For the work Wigan Pit-Brow Women: Intersections with the Caribbean (mobile) , Candice Lin studied English Victorian Arthur Munby’s racialized and masculinized drawings of working-class white female miners. Specifically, Lin’s work critically addresses Munby’s observations about the laborers’ femininity that was more concerned with the modesty of the women, than that they toiled in life-threatening situations. “Pit brow women” or “pit brow lasses” were female surface laborers at British collieries.
Occupy HK 2014 is a series of 18 photographs that Xyza Cruz Bacani’s shot at the height of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong. At the time, the Umbrella Movement was considered the largest social unrest defending the democratic aspirations of Hong Kongers, who flooded the streets to demand universal suffrage. The protestors even managed to block Hong Kong’s main highway for months, freezing Asia’s financial centre.
Something Other Than What You Are by Camel Collective is formed by two works: a multi-channel video installation with controlled lighting, and a single-channel version with stereo sound. In both works, the 36 minute video depicts a narrative taking place outside of a live theater performance in the form of monologues that moves between the production and technical crew. There is a set of three different characters—a lighting technician, a lighting designer, and a professor all played by the same actress who share in their personal experiences and attitudes the precariousness of their work, the problems and myths of collaboration, and the obsolescence of theatrical technology.
Occupy HK 2014 is a series of 18 photographs that Xyza Cruz Bacani’s shot at the height of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong. At the time, the Umbrella Movement was considered the largest social unrest defending the democratic aspirations of Hong Kongers, who flooded the streets to demand universal suffrage. The protestors even managed to block Hong Kong’s main highway for months, freezing Asia’s financial centre.
Part of an installation commissioned by National Gallery Singapore, The Weaver’s Lament by Erika Tan addresses the invisibility of women textile artists and their labor. Tan’s video focuses on the story of a forgotten weaver, Halimah Binti Abdullah, who participated in the 1924 British Empire Exhibition in the United Kingdom. A minor figure in the exhibition histories of what was formerly known as Malaya, Abdullah’s loom was left behind at the end of the exhibition, now residing in the Victoria and Albert Museum.
To produce the series of sculptures collectively titled Utarand , Prabhakar Kamble relocated his studio to Kolhapur, Maharashtra, near the village where he was born into a family of daily wage earners. Kamble cast the feet of agricultural workers in metal to prop up the eponymous terracotta pots traditionally used to store food and grains in every home. A commentary on the caste system’s four-tiered hierarchy, the pots become smaller as they go up the stand, mimicking the structure of society where most of the population is comprised of impoverished communities, which form the base of the caste system while a small minority makes up the wealthy upper castes.
To produce the series of sculptures collectively titled Utarand , Prabhakar Kamble relocated his studio to Kolhapur, Maharashtra, near the village where he was born into a family of daily wage earners. Kamble cast the feet of agricultural workers in metal to prop up the eponymous terracotta pots traditionally used to store food and grains in every home. A commentary on the caste system’s four-tiered hierarchy, the pots become smaller as they go up the stand, mimicking the structure of society where most of the population is comprised of impoverished communities, which form the base of the caste system while a small minority makes up the wealthy upper castes.
Occupy HK 2014 is a series of 18 photographs that Xyza Cruz Bacani’s shot at the height of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong. At the time, the Umbrella Movement was considered the largest social unrest defending the democratic aspirations of Hong Kongers, who flooded the streets to demand universal suffrage. The protestors even managed to block Hong Kong’s main highway for months, freezing Asia’s financial centre.
Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)
In her new series titled Ninas Peruanas Cusquenas , Teresa Burga depicts young indigenous women from Peru’s Andean region, dressed in traditional garments. Sourcing imagery from the internet, the drawings recall an untitled series of drawings from 1974, in which Burga selected images of women at random from various print media, and then rendered the images on paper. Those drawings, like the newer ones, suggest the perils of images without context––how assumptions are made, stereotypes are formed, and knowledge is gathered.
Tomorrow by Jung Yoonsuk is a two-channel video installation, observing the two different sites of factories, one in the mannequin reform factory in Seoul, Korea, and the other in a sex doll factory in Shenzhen, China. The artist’s research began in 2016 when he encountered articles, and some dystopian images, about a “retired sex doll”, a spooky, deformed dummy with big breasts, that stood in an agricultural field backdrop of a high-rise apartment complex in Chengdu, China. Jung’s work explores the factory scene, the (mostly female) workers and their labor, the doll’s artificiality, and human-like eccentricities.
Birender Kumar Yadav comes from Dhanbad, India, a city built on its proximity of iron ore and coal and once forested and inhabited by Indigenous people who compose the Gondwana. The forests were felled and immigrants from northern Bihar and South India were brought to exploit the mineral resources. The Indigenous people were then dispersed to live nomadically, engaging themselves as seasonal workers in farms and industries.
Combined into a single two-channel HD video, Li Xiaofei’s Ponytail and Chongming Island II are silent portraits of the women assembly line workers at a Chinese kitchenware factory. Close-up shots of women’s heads—most notably of the rear with their hair in the similar updo fashion—and faces occupy the frame amidst a backdrop of a revolving steel conveyor. In lieu of dialogue or humming of the machinery, a ringing score of chimes and bells provides a tranquil soundtrack.
To produce the series of sculptures collectively titled Utarand , Prabhakar Kamble relocated his studio to Kolhapur, Maharashtra, near the village where he was born into a family of daily wage earners. Kamble cast the feet of agricultural workers in metal to prop up the eponymous terracotta pots traditionally used to store food and grains in every home. A commentary on the caste system’s four-tiered hierarchy, the pots become smaller as they go up the stand, mimicking the structure of society where most of the population is comprised of impoverished communities, which form the base of the caste system while a small minority makes up the wealthy upper castes.
RUINER III by Nikita Gale is part of an on-going numbered series of abstract sculptures in which various ancillary materials necessary for sound production and recording such as towels, foam, and audio cables, are riddled around piping resembling crowd control bollards, lighting trusses, and other like stage architecture. While these muscular works evoke the forms and dynamism of mid-century modernism, they can also be seen as a translation of Goethe’s idea that “architecture is frozen music”. RUINER III is exemplary of how the artist’s disembodied sets typically evoke a sense of longing through absence, and in so doing, draw out an extended mediation on how audiences project mental or emotional energy onto a person, object, or idea.
In On Guard by Jeamin Cha, a security guard receives safety training, juxtaposed against his patrol of an empty building as he tries to give care instructions for his ailing mother over the phone. The film dismantles the binary oppositions between “caring” and “guarding,” two actions that parallel one another in their emphasis on attentiveness without a logical conclusion. Cha’s exploration of the relationship between these two focuses is channeled through nocturnal urban space, drawing attention to the labor that each requires.
Occupy HK 2014 is a series of 18 photographs that Xyza Cruz Bacani’s shot at the height of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong. At the time, the Umbrella Movement was considered the largest social unrest defending the democratic aspirations of Hong Kongers, who flooded the streets to demand universal suffrage. The protestors even managed to block Hong Kong’s main highway for months, freezing Asia’s financial centre.
Occupy HK 2014 is a series of 18 photographs that Xyza Cruz Bacani’s shot at the height of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong. At the time, the Umbrella Movement was considered the largest social unrest defending the democratic aspirations of Hong Kongers, who flooded the streets to demand universal suffrage. The protestors even managed to block Hong Kong’s main highway for months, freezing Asia’s financial centre.
Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)
Birender Kumar Yadav comes from Dhanbad, India, a city built on its proximity of iron ore and coal and once forested and inhabited by Indigenous people who compose the Gondwana. The forests were felled and immigrants from northern Bihar and South India were brought to exploit the mineral resources. The Indigenous people were then dispersed to live nomadically, engaging themselves as seasonal workers in farms and industries.
Capture is a photographic series by Paolo Cirio in which the artist sourced 1000 public images of police officers’ faces and processed them with facial recognition technology. The original photographs were taken during protests in France, Cirio collected these images and created an online platform containing a database of the 4000 police faces that the AI program isolated. The artist crowdsourced their identification by name and then publicly exposed the officers by printing their headshots and posting them throughout Paris.
In Fordlândia Fieldwork (2012), Tossin documents the remains of Henry Ford’s rubber enterprise Fordlândia, built in 1928 in the Brazilian Amazon to export cultivated rubber for the booming automobile industry. When his rubber trees died from disease and his primarily indigenous workforce revolted, his enterprise went busts within a few short years. Ford never faulted his own planning, but instead blamed the “inhospitable” Brazilian landscape.
In 2015, while in residence at the Jatiwangi Art Factory (JaF) located in the village of Jatisura in Jatiwangi, West Java, Indonesia, Togar initiated the Jatiwangi Cup in which the artist, together with communities in the area, established an annual bodybuilding contest. The area is renowned for its roof tile factories, and the cup aims to celebrate the factory worker’s physiques, sculpted by intense, daily, physical labor. Togar based the idea of the cup on the simple notion of collectivity.
Dhuwã (term used by indentured people of Natal for ‘smoke’), is a single-channel film by Sancintya Mohini Simpson that traces back to the lived experiences of indentured labourers taken from India to Natal (now KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa) to work on sugar plantations during the late 1800s and early 1900s. This often-overlooked chapter in colonial history is close to the artist, as her maternal family were contracted to a sugar plantation in Natal. Filmed originally in 16mm film, Dhuwã captures sugarcane plantations in North Queensland, initially in moments of stillness that are gradually disrupted by a crescendo of repetitive sounds and fast camera movements that culminate in the fields being engulfed by flames.
Argentum is part of Li Li Xiaofei’s Assembly Line series. The film was shot in Dongchuan, a small town 180 km from Kunming. Ten years ago, in order to attract foreign investment, Dongchuan officially became a district of Kunming, thus giving it access to preferential policies.
Cinthia Marcelle’s video work Automóvel (2012) re-edits the mundane rhythms of automotive traffic into a highly compelling and seemingly choreographed meditation on sequence, motion, and time. Shot from an aerial vantage, the camera tracks the daily commute on a small stretch of concrete highway. The camera films the traffic below in short five-second excerpts before blacking out; time begins to collapse as the video shifts between scene, and the hours compress into minutes as daylight quickly turns into night.
Yoshinori Niwa’s investigation into the monetary system and material goods is witnessed across a range of his works. As the title of this work indicates, Niwa visits several currency exchanges in the market in Istanbul and proceeds to continually exchange from one currency into another until he has no money left, going against the grain of the economy. The laborious act of exchanging the currency back and forth does not create any profit.
he woke up with seeds in his lungs by Prajakta Potnis is a set of x-ray films presented through backlit light boxes of found objects constructed to evoke the body or organs that turns the host into a foreign element. The title of the work is inspired by a story the artist came across during her research, according to which a man had swallowed seeds that started to grow inside his organs. In the work, interior scapes of the body appear as radioactive rays pass through various materials.
In the performance video Vitrina , María Teresa Hincapié stood inside a storefront window in downtown Bogota, unannounced, for eight hours a day, wearing a uniform and initially carrying out cleaning chores. As the day and passers went by, the routine became more playful: she would send kisses to bus drivers on the busy Avenida Jiménez who would return them, use the newspaper with which she was shining the glass to flirtatiously hide and engage with an improvised audience or draw the shape of her body with soap and a sponge. She would interrupt these chores to carry out other ‘feminine’ activities, like brushing her hair or applying make-up, only to return to frantically cleaning the transparent surface that separated her from the public.
Acts of Appearance is an ongoing series by Gauri Gill consisting of lush, large-scale color portraits of the residents of a village in Maharashtra, in Western India, which is known for making Adivasi masks. Adivasi people are part of the tribal groups population of South Asia. Instead of requesting the likenesses of gods and demons, Gill asked the residents—including the master mask-makers Subhas and Bhagavan Dharam Kadu, their families, and fellow volunteers—to make masks that portray their own lives.
To explore the boundaries between artwork and audience, Gimhongsok created a series of sculptural performances in which a person wearing an animal costume poses in the gallery. Bunny’s Sofa is a continuation of this series, but with a different twist. Instead of hiring a real person to dress as the animal, Gimhongsok placed a mannequin inside the rabbit costume.
In 2015, while in residence at the Jatiwangi Art Factory (JaF) located in the village of Jatisura in Jatiwangi, West Java, Indonesia, Togar initiated the Jatiwangi Cup in which the artist, together with communities in the area, established an annual bodybuilding contest. The area is renowned for its roof tile factories, and the cup aims to celebrate the factory worker’s physiques, sculpted by intense, daily, physical labor. Togar based the idea of the cup on the simple notion of collectivity.
Xyza Cruz Bacani is a Filipina author and photographer who uses documentary-style photography to call attention to less visible, erased, and under-reported global events...
Prabhakar Kamble is an artist, curator, and cultural activist...
Julian Abraham “Togar” is an artist, musician, and pseudo-scientist...
Birender Kumar Yadav is a multi-disciplinary artist who experiments with various media including painting, sculpture, photography, installation, etching, found and man-made objects, as well as live documentary...
Li Xiaofei initiated Assembly Line in 2010, an ongoing project that records industrialized social change not only China, but as it occurs internationally...
Sancintya Mohini Simpson is an artist, writer, and researcher whose work addresses the impact of colonization on the historical and lived experiences of her family and broader diasporic communities...
Prajakta Potnis’s work dwells between the intimate world of an individual and the world outside, which is separated sometimes only by a wall...
Julia Rommel (b...
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...
Yoshinori Niwa’s practice takes the form of social interventions, executed through performance, video and installation...
Jeamin Cha’s questions exist in the gyre between individual and social environment, stepping over conspicuous strands of relation between the two in favor of cultivating characters that dwell in the night, under-noticed or otherwise surplus figures outside of mainstream societal representation...
Artist Paolo Cirio engages with legal, economic, and cultural systems of information...
Elena Tejada-Herrera is a key figure at the intersection of feminist, performance, and technological art in Peru...
Erika Tan’s practice is primarily research-driven with a focus on the moving image, referencing distributed media in the form of cinema, gallery-based works, Internet and digital practices...
Rindon Johnson’s work in sculpture, video, poetry, and virtual reality deals with technologies that enable captivity and the harnessing and transformation of nature from a gender- and race-critical perspective...
Diego Marcon uses film, video and installation to investigate the ontology of the moving image, focusing on the relationship between reality and representation...
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...
Gauri Gill is interested in the social contract of photography...
As one of the notable Korean artists of his generation working across contemporary visual art and documentary cinema, Jung Yoonsuk has created internationally recognized documentary films like Lash (2022), Bamseom Pirates Seoul Inferno (2017), Non-Fiction Diary (2013), and Hometown of Stars (2010)...
The artistic entity “leonardogillesfleur” is the alliance between two artists, Leonardo Giacomuzzo (b...
A Next-Generation Lunar New Year Party in Oakland | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Food A Next-Generation Lunar New Year Party in Oakland Alan Chazaro Feb 12 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Yăng Shēng, a multimedia project launched by Hanna Chen (left), aims to bring "third culture" children of immigrants from Asian diasporas together in the Bay Area...
Best and Worst Super Bowl Ads, 2024 | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint NPR Super Bowl Ads Played it Safe, but There Were Still Some Winners Eric Deggans Feb 12 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Cardi B...
Beyoncé Won the Super Bowl, Dropping Two New Songs | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint NPR Beyoncé Releases Two New Songs During the Super Bowl, Teasing More to Come Rachel Treisman Feb 11 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Beyoncé accepts the Best Dance/Electronic Music Album award for ‘Renaissance’ onstage during the 2023 Grammy Awards...
New electric BMW CE 02 is an eParkourer for the urban jungle | Wallpaper (Image credit: BMW Motorrad) By George Chapman published 10 February 2024 The new BMW CE 02 is the second all-electric scooter from the long-established German brand’s motorbike division, positioned as trend-setting urban transport for younger riders...
With Sway's Blessing, SF Rapper Frak Is Ready to Level Up | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture With Sway's Blessing, SF Rapper Frak Is Ready to Level Up Nastia Voynovskaya Feb 9 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Frak at Billy Goat Hill in San Francisco on Feb...
SF IndieFest Is a Valentine to Movies and Movie Lovers | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List SF IndieFest Is a Valentine to Movies and Movie Lovers Michael Fox Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Steve Zahn in the SF IndieFest opening night film, 'LaRoy,' playing Feb...
A Baby Penguin Boom is Just as Cute as You Hoped | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture A Baby Penguin Boom at the Academy of Sciences is Just as Cute as You Hoped Sarah Hotchkiss Feb 9 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email African penguin chicks Alice and Nelson...
The Best Snacks for This Year’s Super Bowl | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Food Wings Cost Less and Beer’s Flat: Super Bowl Fans Are Expected to Splurge Scott Horsley Feb 9 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Chicken wing prices have fallen for the second year in a row, in a windfall for Super Bowl snackers...
Book Review: ‘The Secret History of Bigfoot’ by John O’Connor | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List Is Bigfoot Real? A New Book Dives Deep Into the Legend Gabino Iglesias Feb 9 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email A moment from Hulu documentary series, 'Sasquatch'...
Happy Lunar New Year! 5 Things to Know About the Year of the Dragon | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Happy Lunar New Year! 5 Things to Know About the Year of the Dragon Rae Alexandra Feb 9 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email The Year of the Dragon begins is upon us....
'Manahatta' to Make Bay Area Premiere | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List 'Manahatta' to Make Bay Area Premiere Nicole Gluckstern Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Shannon R...
‘The Taste of Things’ Review: A Moving Tale of Love and Food | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Food, Glorious Food (and Other Pleasures) in ‘The Taste of Things’ Lindsey Bahr, Associated Press Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Benoit Magimel and Juliette Binoche in ‘The Taste of Things.’ (Stéphanie Branchu/ IFC Films via AP) The Taste of Things should come with a warning: Audiences may be tempted to abandon work as they know it and start a beautiful, calm new life in the French countryside devoted to the culinary arts...
Black History and Love Intertwine at February Bay Area Concerts | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Black History and Love Intertwine at These February Bay Area Concerts Andrew Gilbert Feb 7 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Mary Stallings performs at Keys Jazz Bistro on Feb...
The Best Late-Night Crab and Garlic Noodles in San Bruno | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Midnight Diners Some of the Bay Area’s Best Garlic Butter Crab Is Served in San Bruno After Midnight Luke Tsai Thien Pham Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email The Dungeness crab and garlic noodles at San Bruno’s A-One Kitchen hold their own against any restaurant in the Bay — and they’re available until 1 a.m...
The First Known Photograph of the San Francisco Opera | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Newly Unearthed: The First Known Photograph of the San Francisco Opera Sarah Hotchkiss Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email A detail from an October 1923 photograph of the San Francisco Opera company in the Civic Auditorium shows performers and family in pre-performance street clothes...
Interview: Chelsea Wolfe Talks Witchcraft and Her New Album | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List Chelsea Wolfe Says Witchcraft and Sobriety Informed Her Latest Album Krysta Fauria, Associated Press Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Chelsea Wolfe performing in June 2022...
The 2024 Puppy Bowl: Team Fluff, Team Ruff Go Head-to-Head | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List The 20th Annual Puppy Bowl Pits Team Fluff Against Team Ruff — and Everyone Wins Mark Kennedy, Associated Press Feb 7 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Some of the adorable participants in this year's Puppy Bowl...
Small Thrills, Smaller Skateboards at Fingerboarding Festival | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint The Do List Small Thrills, Smaller Skateboards at Fingerboarding Festival Alan Chazaro Feb 7 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Those hours spent in 8th grade Algebra class mimicking ollies with with a two-inch fingerboard? It’s all about to pay off...
A Pop-Up Black History Museum Receives $2 Million to Find a Home in Redwood City | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture A Pop-Up Black History Museum Receives $2 Million to Find a Home in Redwood City Sarah Hotchkiss Feb 6 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Carolyn Hoskins, third from left, holds a ceremonial check from Senator Josh Becker (center) at the Domini Hoskins Black History Museum...
‘Lisa Frankenstein’ Review: ’80s Teen Movie Satire is Unwatchable | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Diablo Cody’s ’80s Satire ‘Lisa Frankenstein’ Lurches From Whimsy to Unwatchable Mark Kennedy, Associated Press Feb 7 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Cole Sprouse and Kathryn Newton in ‘Lisa Frankenstein.’ (Michele K...
Ticket Alert: Usher Is Coming to Oakland Arena in September | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Ticket Alert: Usher Is Coming to Oakland Arena in September Sarah Hotchkiss Feb 6 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Tickets for Usher’s North American tour ‘Past Present Future’ go on sale to the general public Feb...
What Jade Plants Can Tell Us About East Bay Gentrification | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture What Jade Plants Can Tell Us About East Bay Gentrification Alexis Madrigal Feb 6 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email As a longtime resident of the East Bay, the jade plant is a marker of 'old Bay Area.' (Alexis Madrigal/KQED) While meandering down the street the other day, I noticed: the jade plants are blooming! They have happy little flowers, white stars, tinged with pink....
Swedish-Burkinabé artist Theresa Traoré Dahlberg on bridging past and present - arts24 Skip to main content Swedish-Burkinabé artist Theresa Traoré Dahlberg on bridging past and present Issued on: 01/02/2024 - 16:02 12:13 arts24 © FRANCE 24 By: Marion CHAVAL | Yinka OYETADE | Alison SARGENT | Loïc CHALAVON | Sonia PATRICELLI With a mother from Sweden and a father from Burkina Faso, visual artist and filmmaker Theresa Traoré Dahlberg grew up with a dual perspective...
Kenya breakdancing picking up but no federation to support it - France 24 Skip to main content Kenya breakdancing picking up but no federation to support it Issued on: 02/11/2023 - 12:50 Modified: 02/11/2023 - 12:53 01:33 While breakdancing will feature in the Paris 2024 Olympics, many enthusiasts in Kenya are attracting younger generations to this urban dance popular in the 1980s...
Resistance through art: Tunisia culture world stands with Palestinians - France 24 Skip to main content Resistance through art: Tunisia culture world stands with Palestinians Issued on: 02/11/2023 - 12:38 Modified: 02/11/2023 - 12:52 01:58 Video by: Lilia BLAISE Tunisia’s Carthage Film Festival, one of the oldest African film festivals, has been cancelled...
Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle — L'ahah Moret — Exposition — Slash Paris Connexion Newsletter Twitter Facebook Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle — L'ahah Moret — Exposition — Slash Paris Français English Accueil Événements Artistes Lieux Magazine Vidéos Retour Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle Exposition Vidéo À venir Sinae Lee, J’ai besoin de la chance, vue de l’installation vidéo à la biennale de la jeune création, Houilles © Marc Domage Sinae Lee Exposition personnelle Dans 8 mois : 2 → 23 mars 2024 L’ahah #Moret est heureuse d’inviter l’artiste Sinae Lee pour une exposition personnelle du 02 mars au 23 mars 2024...
Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle — L'ahah Moret — Exhibition — Slash Paris Login Newsletter Twitter Facebook Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle — L'ahah Moret — Exhibition — Slash Paris English Français Home Events Artists Venues Magazine Videos Back Sinae Lee — Exposition personnelle Exhibition Video Upcoming Sinae Lee, J’ai besoin de la chance, vue de l’installation vidéo à la biennale de la jeune création, Houilles © Marc Domage Sinae Lee Exposition personnelle In 8 months: March 2 → 23, 2024 L’ahah #Moret est heureuse d’inviter l’artiste Sinae Lee pour une exposition personnelle du 02 mars au 23 mars 2024...
The Louvre welcomes Renaissance masterpieces from Naples Capodimonte Museum - France 24 Skip to main content The Louvre welcomes Renaissance masterpieces from Naples Capodimonte Museum Issued on: 27/06/2023 - 17:31 Modified: 27/06/2023 - 17:38 02:24 Video by: Catherine VIETTE Follow The Louvre museum is hosting masterpieces from the Capodimonte museum in Naples, offering the world's largest exhibition devoted to the Italian Renaissance for six months, along with its own collections...
the amana collection Exhibit 02: Asako Narahashi, Rika Noguchi, Tomoko Yoneda | Exhibition | IMA ONLINE the amana collection Exhibit 02: Asako Narahashi, Rika Noguchi, Tomoko Yoneda 9 October 2018 - 16 November 2018 IMA gallery TAGS Asako Narahashi Rika Noguchi Tomoko Yoneda IMA gallery Share Tomoko Yoneda, Gandhi’s Glasses - Viewing a note written on his “Day of silence” shortly before his death, 2003 On Seeing: A photograph does not show some thing...
In the performance video Vitrina , María Teresa Hincapié stood inside a storefront window in downtown Bogota, unannounced, for eight hours a day, wearing a uniform and initially carrying out cleaning chores...
Lambri’s careful framing in Untitled (Miller House, #02) redefines our understanding of this iconic mid-century modernist building located in Palm Springs, California...
Leonardogillesfleur describe Action 3:02 as their “first New York blizzard storm at about 5am...
To explore the boundaries between artwork and audience, Gimhongsok created a series of sculptural performances in which a person wearing an animal costume poses in the gallery...
Yoshinori Niwa’s investigation into the monetary system and material goods is witnessed across a range of his works...
In Fordlândia Fieldwork (2012), Tossin documents the remains of Henry Ford’s rubber enterprise Fordlândia, built in 1928 in the Brazilian Amazon to export cultivated rubber for the booming automobile industry...
Cinthia Marcelle’s video work Automóvel (2012) re-edits the mundane rhythms of automotive traffic into a highly compelling and seemingly choreographed meditation on sequence, motion, and time...
Occupy HK 2014 is a series of 18 photographs that Xyza Cruz Bacani’s shot at the height of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong...
Occupy HK 2014 is a series of 18 photographs that Xyza Cruz Bacani’s shot at the height of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong...
Occupy HK 2014 is a series of 18 photographs that Xyza Cruz Bacani’s shot at the height of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong...
Occupy HK 2014 is a series of 18 photographs that Xyza Cruz Bacani’s shot at the height of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong...
Occupy HK 2014 is a series of 18 photographs that Xyza Cruz Bacani’s shot at the height of the Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong...
For the work Wigan Pit-Brow Women: Intersections with the Caribbean (mobile) , Candice Lin studied English Victorian Arthur Munby’s racialized and masculinized drawings of working-class white female miners...
Drawing & Print
Birender Kumar Yadav comes from Dhanbad, India, a city built on its proximity of iron ore and coal and once forested and inhabited by Indigenous people who compose the Gondwana...
Acts of Appearance is an ongoing series by Gauri Gill consisting of lush, large-scale color portraits of the residents of a village in Maharashtra, in Western India, which is known for making Adivasi masks...
On the artwork, Rommel states: “I was reading Jonathan Franzen’s new novel Purity, where they take a lot of walks through the jungle in Uruguay, or Paraguay, I can’t remember...
The video animation Falling Head 2 , hand-painted by Diego Marcon in 2015, consists of a close-up of a head caught on the threshold between sleep and wakefulness or maybe from wakefulness to sleep...
Birender Kumar Yadav comes from Dhanbad, India, a city built on its proximity of iron ore and coal and once forested and inhabited by Indigenous people who compose the Gondwana...
La libertad is a “greca” film, a meander film, with no beginning nor end, weaving together fragments of daily life at the Navarro´s, counting threads and time, wondering and wandering around words as emancipation, labor, and freedom (la libertad), the word that most appeared in our conversations...
Something Other Than What You Are by Camel Collective is formed by two works: a multi-channel video installation with controlled lighting, and a single-channel version with stereo sound...
In On Guard by Jeamin Cha, a security guard receives safety training, juxtaposed against his patrol of an empty building as he tries to give care instructions for his ailing mother over the phone...
Drawing & Print
In her new series titled Ninas Peruanas Cusquenas , Teresa Burga depicts young indigenous women from Peru’s Andean region, dressed in traditional garments...
In 2015, while in residence at the Jatiwangi Art Factory (JaF) located in the village of Jatisura in Jatiwangi, West Java, Indonesia, Togar initiated the Jatiwangi Cup in which the artist, together with communities in the area, established an annual bodybuilding contest...
In 2015, while in residence at the Jatiwangi Art Factory (JaF) located in the village of Jatisura in Jatiwangi, West Java, Indonesia, Togar initiated the Jatiwangi Cup in which the artist, together with communities in the area, established an annual bodybuilding contest...
Las Bambas by Elena Tejada-Herrera takes the name of a copper mine in the Andean department of Apurímac, Peru...
Advanced Technology
The VR play Meat Growers: A Love Story by Rindon Johnson centers on two meat growers who work together in a meat processing factory in the year 2100...
Drawing & Print
And words were whispered by Sancintya Mohini Simpson is a series of ten works on paper based on the lived experiences of Indian women taken to the Natal region of South Africa from the 1860s to the early 1900s to work in tea and sugarcane plantations during apartheid, which included servitude in its broadest and most sinister definition...
Tomorrow by Jung Yoonsuk is a two-channel video installation, observing the two different sites of factories, one in the mannequin reform factory in Seoul, Korea, and the other in a sex doll factory in Shenzhen, China...
RUINER III by Nikita Gale is part of an on-going numbered series of abstract sculptures in which various ancillary materials necessary for sound production and recording such as towels, foam, and audio cables, are riddled around piping resembling crowd control bollards, lighting trusses, and other like stage architecture...
Capture is a photographic series by Paolo Cirio in which the artist sourced 1000 public images of police officers’ faces and processed them with facial recognition technology...
he woke up with seeds in his lungs by Prajakta Potnis is a set of x-ray films presented through backlit light boxes of found objects constructed to evoke the body or organs that turns the host into a foreign element...
Dhuwã (term used by indentured people of Natal for ‘smoke’), is a single-channel film by Sancintya Mohini Simpson that traces back to the lived experiences of indentured labourers taken from India to Natal (now KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa) to work on sugar plantations during the late 1800s and early 1900s...
To produce the series of sculptures collectively titled Utarand , Prabhakar Kamble relocated his studio to Kolhapur, Maharashtra, near the village where he was born into a family of daily wage earners...
To produce the series of sculptures collectively titled Utarand , Prabhakar Kamble relocated his studio to Kolhapur, Maharashtra, near the village where he was born into a family of daily wage earners...
To produce the series of sculptures collectively titled Utarand , Prabhakar Kamble relocated his studio to Kolhapur, Maharashtra, near the village where he was born into a family of daily wage earners...