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Archive for the ‘Events’ Category

sk-interfaces : Casino Luxembourg

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

I will make a new version of inthewrongplaceness for the opening of sk-interfaces  at Casino Luxembourg, the action will be photographed and the documents will be exhibited in the space for the remainder of the exhibition.

26 September 2009 - 10 January 2010
(opening Friday 25 September 2009)
SK–INTERFACES

Art Orienté objet, Maurice Benayoun, Zane Berzina, Critical Art Ensemble, Wim Delvoye, Olivier Goulet, Eduardo Kac, Antal Lakner, Yann Marussich, Kira O’Reilly, Zbigniew Oksiuta, ORLAN, Philippe Rahm,  Julia Reodica, Donald Rodney, Stelarc, Jun Takita, The Office of Experiments, The Tissue Culture & Art Project, Sissel Tolaas, Paul Vanouse

Skin is our natural interface to the world – but it is progressively being replaced by technological extensions, some of which can have liberating, other rather new restrictive, effects. The trans-disciplinary exhibition SK–INTERFACES presents about 20 international artists who question the ways in which today’s techno-sciences alter our relation to the world: digital technologies, architecture, tissue cultures, transgenesis, self-experiments or telepresence – the artists appropriate these methods and explore the permeability between disciplines and between art and science. Their interfaces connect us with different species, destabilise our definition of being human today and reflect on the question of satellite bodies.

The exhibition SK–INTERFACES at Casino Luxembourg – Forum d’art contemporain, curated by Jens Hauser, is the extended continuation of a project organised for the European Capital of Culture 2008 at the Foundation for Art and Creative Technology (FACT) in Liverpool.

A number of performances will accompany the exhibition.
Curator: Jens Hauser
in collaboration with FACT (Foundation for Art & Creative Technology) Liverpool

Posted in photography, cell culture, Touch, tissue engineering, skin, tissue culture, Non human animal, Bioart, Performance, live art, action, Ethics, Pigs, Events | No Comments »

queering the lab

Monday, June 8th, 2009

Queering the lablab shootVoEdestablisaing

Posted in DIY biotech, cell culture, Blood, Haptic, Touch, tissue culture, writing, Bioart, Events, Performance, live art, action, dance, Ethics, Research | No Comments »

Notes for for Whitworth Art Gallery staircase (north) (ii)

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

Whilst I prepare for the work I am making during Marina Abramovic Presents . . .  I’m also thinking about some of the other important individuals and activities in Manchester ouside of Manchesters Internations Festival that I relate to my practice, concerns and cares.

Professor Amelia Jones currently holds a chair in the University’s Schools of Arts, Histories and Cultures,  her writing, editing and theorising in works  such as Body Art, Performing the Subject, has been crucial to many artists, scholars and students such as myself. I’m hoping she might be able to come to the event and perhaps share an opinion over a cup or glass of something.

UK Base artist Ansuman Biswas will be hermit in resident in the Manchester Museums gothic tower, simultaneously artist and anchorite, he will be cloistered away for 40 days engaged in Vipassana practice and an exploration of the museums collection, concering his investigations with memory, embodiemnt and the museums role as holder of cultureal memory. There will be a blog on which he communicates his concerns and how they develop over the 40 days.

And of course there is the utterly fabulous David Hoyle, who I last saw perform and be MC at Visions of Excess during SPILL Festival of Performance. David also works with young lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans homeless people in Manchestester.

The Manchester and District Institute of Iynegar Yoga is the oldest Iyengar yoga establishement in the UK and was the creation of many of the earliest students of B.K.S. Iyengar such as Jeanne Maslen who has now retired. I’m very much hoping I’ll get a chance to attend a class during the course of the work, the strengthening, recouperative and mental effects of Iyengar yoga will all be fundamental to how I get through makeing the work.

Posted in writing, Performance, live art, action, Events | 1 Comment »

Notes for for Whitworth Art Gallery staircase (north) (i)

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

as part of Marina Abramovic Presents . . .

falling down the stairs backwards over four hours, repeated daily for 17 days
one descent per day

Whitworth Art Gallery staircase north

From the top, your flights of stairs go:
7 short
1 long step
9 short
1 turning long step
5 short
1 turning long step

9 short
1 long step
9 short
(FLOOR)

as written by Mary Griffiths, contemporary art curator, Whitworth Gallery

riser: 16 cms        6 1/2 inches
tread: 31.75 cm    12 1/2 inches

Stone steps
flights
wooden banisters with iron spindles
The stone stairs are smooth and slippery, no real purchase
if I really fall down, I’ll break my neck, there is a fabulous set of banister rails that I think I’ll use to grasp as I make my descent.

The movement needs to be so very slow, allowing for gradual progression, but there needs to be rest points, still points, especially for the hands which will get tired with the grasp.
So I need to find ways to come down, to be upside down alot in a kind of legs over head, to do that on a descent, and to sustain.

I’m concerned to find
• ways of moving that protect my neck – as well as everything else
• Ways of organising skeletal frame on the stairs to create balances that can be moved between like lots of svangasana (shoulder stand) to halasana (legs over head)
• Ways to prepare from now until the piece begins
• Ways to warm up before each daily session
• Ways to warm down and address aches and pains that allow for the next day

At the moment I’m imagining making the work naked
The skin slipping on stone is an issue but I think fabric is more hazardous and skin leaves slight marks, the stone/skin pressure will presumably redden the skin
I would like there to be a cumulative effect, so that someone coming in on day 11 will have a sense of build up, of a deposit of effort, or of travel.

Artists I’ve had or am about to have conversations with into and around this developing this work are:

Fiona Wright

Amanda Brown

Doran George

Yann Marussich

Empress Stah

Whitworth Art Gallery staircase north 02

 

Whitworth Art Gallery staircase north 03

 

Whitworth Art Gallery staircase north 04

 sKu-mNyé

Iyengar Yoga, asana and pranayama practices

 Here are a couple of pages on the history of the gallery and about it’s unique and special position in the history of Manchester.

It’s founding vision emrged out of the Arts and Crafts movement to  ‘Secure a source of perpetual gratification to the people of Manchester & and cultivate taste and knowledge of the Fine Arts of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture.’

Posted in dance, architecture, Performance, live art, action, Events | No Comments »

Marina Abramović Presents…

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Posted in Performance, live art, action, Events | No Comments »

SPILL Salon 02: Feasts

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

The SPILL Salons are informal events that are intended to allow people to engage with some of the strands of practice and thematics presented during the festival.

Salon 2
Monday 13th April
3 – 5 pm,
The Edge, Soho Square.

Feasts
Food and eating as cultural, political, economic and social practices; celebratory, sensory, perceptual, feasts and feasting will be explored as an entry point to digest SPILL’s multitude of courses. Archaeologist Martin Jones will discuss how humans first came to share food and the ways in which the human meal has developed since that time and how our culture of feasting has had far-reaching consequences for human social evolution. Australia artist Boo Chapple will talk about her art project Hand to Mouth and it examination of means of production, economies and waste, UK based artist John O’Shea will introduce Meat Licence, an artistic intervention into meat consumption, legislation and ethics of meat production.

Posted in Molecular biology, salons, archeology, Non human animal, Ethics, Performance, live art, action, Non human animals, Events | 1 Comment »

SPILL Salon 01: Sex in Performance

Monday, March 30th, 2009

AS part of my thinker in residence for SPILL Festival of Performance,

Untitled (for You Beloved)

I’ll be hosting 3 SPILL Salons, they’ll be informal events that are intended to allow people to engage with some of the strands of practice and thematics presented during the festival.

Salon 1

Sex in Performance

Monday 6th April
2 – 5 pm,
The Edge, Soho Square.

With Ron Athey and other performers who use actions that could be construed as live sex in their work.  This salon will emphasise the unrehearsed in conversation, as discussions around and about sex in performance are allowed to evolve and unfold. These discussions will also contribute towards anticipating and contextualising Visions of Excess curated by Lee Adams and Ron Athey, and it’s attendant Bataillian themes of death, eroticism and the forbidden.

Posted in salons, Performance, live art, action, Events | No Comments »

SPILL Festival of Performance 09, 2 - 26 April.

Saturday, March 28th, 2009

SPILL 09

This year I have the happy task of being Thinker in Residence at  SPILL Festival of Performance.

This follows my involvement with the first SPILL Festival in 2007, when I was commissioned to make Untitled (Syncope), which I have just remade for SPACE UK - see previous entry.

I will also perform within Ron Athey and Lee Adam’s curated Visions of Excess, a 12 hour homage to Bataille and his philosophical works on sex, death and decay and have been photographed by Manuel Vason for the Tarot project - as Strength.

The Thinker Residency will involve attending the Festival in pretty much it’s entirety, both a daunting and really quite extraordinary prospect, responding to the works via the contextualising and informal salons  and producing an overarching work of writing. I’m hoping to make many small, discreet textual interventions via this blog and perhaps other online spaces. The salons will be pretty informal, open to anyone but will also create some entry points into converstations from which to approach the festival and some of it’s thematics. On the phone yesterday Ron Athey mentioned the importance of unrehearsed discussion, frankness and a willingness to allow ideas and thinkings to unfold, tranform and occur. We were talking about the salons but it’s very much this approach that I hope to also bring to my thinking, tinkering and unthinking in residence, allowing ideas to spool and unravel, twist and move into other arrangements and configurations.

Untitled (for You Beloved)

 

Posted in Performance, live art, action, Events | No Comments »

Untitled (Syncope), Teatro Laboral, March 2009.

Friday, March 27th, 2009

Untitled (Syncope) 01

Untitled (Syncope) 02

Untitled (Syncope) 03

Untitled (Syncope) 04

Untitled (Syncope) 05

Untitled (Syncope) 06

 Untitled (Syncope) 07

Untitled (Syncope) 08

Untitled (Syncope) 09

Untitled (Syncope)
Photographer: Julio Calvo
SPACE UK, Teatro de Laboral, Gijon, Spain, British Council
March 2009.

Thanks to Mateo Feijoo and Almudena Olalla at Teatro Laboral, Steven Brett and Isabel Fernandez at British Council and Marty Langthorne for exquisite lighting and production.

 

Posted in Performance, live art, action, Events | No Comments »

from Maya Deren to Complexity Systems Science and then on to Loie Fuller

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

One story I like to tell students is one that artist Susan Hiller told when I was a first year art student about Maya Deren. Like Hiller,  Deren was also both an anthropologist and artist who’s practices strayed willfully across disciplines and utilised paradigms other to those dominant in regard to discourse and knowledge making. ( - loose cannons in canonical disciplines).

Maya Deren

Deren went to Haiti as an anthropologist to study voodoun practices, making ethnographic films and studies, resulting in a book first published in 1953 called The Divine Horseman (my copy is called The Voodoo Gods, it’s on my bookshelf in between Esoteric Buddhism and The yellow Wallpaper - I need IP addresses in my books to find them - which might not be so long now - two of the aforementioned are online. My books are arranged for the most part thematically but not necessarily obviously, the proximities of these 3 in a cluster is a typical accidental shuffling that enables a whole load of marvellous intertextual connections)

 The Voodoo Gods, Maya Deren, Paladin paperback 1975 edition

The very last chapter of The Divine Horseman, titled The White Darkness, is an account of her participation in a Voodoun practice, transgression out of the ‘observer’ position and that scopic binary structuring stuff) etc. into the mix and fray or a Voodoo practice, allowing herself to enter into ‘possession’. She writes,

‘I have left possession until the end, for it is the centre towards which all the roads of Voudoun converge. It is the point toward which one travels by the most visible, the most physical mean, yet, for the traveller, it is itself invisible. One might speak of it as the area of a circle whose circumference can be accurately described; yet this circumference is not, itself, the circle which it defines. To know this area, one must, finally, enter.’  

In Thinking About Art: conversations with Susan Hiller, Hiller quotes Deren’s querying of a Western thinking’s ‘reverence for detactment whether scientific or scholarly’ and suggestion that the artist in Western culture does not necessarily accept that postion. (Hiller quoting Deren, page 31.)

It’s one of my favourite stories as it spoke so wonderfully and comprehensively of a radical departure from the privileged mechanisms of observation, the hierachies of the senses in knowledge production, and also  because I’d already encountered Deren via an interest in the occult and the post punk alternative cultures in which her movies and life story figured. At that of listening to Hiller, (a first year art undergrad albeit a late 20’s mature student),  I’d not yet joined the dots to ‘Art History’ and the Art Cannon etc. Her practises across dance, film, anthropology and Voodoun Priestess made an expansive and intuitive kind of sense to me.

I love anthropologists, like geographers they crop up everywhere as willing transdisciplinary adventurers, the Cardiff University (Post) Human reading group  gave me a  chapter of Partial Connections, by Marilyn Strathern - here’s the Amazon Blurb on it.

. . . Marilyn Strathern’s seminal book challenges the routine ways in which anthropologists have thought about the complexity and quantity of their materials, focusing on a problem normally thought of as commonplace; that of scale and proportion. Revealing unexpected replications in modes of thought and in the presentation of ambiguous images, Strathern has fashioned a unique contribution to the anthropological corpus.

In her blog Mikala Hansbol writes: Strathern argues that we always only have access to making partial connections. There is (according to Strathern) no such thing as parts and wholes. When enacting the living world, we also enact holes. She argues that the world is always both one and multiply enacted - it is always both a container and what is contained. We cannot see it all at once. 

or as mathematician Ralph H. Abraham writes,“the fractal concept of self-similarity across scales is extensively applied to the complexity and quantity of anthropological materials: cultural data, ethnographic recordings, etc.”, Human Fractals: The Arabesque In Our Mind. Inspired by the Cardiff (Post) Human posse, I’ve suggested it to Janet Smith, my bioscience collaborator as a text we might both read, to consider our research activities from. It also to brought to mind the research of Complex systems scientist Sylvia Nagl and her thoughts on how we organise information to  structure knowledges and architect meanings:

An enormous wealth of data and knowledge about cancer has been created through research efforts around the globe. This has led to very substantial advances, but we have now reached a fundamental barrier to deriving maximum benefit from this data - the ‘complexity limit’.

Complex systems science addresses open questions that are fundamental to complex systems in general, cutting across particular disciplines, and searches for methods to deal with them. Principles, concepts and methods can then be applied to a particular type of complex system such as cancer cells and tumours.

I seem to be doing a big revisit to reacquaint myself with artists like Deren. Lois Fuller is another thanks to Catherine Hindson at University of Bristol’s Drama Department, who highlighted Fullers widely regarded activities in science, her relationship to the Curies, Edison and other scientists and technologists of the time.

Loie Fuller

Interestingly both Deren and Fuller were dance practitioners; that possession and hypnosis featured on occasion in both Deren and Fuller’s work respectively is not necessarily a linkage I was initially thinking of but it’s certainly a compelling one and perhaps to do with a series of questions and thoughts I’m trying to form on embodiment, knowledge and bodies, and language and body. This current in both my lab based activities as well as my presence in the larger science domain - and of course the explicit performance works I make.  That Fuller was a keen scientist herself and good friends with the Curies is similar to how I feel about Deren’s body of works across disciplines.

In her paper The “Symptomatic Act” Circa 1900: Hysteria, Hypnosis, Electricity, Dance,  Felicia McCurran discusses Fuller’s then highly experimental innovations with emerging technologies of electric lighting along side Charcot’s studies and experiments with hysterics in Salpetriere, emergent practices of dance, medicine, science and technologies knotting and constructing altogether other kinds of bodies, representations of bodies and cultural meanings of bodies. Erin Brannigan inLa Loie” as Pre-Cinematic Performance - Descriptive Continuity of Movement writes about

“the interchange between art and science and the centrality of the female dancer, finding in Fuller’s mobility an electrically charged evolution of form that offered an antidote to the popular theme of degeneracy. [Jane] Goodall describes Fuller as perfectly in step with her age; “scientist and inventor, a woman of the future, charged with the energies of an age about to dawn”

from Jane Goodall’s Performance and Evolution in the Age of Darwin: out of the natural order, p.217. In Women in Motion: Loie Fuller and the “Interpenetratio” of Art and Science, Elizabeth Coffman writes:

Fuller’s dancing embodies the intersection, or, to use the historically specific term, the interpenetration of the arts and sciences, and, by connotative extension, the interpenetration of both feminine and masculine codes of performance. As Jonathan Crary argues, “rather than stressing the separation between art and science in the nineteenth century, it is important to see how they were both part of a single interlocking field of knowledge and practice.”

Perhaps it is the interlocking or interpenetration that I’m curious about for myself and my activities across my own practice, and in dialogue with both defined and undefined science practitioners and art practitioners. The discreet disciplines both push and pull into complex engagements materially, metaphorically and conceptually. Ultimately what I am pursuing are critical and cultural questions, of how bodies and knowledge are constructed; bodies of knowledge and knowing bodies, and what are the unconscious underpinnings with their attendant cascades of power within the matter of bodies and the bodies that matter. As an arts practitioner within the science institution, bringing research strategies from my field and personal practice is difficult and fraught, sometimes seemingly invisible, perhaps because I do not participate in canonising, concretising structures, and also because I am maintain a non academic position. Being able to be within and without the institution is a rare and wonderful privilege and a tricky and tough one to navigate. So I’m curious about Deren and Fuller and others like them.



Posted in Film, Anthropology, dance, Events, Research, School of Biosciences residency | No Comments »

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