millions of Twitter and Reddit posts related to 100 seismic events in recent history. Kurant’s fictional mineral-currency is at once data visualization, a sly commentary on global markets, and a speculative narrative about the connection between technology and geology (for example ‘conflict minerals’ used in smartphones). Inspired by the way natural forces shape rocks, landscape, and planets over time, Sentimentite ’s evolving forms are shaped by dynamic social and political ruptures in the 21st century.

Placebo VIII
© » KADIST

Agnieszka Kurant

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Agnieszka Kurant’s Placebo VIII brings together a series of imaginary pharmaceuticals invented within the fictional narratives of literature and film. Displayed in a custom cabinet, these imaginary drugs are materialized as physical objects, packaged in meticulously designed boxes, listing dosage and description information along with references to the fictional source. Each box is filled with placebo tablets.

Pleasant Sensation Passing Through Flesh - 3
© » KADIST

Yang Zhenzhong

Installation (Installation)

Peasant Sensation Passing Through Flesh – 3 consists of a massage chair fixed to a wall. With its cushions removed to reveal its internal mechanisms, the chair’s programmed rubbing, kneading, patting, and vibrating motions create a strange sight and soundscape. The work explores the relationship between flesh and machine as they come together through technologically simulated social behaviors, challenging normative ideas about human interaction.

VFGY9
© » KADIST

Larry Bell

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Like many of Larry Bell’s works, VFGY9 deals primarily with the viewer’s experience of sight. The blocks resemble a stone carving, or slabs of wood shaped into a simple organic composition whose overall sheen is varied through a thin layer of aluminum vapor. Yet, the real material of Bell’s piece is actually light, formed within the viewer’s eye into masses as present as stone.

Constituent
© » KADIST

Cameron Rowland

Installation (Installation)

Rowland’s minimal installations require a focus not on the objects themselves, but on the conditions of their creation, use, and distribution. Who controls the services that contemporary citizens take for granted—like power, water, heat? Who makes these objects that deliver these services?

Box Stall
© » KADIST

Davida Nemeroff

Photography (Photography)

In one series, she considers issues of spectatorship at the Los Angeles Zoo. Box Stall (2013) shows the back end of a horse, highlighting what is included and excluded from the frame of vision.

Editioned Screenprints
© » KADIST

Rachel Foster

Rachel E. Foster uses printmaking, sculpture, and photography to illuminate the nearly invisible. For her source material she combs the digital world for bits of strange information that seep into our daily reality. These clues, be they coded sequences or simple phrases, become part of her puzzle; by reframing information she makes us reconsider it through a different lens.

Prêt à faire une grosse bêtise
© » KADIST

Alain Séchas

Sculpture (Sculpture)

A cat, standing like a human being, is looking at us with round and dazed eyes and holds a gun. In the background, we notice a range of unwelcoming buildings, closed in with barbwire. A sentence is inscribed inside of one of the clouds, as if it were a speech bubble, and comments ?with hope or disillusion?

How to Improve the World
© » KADIST

Nguyen Trinh Thi

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The essay film How to Improve the World by Nguyen Trinh Thi takes us into an indigenous village of the Jrai people in the Central Highlands of Vietnam, in Gia Lai province. It begins with sound – perhaps a hammer, or a gong – the lack of image making its identification difficult. A landscape emerges of an open field where a farmer tends his grazing cow herd.

Landscape Series no. 1
© » KADIST

Nguyen Trinh Thi

Installation (Installation)

Landscape Series no. 1 presents landscape as a “quiet witness of history.” It began with searches of online archives of Vietnamese news-media, for images of figures in landscapes “pointing, to indicate a past event, the location of something gone, something lost or missing.” The uniformity is striking but the sequence is subtly structured: the typology hints at narrative progression, though of an uninformative narrative, lacking details.

OM Rider
© » KADIST

Takeshi Murata

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Takeshi Murata developed an interest in space inspired by his architect parents. OM Rider features the artist’s characteristic absurdist humor and aesthetics–a mélange of highly attuned lighting and composition (in homage to Ken Price), with retro modeling and minimalist, almost antiseptic spaces.

Infinite Doors
© » KADIST

Takeshi Murata

Film & Video (Film & Video)

If one had been guessing at Takeshi Murata’s criticism of American consumerist culture up until watching Infinite Doors , it would be solidified after hearing the announcer from The Price is Right squawk prizes one after the next. In the two minutes of the film’s runtime, can count the word “new” used twenty-eight times, and “car”—the holy grail of prizes on that show—used eight times. The bodacious women introduce free prizes, the doors slide open repeatedly, and the crowd cheers with an insatiable appetite in a clear signal of an American propensity for numbing overconsumption.

Mémoire promise #3
© » KADIST

Nidhal Chamekh

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Nidhal Chamekh made the first drawings of the ongoing series Mémoire Promise in 2013. In the series, the artist persistently dissects, examines and describes his experiences and memories of his family and life in Tunis, Tunisia. As underlined by poet Arafat Sadallah, the artist draws eyes and gazes of unachieved portraits, hands and arms of a skeleton—figures disappear but they witness and testify.

In View
© » KADIST

Randa Maddah

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Shot from the rooftop of her house in Majdal Shams, through a complex construction of moving mirrors, this video connects both sides of the border which has cut through Syrian Golan heights since the 1967 Six-Day war. Located on the cease-fire line, residents of Majdal Shams are reminded of this tragic separation on a daily basis. During the war the majority of the local population were exiled to Syria.

Mémoire promise #4
© » KADIST

Nidhal Chamekh

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Nidhal Chamekh made the first drawings of the ongoing series Mémoire Promise in 2013. In the series, the artist persistently dissects, examines and describes his experiences and memories of his family and life in Tunis, Tunisia. As underlined by poet Arafat Sadallah, the artist draws eyes and gazes of unachieved portraits, hands and arms of a skeleton—figures disappear but they witness and testify.

Poema
© » KADIST

Lenora de Barros

Photography (Photography)

Lenora de Barros’s poetics are known for setting in motion an intimate relationship between image and the written word. This was precisely one of the questions raised while producing the photographs that compose Poema , one of de Barros’s first and most iconic visual poems. The work consists of a sequence of six black and white photographs where language acts in a performative movement with the typewriter, forging a connection between word and image.

Los Abuelos
© » KADIST

Manuel Solano

Painting (Painting)

Since Manuel Solano became blind, they developed a technique that relies on audio descriptions that allow for an assistant to place pins and threads on a grid that guides the artist’s hands through the surface. In Los Abuelos , the artist works with a canvas the size of their body, allowing intense interaction with the wet paint. This kind of tactility creates a complex entanglement of color masses alternating sharp and blurred details, giving the image an erratic and affective atmosphere just as our fond memories often appear to us.

Limbé
© » KADIST

Mathieu Abonnenc

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The film Limbé by Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc takes its inspiration and its title from a poem by the Guyanese poet Léon-Gontran Damas, one of the co-creator of the negritude movement. This Creole expression, which activates the Limbo dance through language, evokes a great sadness, linked to the death of the artist’s sister. This silent film continues Abonnenc’s collaboration with dancer and choreographer Betty Tchomanga, who played the protagonist in his film Secteur IXB (2015).

BC/AD
© » KADIST

Ian Breakwell

Film & Video (Film & Video)

“BC/AD” (Before Cancer, After Diagnoses) is a video of photographs of the artist’s face dating from early childhood to the month before he died, accompanied by the last diary entries he wrote from April 2004 to July 2005 (entitled “50 Reasons for Getting Out of Bed”), from the period from when he lost his voice, thinking he had laryngitis, through the moment he was diagnosed with lung cancer and the subsequent treatment that was ultimately, ineffective. The diary entries are at once poignant, ironic, laced with gallows of humor, with his continued eye for the little incidents in life, interweaving the past with his experience of the present. The morphing of the portraits—the eyes and sight remaining leveled—is haunting, beginning with very blurry images of childhood and ending with a pin-sharp photograph of Breakwell the month before he died.

Dialect
© » KADIST

Felipe Romero Beltrán

Photography (Photography)

Dialect by Felipe Romero Beltrán is a photographic series that follows a group of immigrants who have recently crossed the strait (the maritime border between Morocco and Spain) to avoid border controls. The young immigrants settle in Seville while their legal situation is either resolved or refused. Reflecting on his own status as a migrant, Beltra?n’s series of photographs documenting Morrocan immigrants is a tribute to their trajectories; a trace of their existences.

Wong Ping’s Fables 1
© » KADIST

Wong Ping

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Artist Wong Ping’s madcap video, Wong Ping’s Fables 1 , might at first appear to resemble a crazy screensaver. Grid-like patterns allude to the work’s deep digital structure, while comic-book imagery illustrates a set of curious moral parables. The video tells the story of three flawed characters named Elephant, Chicken, and Tree.

Agnieszka Kurant

Alexandre da Cunha

Takeshi Murata

Underlining the temporality of nostalgia, memory, and narratives crafted through cinematic pop culture, the American artist Takeshi Murata has constructed a body of animated works that explore the lifespan of moving images and their role in the shaping of shared cultural histories...

Nguyen Trinh Thi

Nguyen Trinh Thi is a moving image pioneer, not only within the landscape of contemporary art in Vietnam, but also broader South East Asia...

Mithu Sen

Mithu Sen’s writing is central to her practice, as a poet from West Bengal, a region of great Indian literary history, poetic and visual tropes giving ground to her challenge of semiotics...

Nidhal Chamekh

Based between his native Tunis and Paris, Nidhal Chamekh’s work is an investigation into history as a point of access to our contemporary times...

Shooshie Sulaiman

Shooshie Sulaiman is one of the leading creative practitioners in Southeast Asia...

Manuel Solano

Manuel Solano, who is non-binary and prefers plural pronouns, was an emerging 26-year-old artist when they lost their sight to an HIV-related infection in 2013...

Karthik Pandian

Los Angeles-born artist Karthik Pandian’s work explores our relationship to historical consciousness and the various ways in which we perceive and perform the past...

Bontaro Dokuyama

Bontaro Dokuyama became an artist after the triple disaster of March 2011 that irrevocably damaged his hometown of Fukushima, “sensing that everything that had been taught to him was a lie.” Previously working as an architect, he then started his artistic practice under a new name in order to underline the beginning of this new life...

Randa Maddah

Randa Maddah, was born 1983 in Majdal Shams, occupied Syrian Golan...

Wingyee Wu, Lap-See Lam

Wingyee Wu is an NYU and Central Saint Martins educated filmmaker, as well as a businesswoman with roots in the Hong Kong diaspora, currently living and working in Stockholm...

Davida Nemeroff

Davida Nemeroff turns her camera toward scenes from everyday life, creating compositions within the frame of her lens that are strong, even introspective...

Enrique Ramirez

Lenora de Barros

Lenora de Barros studied linguistics and started her artistic career in the 1970s...

Mathieu Abonnenc

Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc’s practice engages with the cultural hegemonies that form the basis for the evolution of contemporary society...

Larry Bell

Ian Breakwell

Fang Lu

Fang Lu uses intimacy as a place for self-expression in her videos and draws out mundane moments from everyday life as a strategy to heighten one’s awareness of existence from the rest of the world...

Pratchaya Phinthong

Pratchaya Phintong’s works often arise from the confrontation between different social, economic, or geographical systems...

Gregory Halpern

Gregory Halpern is an acclaimed American photographer whose practice is predicated on wandering...

Rachel Foster

Rachel Foster is concerned with showing the unseen...

Jompet Kuswidananto

Inspired by Indonesia’s complex social history, political identity, ideologies, and culture, as well as his training as a musician, Jompet Kuswidananto makes multimedia installations that often combine video, sound, and mechanized elements...

Mateo Lopez

Jennifer West

Based in Los Angeles, Jennifer West is known for her work with film, not only through creating moving images and photographs, but for her exploration of the materiality of the film itself...

Cameron Rowland

Cameron Rowland bases his practice on re-contextualizing everyday objects in ways to highlight the economic and political forces that influence our immediate surroundings, exposing dynamics that are often overlooked, hiding in plain sight...

Wong Ping

Obscenity and profound issues of contemporary society are not mutually exclusive in Wong Ping’s video works...

Yang Zhenzhong

© » DAZED DIGITAL

about 11 months ago (02/12/2024)

This Björk-narrated fungi documentary is enough to make you trip | Dazed ⬅️ Left Arrow *️⃣ Asterisk ⭐ Star Option Sliders ✉️ Mail Exit Film & TV Feature Directed by Merlin Sheldrake, Fungi: Web of Life features jaw-dropping time-lapse footage in which fungi germinate like majestic, otherworldly creatures 12 February 2024 Text Nick Chen Fungi: Web of Life 8 The British biologist and writer Merlin Sheldrake is to mushrooms what Björk is to music...

© » ARTNEWS

about 11 months ago (02/09/2024)

UK Public Art Database Will Record More Than 5,000 Murals Skip to main content By Karen K...

© » OBSERVER

about 11 months ago (02/02/2024)

Review: “The Realm of Appearances” at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston | Observer An exhibition view of ‘Matthew Wong: The Realm of Appearances’...

© » SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

about 11 months ago (01/28/2024)

A Hong Kong village house with a Balinese vibe brings Scandinavian, Moroccan and Japanese elements together seamlessly – and it all started with a single-line drawing....

Gregory Halpern
© » APERTURE

about 12 months ago (01/17/2024)

The photographer speaks with his brother, the journalist Jake Halpern, about growing up in a city of surreal sights and memorable characters....

© » ASX

about 12 months ago (01/05/2024)

Mårten Lange – Threshold – AMERICAN SUBURB X Skip to content Humans leave traces of their presence almost everywhere they inhabit in the built environment...

© » LITHUB

about 12 months ago (01/04/2024)

How Alien We Seem: On Being Blind and Obsessed with Photography ‹ Literary Hub Craft and Criticism Fiction and Poetry News and Culture Lit Hub Radio Reading Lists Book Marks CrimeReads About Log In Literary Hub Craft and Criticism Literary Criticism Craft and Advice In Conversation On Translation Fiction and Poetry Short Story From the Novel Poem News and Culture History Science Politics Biography Memoir Food Technology Bookstores and Libraries Film and TV Travel Music Art and Photography The Hub Style Design Sports Freeman’s The Virtual Book Channel Lit Hub Radio Behind the Mic Beyond the Page The Cosmic Library The Critic and Her Publics Emergence Magazine Fiction/Non/Fiction First Draft: A Dialogue on Writing Future Fables The History of Literature I’m a Writer But Just the Right Book Keen On The Literary Life with Mitchell Kaplan New Books Network Read Smart Talk Easy Tor Presents: Voyage Into Genre Windham-Campbell Prizes Podcast Write-minded Reading Lists The Best of the Decade Book Marks Best Reviewed Books BookMarks Daily Giveaway CrimeReads True Crime The Daily Thrill CrimeReads Daily Giveaway Log In How Alien We Seem: On Being Blind and Obsessed with Photography M...

© » ARTNET

about 13 months ago (12/12/2023)

There's more to these resort towns than just winter sports...

© » DIANE PERNET

about 13 months ago (12/08/2023)

Confronting Mortality: Sophie Calle’s Personal Exhibition at Musée Picasso – till January 7, 2024 – A Shaded View on Fashion Dear Shaded Viewers, The Musée Picasso in Paris hosts “À toi de faire, ma mignonne,” an exhibition from October 3, 2023, to January 7, 2024, spanning all four floors...

© » FAD MAGAZINE

about 13 months ago (12/02/2023)

The Rolls-Royce to buy for the Art professional in your life...

© » FAD MAGAZINE

about 13 months ago (12/02/2023)

Haining Wang wins Art For Change Prize...

© » TWOCOATSOFPAINT

about 13 months ago (11/28/2023)

Out-of-town Selected Gallery Guide: Dec 2023 – Two Coats of Paint Front Room Gallery: Beth Dary , Notions , 2022, Red Glass head pins on steell hoop with fabric and beeswax, 3.5 inches diameter What’s up outside the city? At Jack Shainman The School in Kinderhook, take some time at the sprawling installation by Meleko Mokgosi, co-director of Graduate Studies in Painting/Printmaking at Yale...

© » SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

about 14 months ago (11/25/2023)

Novelist Tony Parsons on the 70s and Debbie Harry, love at first sight and why Hong Kong is his place | South China Morning Post Novelist Tony Parsons on the 70s and Debbie Harry, love at first sight and why Hong Kong is his place Profile The British writer recalls following punk rockers around in the drug-addled 70s, wild times in Wan Chai, falling in love, and finding his voice as a novelist Kate Whitehead + FOLLOW Published: 6:15am, 26 Nov, 2023 Why you can trust SCMP My dad was a Royal Navy commando and was badly wounded in the invasion of Elba (in Italy during World War II), in Operation Brassard...

© » FLASH ART

about 14 months ago (11/24/2023)

Martin Maeller "lethargic rays" Loggia/UA26 / Vienna | | Flash Art Flash Art uses cookies strictly necessary for the proper functioning of the website, for its legitimate interest to enhance your online experience and to enable or facilitate communication by electronic means...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 15 months ago (10/05/2023)

Since starting with a Léger in 2009, Lisa Fayne Cohen's art collection has taken a turn and now includes works by George Condo and Cecily Brown....

© » LENS CULTURE

about 17 months ago (08/12/2023)

Another America — AI-Generated Photos from the 1940s and 50s - AI-generated images by Phillip Toledano | Interview by Jim Casper | LensCulture Interview Another America — AI-Generated Photos from the 1940s and 50s Phil Toledano has often pushed the boundaries of photography to imagine the future; now he’s tapping into AI to create alternative histories, challenging our belief in any images at all...

© » THE INDEPENDENT

about 22 months ago (03/01/2023)

News & Advice | The Independent News & Advice News & Advice Flight delayed by hedgehog on runway News & Advice What rights do disabled passengers have when it comes to air travel? News & Advice Influencer applauded for refusing to swap seats with family on flight News & Advice BA passenger represents herself in court battle and wins News & Advice Actor dropped from theatre show after ‘indecent act’ on flight News & Advice Fury after Matt Hancock is hired to speak at Qatar travel conference News & Advice I paid £11 to travel 500km: is the ‘Ryanair’ of the railways worth it? News & Advice Matt Hancock criticism heightens as he agrees to speak at travel event News & Advice RMT union joins Aslef in 15 March Tube strike News & Advice Lufthansa ad ‘protecting’ the planet banned over environmental claims News & Advice Heathrow boss says third runway must go ahead to protect economy News & Advice Man breaks record by visiting Disneyland every day for eight years News & Advice Disabled Ryanair passenger forced to drag himself onto coach News & Advice Pilot makes 360-degree turn so passengers can see Northern Lights News & Advice Wizz Air suspends Moldova flights over security fears News & Advice More red tape for travellers to Europe: Get ready for Etias and EES News & Advice Dog gets to sleep in business class lie-flat bed on flight News & Advice Europe’s Etias ‘e-visa’ postponed again to 2024 News & Advice Flight chaos as strikes hit German and Spanish airports News & Advice 250 days since national rail strikes began....

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 34 months ago (03/31/2022)

Spectres of May 13, 1969 | ArtsEquator Skip to content Eddie Wong writes of the various spectres around the riots of May 13 1969 that continue to haunt the Malaysian psyche till today...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 35 months ago (02/13/2022)

re:walk Telok Ayer: Not so secret walks hidden in plain sight | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints February 13, 2022 By Nabilah Said (1,000 words, 5-minute read) There has been no shortage of art walks happening in Singapore...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 43 months ago (06/22/2021)

Podcast 89: Critics Live: Three Sisters at SIFA 2021 | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints The Pond Photography June 22, 2021 Critics Corrie Tan (SG), Elisabeth Vincentelli (US), Jose Solís (US) and Sharaad Kuttan (MY) chat about Three Sisters by Singapore’s Nine Years Theatre and SITI Company from New York, presented at Singapore International Festival of the Arts (SIFA)...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 45 months ago (05/08/2021)

AE x Goethe-Institut Critical Writing Micro-Residency: Meet the Writers (Part 1) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints May 8, 2021 We recently announced our selected resident writers for the inaugural AE x Goethe-Institut Critical Writing Micro-Residency, focusing on the development and promotion of critical writing about arts and culture in Southeast Asia...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 47 months ago (02/25/2021)

Pelesits And Where To Find Them: A conversation with NADA and Teater Ekamatra | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints February 25, 2021 By ila Many of us grew up with ghost stories...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 48 months ago (01/28/2021)

Tender reading: A review of Loss Adjustment by Linda Collins | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles January 28, 2021 By Grace Foo (650 words, 3-minute read) Not many people can endure the traumatic experience of losing a child to suicide, let alone be of sound mind to write about it in a painfully self-aware manner...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 51 months ago (10/30/2020)

10 Things You Didn’t Know About Nanyin | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Joy Ho / Jawn October 30, 2020 10 Things is a series of three short animated videos, each focusing on a lesser known traditional artform – Dikir Barat, Kavadi Attam and Nanyin...

© » HIGH FRUCTOSE

about 62 months ago (12/08/2019)

Miami Art Week and all of its accompanying fairs come to a close on Sunday, including SCOPE Miami Beach , of which we're a media partner...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 67 months ago (06/25/2019)

Transgression, triggers, and the thousand cuts of “Blunt Knife” | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Photo courtesy of the artist June 25, 2019 By Corrie Tan (2,700 words, 13 -minute read) Content Warning: Mentions of a sexual relationship involving a teenager This response contains major spoilers for Blunt Knife by Eng Kai Er and A Doll’s House by Theatre of Europe...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 68 months ago (05/29/2019)

Podcast 59: The Truth About Voguing in Asia | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Vogue in Progress May 29, 2019 Duration: 20 min Podcast host Chloe Chotrani (assisted by Chan Sze-Wei) uncovers the world of vogue culture and voguing in Asia from legendary mother, Koppi Mizrahi, who hails from Tokyo, Singaporean drag queen Vanda Miss Joaquim and Singaporean dancer Amin Alifin...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 75 months ago (11/16/2018)

Budget leaves arts and culture out in the cold (via The Star) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles November 16, 2018 THE fact that arts and culture has the lowest priority in government planning was borne out by Budget 2019...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 77 months ago (09/20/2018)

Reflections on the Sight/Unseen Asian Drama Conference | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Che-Min Hsieh September 20, 2018 By Benedict Leong (1700 words, 10-minute read) The Sight/Unseen Asian Drama Conference was a two-day event on 26 – 27 April 2018 at Goldsmiths, University of London, and Tara Arts ...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 78 months ago (08/08/2018)

"Binary – International Artist Showcase" at M1 Contact 2018: The Colour of the Sun is Black | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Crispian Chan Left: "Vestige" by Astrid Boons; "Black Velvet" by Shamel Pitts August 8, 2018 By Chloe C...

© » KADIST

about 28 months ago (09/10/2022)

© » KADIST

about 32 months ago (05/06/2022)

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