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The Possibility of the Half
© » KADIST

Minouk Lim

Film & Video (Film & Video)

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. As both frames progresses, a montage of large crowds of mourners are depicted in slow motion interwoven with a variety of images including bomb explosions, fireworks, vacant stores, sunsets and sunrises, beachside landscapes, and infrared shots. At midpoint, life in the year 4012 is foreshadowed down to living insects and the video concludes back in the year 2012 as a burning inferno.

Knotty Spell in Windy Drapes
© » KADIST

Haegue Yang

Sculpture (Sculpture)

A steel clothing rack adorned with turbine vents, Moroccan vintage jewelry, pinecones and knitting yarn, these heterogeneous elements are used here to create an exotic yet undefined identity within the work. Following Haegue Yang’s 2010 anthropomorphic series Medicine Men, this sculpture appears as a shamanic objet or being. It is mobile and can be activated.

New Town Ghost
© » KADIST

Minouk Lim

Film & Video (Film & Video)

New Town Ghost (2005) is one of Lim’s trio of large-scale video installations. (The other two are S. O. S—Adoptive Dissensus [2009] and The Weight of Hands [2010].) The series grew out of her interest in capturing lost memories and the collective unconscious in rapidly globalizing cities such as Seoul.

Milkwood Tree, Cape Town
© » KADIST

Uriel Orlow

Photography (Photography)

The series The Memory of Trees is specifically about trees, and what trees have witnessed in South Africa: for example, trees that were used as locations for slave trading, or trees that was during the anti-Apartheid struggle as a kind of identifier for a safe house for activists who were fleeing from security forces. Trees and plants are connected and embedded in history; but not only as witnesses and onlookers; Orlow tries to think about plants as active agents in history. This perspective allows for an oblique view of history especially when it comes to specific loci of violence such as in South Africa.

Office Voodoo
© » KADIST

Haegue Yang

Sculpture (Sculpture)

In addition to Yang’s signature drying rack and light bulbs, Office Voodoo includes various office supplies like CDs, paper clips, headphones, a computer mouse, a stamp, a hole puncher, a mobile phone charger. The installation suggests the personal, physical, psychological, and political dimensions of the modern office environment. Though abstracted from their original contexts, these materials are still formally recognizable and function as stand-ins for the places from which they came.

Ronde de Jambe
© » KADIST

Aimée Zito Lema

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Rond de Jambe by Aimée Zito Lema is a series formed by two works: a three-channel video installation and a live performance. Each component in this project approaches the same subject matter through a different medium in order to investigate politics as they are made manifest in and through the body. Using archival footage of protests of the Stopera building project in Amsterdam as a starting point, artist Aimée Zito Lema worked with dancers to translate the protest movements into a choreography.

Terraza Alta V
© » KADIST

Abel Rodríguez

Painting (Painting)

Abel Rodríguez’s precise, botanical illustrations are drawn from memory and knowledge acquired by oral traditions. They are the visions of someone who sees the potential of plants as food, material for dwellings and clothing, and for use in sacred rites. Terraza Alta V is part of a series of drawings that track the changing appearance and life of an area identified as Terraza Alta.

WTEIA3
© » KADIST

Daniel Boyd

Painting (Painting)

Daniel Boyd’s work WTEIA3 is part of a series of paintings that reference the stick charts used by indigenous communities on the Marshall Islands. These charts were made in order to navigate the Pacific ocean by canoe and thus crucially depict ocean swell patterns. These highly individualised maps were rarely intended for mass use but instead for memorising, and transmitting between the community, the maps were not taken to sea but instead memorised in advance.

A Gente Combinamos De Não Morrer (BANDEIRA #1) / Us Agreed Not To Die (FLAG #1)
© » KADIST

Jota Mombaça

Sculpture (Sculpture)

The performance title A Gente Combinamos De Não Morrer (BANDEIRA #1) / Us Agreed Not To Die (FLAG #1) is taken from a short story by Brazilian writer Conceição Evaristo, whose work addresses violence, resilience, and necropolitics with an Afro-diasporic lens. This artwork by Jota Mombaça articulates connections between black and trans people’s challenges and struggles. Mombaça points out that an ongoing genocide of these minorities underscores the established power structures, and their resistance is to survive.

Creole Portraits III
© » KADIST

Joscelyn Gardner

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Creole Portraits III alludes to the 18th century practice by slave women on Caribbean plantations of using tropical plants as natural abortifacients. As an act of political resistance against their exploitation as “breeders” of new slaves and to protest the inhumanity of slavery, some slave women chose to either abort or kill their offspring. Armed with practical knowledge passed on orally from their African ancestors and/or Amerindian counterparts, enslaved Creole women collected the seeds, bark, flowers, sap, and roots from various plants which allowed them to secretly put an end to their pregnancies.

Sobre la igualdad y las diferencias: casas gemelas
© » KADIST

Carla Zaccagnini

Photography (Photography)

This series of photographs, Sobre la igualdad y las diferencias: casas gemelas (On Equality and Differences: Twin Houses) , taken in Havana in 2005, belongs to a wider group of works that the artist has been developing over many years, generally titled Bifurcaciones y encrucijadas (Forking Paths and Crossroads) . These works are dedicated to the collection and investigation of similarities and singularities. Some focus on things that are supposed or expected to be identical, but end up being slightly different.

Moving Clocks Change Rhythm
© » KADIST

Renee Rhodes

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The artist writes about her work: “There is an endless desire to know what we look like from outer space and many of us have evolved into a species that exists across the disorienting spaces and timeframes of virtuality. Within my current work, dance and simple movement scores act as a language for simultaneously collecting, mapping and producing volumes of information and knowledge. Moving makes a map and performing is observation.

Mandacura
© » KADIST

biarritzzz

Film & Video (Film & Video)

biarritzzz is interested in how the development of the internet, and experimentation in the virtual world happens simultaneously with the experimentation in the material world of the human species; and how these developments reflect the precariousness of life within neoliberalism. The title of their video work Mandacura is a corruptela (a linguistic distortion on writing or pronunciation) of the Portuguese sentence Mão da Cura (Healing Hand), distorting Portuguese into what sounds as Brazilian Afro-Indigenous. Inspired by and using the music and poetry of Alberto Marques, and drawing sources from archival images, webcam videos, screenshots, gifs and memes, the video asks: What provokes our feelings toward society, history, culture, and the future?

De sino à sina (From Bell to Fate)
© » KADIST

Carla Zaccagnini

Installation (Installation)

De sino à sina (From Bell to Fate) is a six-channel sound installation by Carla Zaccagnini exploring the relationship between modern Brazil and its colonial past. The sound installation is made from a recording of the bell at Capela de Nossa Senhora do Rosário dos Homens Brancos, a Baroque-style chapel that is one of the first chapels in Ouro Preto (previously Vila Rica) in the region of Minas Gerais. The work references the execution of José da Silva Xavier (1746-1792), also known as “Tiradentes”.

Squid Currency
© » KADIST

Natsuko Uchino

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Squid Currency is a series of 13 non-calibrated double-sided tin coins made using a casting technique dating back to Neolithic times where cuttlebones (squid bones) were carved by hand and then used as a mold. Natsuko Uchino draws on research into tin mining across the world, which takes place largely in China and Bangladesh as well as in Potosi, Bolivia where silver has been depleted due to the production of coins and other ornate riches during the 16th century Spanish Empire. Tin has a low melting point and is easily up-cycled from vessels such as measuring cups and kitchen utensils found at yard sales.

The Yellow Scarf
© » KADIST

Shubigi Rao

Installation (Installation)

Named after a book that artist Shubigi Rao read growing up, The Yellow Scarf explores the history of the Thuggee cult in India in relation to the colonial British administration that ‘discovered’ but also ultimately exterminated this cult of assassins. The modern term ‘thug’ is said to be derived from Thuggee. Rao’s fascination with the Thuggee is interwoven with her parallel research into the strangler tree, found throughout South and Southeast Asia.

Hueso de culebra (Installation #2)
© » KADIST

Christian Salablanca

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Hueso de culebra (Snake Bone) arises from the stories that the artist’s grandmother used to tell him as a child about her father’s medical and spiritual practices in the southern part of Costa Rica, close to the border with Panama. One of them revolved around a plant that had various uses, from healing poisonous snake bites to predicting the future. She said, for example, that if one came across this plant during a period of drought, it could mean trouble was coming.

Going Round and Round in a Line ST (12m)
© » KADIST

Javier M. Rodríguez

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Javier M. Rodriguez’s Going Round and Round in a Line ST (12m) is a sculptural composition made of the simplest materials—a single tape measure and metal rivets. The rivets lock the tape measure in its contorted shape, bending in angles to create a geometric abstraction. The piece hangs simply from the ceiling, at times rotating around, its shape changing with our point of view.

Pau-Brasil
© » KADIST

Thiago Honório

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Pau-Brasil is a sculpture by Thiago Honório that references Oswald de Andrade’s 1925 classic of Brazilian modernist literature of the same title. De Andrade’s work demands the resuscitation of “Brazilian” language and culture, advocating for the cultivation of invention and an illogical, “agile and candid” attitude. In response, Honorio’s work takes the physical form of a laquered stalk of the pau brasil tree, from which de Andrade’s work drew its title, piercing the physical form of the book itself.

A Variation on Powers of Ten
© » KADIST

Futurefarmers

Photography (Photography)

In 2011-12 the San Francisco-based collective Futurefarmers staged a 10-part series of conversations and collaborations with scientists, theorist, and philosophers inspired by Charles and Ray Eames’s film, Powers of Ten (1977). PoT was an IBM sponsored documentary that visualized the relative scale and limits of the known universe, both macro and microscopic, through a sequence of magnifications by 10-to-the-x-power. Using the picnic as human-scale index, Futurefarmers capture their meetings with scholars through audio, photography, and then distributed the results publicly through a website and publication .

A woman you thought you knew
© » KADIST

Sin Wai Kin

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

A woman you thought you knew by Sin Wai Kin originates from a performance series titled A View from Elsewhere . Wearing exquisite hair and makeup and a pair of silicone breasts under shimmering diamanté lingerie, Sin Wai Kin’s former persona, Victoria Sin, assumes an alluring, inviting, and intimidating pose. Through subtle and slow movements, this atemporal courtesan appears as a living deity, whose presence embodies codes of representation found in brothels from the turn of the century, burlesque, and Beaux Arts female nude painting.

Adjamé Charbon
© » KADIST

Cheikh Ndiaye

Painting (Painting)

Adjamé, Charbon reflects on both global environmental discourses and domestic impacts of the use and trade of coal. Adjamé is one of ten urban communes of the city of Abidjan, the economic capital and city with the largest French-speaking populous in the Côte d’Ivoire. Employing vibrant colors to contrast the plastic jerrycans, children toys and clothing strewn randomly throughout the shanty settlement with the darkness of coal is a challenging articulation of the image of progress and its environmental consequences today.

The Planets, Chapter 32
© » KADIST

Jackie Karuti

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The Planets, Chapter 32 (2017) is a short video that depicts the world at a time of great anxiety. However, it is done with a sharp sense of humor. It starts with a voice explaining that Africa will be partially inundated in the coming year, ending with the impossible relationship between the artist and a chatbot (primitive form of artificial intelligence).

Blackout
© » KADIST

Rossella Biscotti

Installation (Installation)

In a broader sense, the meaning of ‘blackout’ —primarily an electrical failure or momentary interruption, opens up to new organizations, perceptions and different ways of experiencing time and space. Every person caught in a blackout must redefine the potentiality of public space, relate to strangers and invent new temporary forms of organization. A blackout acts as the breaking point of an established order, on a personal level as a loss of consciousness or on a collective level, as the temporary disruption of political institutions for example.

Tell me everything you saw, and what you think it means
© » KADIST

Sin Wai Kin

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The video Tell me everything you saw, and what you think it means by Sin Wai Kin is from a performance series titled A View from Elsewhere. Wearing exquisite hair and makeup and a pair of silicone breasts under shimmering diamanté lingerie, Sin Wai Kin’s former persona, Victoria Sin, assumes an alluring, inviting, and intimidating pose. Through subtle and slow movements, this atemporal courtesan appears as a living deity, whose presence embodies codes of representation found in brothels from the turn of the century, burlesque, and Beaux Arts female nude painting.

Timur Merah Project II; The Harbor of Restless Spirit
© » KADIST

Citra Sasmita

Painting (Painting)

The work Timur Merah Project 2, the harbour of restless spirit is stretched out on a full cow’s hide, replicates the Kamasan Balinese painterly language that Citra Sasmita has developed in her recent works. It represents female figures, flames, and various natural elements, permutating whimsically in a narrative of pansexual energy. While rooted in mythological thinking, with specifically Hindu and Balinese references, the scenes are equally part of a contemporary process of imagining a secular and empowered mythology for a post-patriarchal future.

Acquired Nationalities
© » KADIST

Rossella Biscotti

Installation (Installation)

Rossella Biscotti’s “10×10” series investigates the relationship between demographics, data processing, textile manufacturing and social structure. The work observes how demographic records have been modeled through the use of punch cards to program both early data processing machines and automated looms (jacquard). Reversing the process, Biscotti turned to the 2001–2006 census information of Brussels—where she was then based—to create a pattern on these textiles.

Octavia E. Butler Papers: mssOEB 1-9062 I (Shape God)
© » KADIST

American Artist

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

American Artist is engaged in a multiyear research project that traces and teases various interconnections between the life and work of science fiction author Octavia E. Butler (b. 1947, Pasadena, CA); the evolution of rocketry and sci-fi in Los Angeles; and the post-war movement of African-diasporic families from the Southern to the Western United States, a phenomenon known as the Second Great Migration. Using a historical materialist frame of study, American Artist’s undertaking asks of the region and the frequency of Black people practicing art and science in Altadena, an enclave northeast of Los Angeles.

Octavia E. Butler Papers: mssOEB 1-9062 II (The L.A. Area)
© » KADIST

American Artist

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

American Artist is engaged in a multiyear research project that traces and teases various interconnections between the life and work of science fiction author Octavia E. Butler (b. 1947, Pasadena, CA); the evolution of rocketry and sci-fi in Los Angeles; and the post-war movement of African-diasporic families from the Southern to the Western United States, a phenomenon known as the Second Great Migration. Using a historical materialist frame of study, American Artist’s undertaking asks of the region and the frequency of Black people practicing art and science in Altadena, an enclave northeast of Los Angeles.

Untitled
© » KADIST

Lubaina Himid

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

In 2007 Lubaina Himid began a series of works she later called Negative Positives: The Guardian Archive (2007-2017). What started out as a one-year project, in the year celebrating the bicentenary of the abolition of slavery in the UK, continued for a decade. Taking a page or a spread of The Guardian (the most liberal newspaper in the UK and her newspaper of choice), Himid sought to expose the unconscious bias manifested in a paper that prides itself on its non-discriminatory policies.

American Artist

American Artist makes experimental work in the form of sculpture, video, and software that comments on histories of race, technology and forms of knowledge production...

Haegue Yang

Rossella Biscotti

Departing from social and political history, the work of Rossella Biscotti (b...

Sin Wai Kin

Through performance, moving image, writing, and print, artist Sin Wai Kin (formerly known as Victoria Sin) uses speculative fiction to interrupt normative processes of desire, identification, and objectification...

Minouk Lim

Carla Zaccagnini

Futurefarmers

Futurefarmers is an international, trans-disciplinary network...

Christian Salablanca

Costa Rican artist Christian Salablanca Díaz has developed a body of work around the phenomenon and experience of violence and the ways in which it generates, determines, and conditions history, society, and politics...

Khvay Samnang

Khvay Samnang’s work critically examines the interlocking nature of ritual and politics, the humanitarian and ecological impacts of globalization, colonialism and migration, and the cultural-material histories of exchange that have shaped the Southeast Asia region...

Renee Rhodes

Renée Rhodes grew up amidst the fantasy and rigor that is the world of classical ballet...

Uriel Orlow

In his research-based and process-oriented practice Uriel Orlow’s work is concerned with “spatial manifestations of memory, blind spots of representation and forms of haunting”...

Jackie Karuti

Jackie Karuti is an artist based in Nairobi, Kenya...

Lubaina Himid

Cheikh Ndiaye

The work of Cheikh N’Diaye (b...

Lotus Laurie Kang

Lotus Laurie Kang works with sculpture, photography, and site-responsive installation...

Ali Yass

Ali Yass is a painter and filmmaker whose work entangles personal and collective memory in its psycho-affective interrogation of power...

Teresa Burga

A pioneer of Latin American Conceptualism, since the 1960s, Teresa Burga has made works that encompass drawing, painting, sculpture, and conceptual structures that support the display of analytical data and experimental methodologies...

Bady Dalloul

Bady Dalloul cunningly employs collage across various media: texts, drawings, video, and objects to produce powerful works commenting on the past and the present...

Citra Sasmita

Artist Citra Sasmita’s work is inscribed with originality in a pan-Asian effort to revisit traditional artistic languages as tools of expression in contemporary society...

Daniel Boyd

Daniel Boyd is an indigenous Australian Pacific artist, in his practice he combines references to both Aboriginal art and international contemporary art, displaying a strong political commitment...

Natsuko Uchino

Natsuko Uchino is an artist whose practice is defined by its interaction with agriculture and craft; she relocated to a rural area of France in order to have an open air studio where she could produce ceramics and work with natural elements such as mushrooms and fermentation techniques and where she collaborates with farms...

Christian Nyampeta

Christian Nyampeta’s works investigate how individuals and communities negotiate forms of socially-organized violence...

Marcelo Cidade

Sofia Crespo

Since 2018, Sofia Crespo has been working on what she terms “artificial natural history”...

Joscelyn Gardner

Joscelyn Gardner is a Caribbean / Canadian visual artist working primarily with printmaking and multimedia installation...

Shubigi Rao

Shubigi Rao interrogates how we know what we do and how we remember what we do...

Anju Dodiya

Anju Dodiya paintings feature autobiographical and human relationships, with ‘women’ usually at the center...

Minia Biabiany

Minia Biabiany’s practice is concerned with the past and ongoing effects of colonialism, exploring the poetics of resistance embedded in everyday life practices, and translating this research into the exhibition space through careful consideration of the cultural and spiritual implications of the material she uses, and the techniques she employs...

biarritzzz

biarritzzz is a Brazilian artist who inserts epistemological conversations through mass communication, specifically on and from the internet...

Amy Balkin

Based in San Francisco, Amy Balkin’s various long-term projects respond to society’s relationship to the land, the atmosphere, the ocean and other natural resources, and how these resources have been used and valued...

© » OBSERVER

about 3 months ago (02/09/2024)

7×7 Models Deeper Collaboration Between Art and Science | Observer Ben Shirken (l.) and Reggie Watts at this year’s 7×7...

© » LITHUB

about 4 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...

© » LITHUB

about 4 months ago (01/02/2024)

How to Be Photographed: 12 Tips for Putting Your Best Writerly Face Forward ‹ 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 to Be Photographed: 12 Tips for Putting Your Best Writerly Face Forward Michelle Wildgen on the Art of the Author Photo By Michelle Wildgen January 2, 2024 Every few years I write a book...

© » ARTNEWS REVIEWS

about 4 months ago (12/21/2023)

2023 in Review: A Glut of Picasso Shows Taught Us Nothing Skip to main content By Alex Greenberger Plus Icon Alex Greenberger Senior Editor, ARTnews View All December 21, 2023 11:00am Pablo Picasso in 1971...

© » KQED

about 5 months ago (12/15/2023)

Hallmark Hanukkah Movie ‘Round and Round’ Shines This Season | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer The Do List One Last Hanukkah Gift From Hallmark: ‘Round and Round’ Is a Really Fun Romcom Linda Holmes Dec 15 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Facebook Share-FB Twitter Share-Twitter Email Share-Email Copy Link Copy Link If you find yourself in Hanukkah withdrawal, take ‘Round and Round’ for a spin: This time-loop romance embraces the holiday in a way that feels complete and thoughtful...

© » ARTSJOURNAL

about 5 months ago (12/12/2023)

The Duty of Interpretation - 3 Quarks Daily Skip to content by Rebecca Baumgartner I’m currently reading The Hunchback of Notre-Dame in translation, and it’s got me thinking about how much we rely on translators to bring us literature from around the world, and how important it is to be able to trust what they tell us...

© » BOMB

about 7 months ago (10/05/2023)

Launching our new series on civil action, AA Bronson and Adrian Stimson discuss their apology project, which was inspired by their opposing connections to an extremely oppressive residential school, and what individuals and communities can do to address colonial violence....

© » AMERICANSFORTHEARTS

about 17 months ago (12/19/2022)

Animating Democracy Transitions & Appreciations | Americans for the Arts Jump to navigation Americans for the Arts Arts Action Fund National Arts Marketing Project pARTnership Movement Animating Democracy Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Instagram YouTube Load Picture Home News Room Animating Democracy Transitions & Appreciations Hello Guest | Login Animating Democracy Transitions & Appreciations Monday, December 19, 2022 Having launched the Animating Democracy program in 1999, Co-Directors Barbara Schaffer Bacon and Pam Korza have decided that 2022 completes their tenure providing program leadership for this transformative initiative...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Gallerists discuss the delicate art of handling collector demand while protecting their artists’ interests....

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

As Inigo Philbrick Legal Actions Churn On, Collector Claims Embattled Dealer Sold Wade Guyton Painting Without His Knowledge - via ARTnews...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

“It Shouldn’t Be Exclusive”: Russell Tovey’s Guide to Art Collecting | AnOther The actor and self-confessed “art geek” is partnering with Sotheby’s next month for a special Contemporary Curated auction...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 22 months ago (06/30/2022)

Producers Lab: “What if we do it this way?” | Banupriya Ponnarasu, Mark Benedict Cheong and Deanna Dzulkifli | ArtsEquator Skip to content Have you ever been a part of a project in the arts, and felt something needed changing? Or have you been either the creator or spectator of a programme, and went away from it thinking, “what if we do it this way?” ? “What if we do it this way?” was the title of a Producers Lab organised by Producers SG, which ran from October 2021 to March 2022....

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 26 months ago (03/17/2022)

Podcast 102: CITRUS Practices & Library of Care | ArtsEquator Skip to content Adib Kosnan chats with arts practitioners Corrie Tan, Elizabeth Chan and Chong Gua Khee, who are members of CITRUS practices...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 27 months ago (02/13/2022)

The Maker’s Project: What does it take to sustain the puppeteer? | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints Courtesy of The Finger Players February 13, 2022 By Janice Yap (1,200 words, 6-minute read) What would it look like if makers had the space and time to reflect, research and incubate outside of working on a production? What benefits would it reap for this generation of puppeteers, and for the ones to come?...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 35 months ago (06/22/2021)

Podcast 90: Critics Live: The Year of No Return by The Necessary Stage at SIFA 2021 | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints Tuckys Photography June 23, 2021 Singapore critics Clarissa Oon, Lee Shu Yu, Nabilah Said and Naeem Kapadia discuss The Year of No Return by The Necessary Stage, presented at Singapore International Festival of the Arts (SIFA)...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 35 months ago (06/09/2021)

Expand, Exchange, and Beyond: A reflection of the Asian Arts Media Roundtable 2021 at SIFA | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints June 9, 2021 By Gladhys Elliona It was a laid-back day at the end of April, when I got the email from ArtsEquator informing me that I had gotten into the Asian Arts Media Roundtable (AAMR) at the Singapore International Festival of Arts 2021...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 36 months ago (05/15/2021)

SEE WHAT SEE (May 2021): SOUTHEAST ASIAN DOCUMENTARIES | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints May 15, 2021 By Joel Tan To borrow and distort the title of David Shield’s lyrical manifesto against fiction: I’ve been HUNGRY for reality in the month of May...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 36 months ago (05/01/2021)

Podcast 87: Southeast Asian Producers | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints May 2, 2021 Earlier this year Producers SG launched the Producers SG Directory , an online directory of independent producers and arts managers working in Singapore and around Southeast Asia, which it hopes can become a starting point for future collaborations and projects in the region...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 37 months ago (04/06/2021)

Keturunan Ruminah: WhatsApp play on family inheritance | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints HATCH April 6, 2021 By Azura Farid and Nabilah Said The pandemic led theatre collective HATCH to dream up Keturunan Ruminah (Ruminah’s Family), a play that takes place entirely on WhatsApp...

© » ARTNOME

about 43 months ago (10/11/2020)

Interview with Generative Artist Kjetil Golid — Artnome Menu Blog Exploring art through data using the Artnome database...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 51 months ago (03/03/2020)

From the Macarena to Chicago: A LASALLE performer's journey | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Photo courtesy of LASALLE March 3, 2020 By Ke Weiliang (1,719 words, 7-minute read) Monday, 20 January 2020...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 53 months ago (12/26/2019)

Podcast 72: ArtsEquator End-of-Year Theatre Podcast 2019 | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles December 27, 2019 Matt Lyon, Naeem Kapadia, Kathy Rowland and Nabilah Said discuss their top picks for theatre in 2019...

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about 54 months ago (11/13/2019)

Podcast 68: Critics Live! Wild Rice's Merdeka | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Rueyloon from Wild Rice November 13, 2019 Theatre critics Corrie Tan, Nabilah Said, Carolyn Oei and Kathy Rowland discuss the recent production of WILD RICE’s Merdeka / 獨立 /சுதந்திரம் , in a critics-led post-show conversation held in front of an audience on 19 October 2019 at WILD RICE’s Ngee Ann Kongsi Theatre...

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about 55 months ago (10/27/2019)

Podcast 66: M1 CONTACT & New Works Platforms (Part 2) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Kuang Jingkai October 27, 2019 Podcast host Chan Sze-Wei and guest Melissa Quek discuss new works platforms at the M1 CONTACT Contemporary Dance Festival, as well as other new works platforms organised by dance companies and entities in Singapore such as Dance Nucleus, P7:1SMA and Frontier Danceland...

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about 55 months ago (10/09/2019)

Translating Homeland: Tanah•Air 水•土: A Play In Two Parts | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Zinkie Aw for Drama Box October 9, 2019 By Nabilah Said (1,900 words, 7-minute read) In less than a week, Drama Box will premiere Tanah•Air 水•土: A Play In Two Parts , a production revolving around the theme of histories, those that are remembered, and those who are sidelined...

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about 61 months ago (04/17/2019)

Podcast 56: Reflections on the 8th World Summit On Arts And Culture, Malaysia | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints April 17, 2019 Duration: 39 min The 8th World Summit On Arts And Culture took place 11 – 14 March 2019 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia...

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about 62 months ago (03/27/2019)

Podcast 55: "Not In My Lifetime?" by The Finger Players | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints Tuckys Photography March 27, 2019 Claire Teo and Stephanie Esther Fam respond to Not In My Lifetime? by The Finger Players which was staged at Gateway Theatre from 5 – 17 March 2019....

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about 66 months ago (11/22/2018)

Podcast 50: Anna Chan, Asia Network for Dance (AND+) | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints November 22, 2018 Duration: 36 min Chan Sze-Wei finds out more about the Asia Network for Dance (AND+) from one of its co-conveners Anna Chan, who was former head of Performing Arts and Dance for the West Kowloon Cultural District and current Dean of the School of Dance at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts...

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about 86 months ago (04/18/2017)

Mobius Gallery: Out of the Blue group show - The re:art Mobius Gallery: Out of the Blue group show Immerse yourself in a blue state of existence, an experience of the absence of time allowing full awareness of the space where all meanings collide, change or quietly fade into nothingness...

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about 101 months ago (01/27/2016)

15 Minutes With Studio Leigh Director Tayah Leigh Barrs – Art Report News ARTISTS Artist Highlights Artist Interviews Studio Visit VIDEOS ART+ Community Listicles No Result View All Result News ARTISTS Artist Highlights Artist Interviews Studio Visit VIDEOS ART+ Community Listicles No Result View All Result No Result View All Result 15 Minutes With Studio Leigh Director Tayah Leigh Barrs by December Projects Jan 27, 2016 in Featured 0 Portrait of Director, Tayah Leigh Barrs...

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about 54 months ago (11/09/2019)

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about 55 months ago (11/01/2019)

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about 76 months ago (02/11/2018)

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about 78 months ago (12/11/2017)

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about 102 months ago (12/02/2015)

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about 129 months ago (09/28/2013)

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about 145 months ago (05/31/2012)

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about 178 months ago (09/01/2009)