Pool II: October School Delhi 2018
Franz Krähenbühl, Christoph Schenker, Nils Röller, Donatella Bernardi
6 CreditsMAF-MAF-Po00.18H.002
Pool IV: Backyard Notes – Massnahmen gegen die Verblödung
Claudia Kübler, Armin Chodzinski
3 CreditsMAF-MAF-Po00.18H.004
Pool IX: Schreibwerkstatt - Techniken und Technologien des Schreibens
Tyna Fritschy
3 CreditsMAF-MAF-Po00.18H.009
Pool VIII: Different Every Time
Claudia Kübler, Laura von Niederhäusern
3 CreditsMAF-MAF-Po00.18H.008
Pool X: Those Inventions Which Belong to Literature While Deforming its Limits.
Leila Peacock
3 CreditsMAF-MAF-Po00.18H.010
Pool XII: Manifesta 12: Palermo
Donatella Laura Ada Bernardi, Uriel Orlow
3 CreditsMAF-MAF-Po00.18H.012
Pool XIII: Dark Assemblages / Translocal Practices
Christian Hübler, Margarida Mendes
3 CreditsMAF-MAF-Po00.18H.013
Praxis 1: Embodiment
Donatella Bernardi, Elodie Pong, Rory Rowan, Philip Matesic
21 CreditsMAF-MAF-Pr00.18H.001
Praxis 2: our? monstrosities - complication and poetry
Yvonne Wilhelm, Christian Huebler, Gerald Raunig, Johanna Bruckner
21 CreditsMAF-MAF-Pr00.18H.002
Praxis 3: Small projects for the coming communities
Dominique Lämmli, Dorothee Richter
21 CreditsMAF-MAF-Pr00.18H.003
Student Study Groups
3 CreditsMAF-MAF-Sg00.18H.001
Student Study Groups
3 CreditsMAF-MAF-Sg00.18H.002
Pool VII: Performing the Voice
Quinn Latimer is a poet, art critic, performer, and editor from California whose work often explores feminist economies of writing, reading, and image production. Her books include Like a Woman: Essays, Readings, Poems (Sternberg Press, 2017); Stories, Myths, Ironies, and Other Songs: Conceived, Directed, Edited, and Produced by M. Auder, coedited with Adam Szymczyk (Sternberg Press, 2014); Sarah Lucas: Describe This Distance (Mousse Publishing, 2013); Film as a Form of Writing: Quinn Latimer Talks to Akram Zaatari (WIELS/Motto Books, 2013); and Rumored Animals (Dream Horse Press, 2012). Her writings, readings, and lecture-performances have been featured widely, including at REDCAT, Los Angeles; Serpentine Galleries, London; Chisenhale Gallery, London; DRAF, London; Kunsthalle Zurich; Radio Athènes, Athens; CRAC Alsace, Altkirch, France; the Poetry Project, New York; the German Pavilion of the Venice Architecture Biennale, Italy; the Dhaka Art Summit; and the Sharjah Biennial 13. She was editor-in-chief of publications for documenta 14 in Athens and Kassel. In addition, she is a frequent contributor to Artforum and a contributing editor of frieze as well as the editor of many books, including Paul Sietsema: Interviews on Films and Works (Sternberg Press, 2012) and coeditor of Pamela Rosenkranz: No Core (JRP-Ringier, 2012). Latimer has lectured at the Banff Centre, Canada; Center for Contemporary Arts, Tallinn; Institut Kunst, Basel; Haute école d'art et de design (HEAD), Geneva, and elsewhere.
Nummer und Typ | MAF-MAF-Po00.18H.007 / Moduldurchführung |
---|---|
Modul | Pool |
Veranstalter | Departement Fine Arts |
Leitung | Quinn Latimer |
Anzahl Teilnehmende | maximal 10 |
ECTS | 3 Credits |
Lehrform | Seminar |
Zielgruppen | Students MFA |
Lernziele / Kompetenzen | The centrality of performance in today’s contemporary art landscape suggests the explicit importance of the body and embodied practices in the visual art field. Why, though? As it has become generally accepted that all culture is performance, as are all relations in the social sphere—inflected by gender, class, racial difference, citizenship, etcetera—how do we distinguish and define and practice the performative work that artists and writers do? How do we understand the production of meaning through the singular and social body, a body that includes an audience? This class will focus on the performance of language—the voice—an everyday enactment that is often cast, inaccurately, as “natural,” inevitable, and unrehearsed. It will examine how the performance of language encourages the development of a radical subjectivity, as well as how a new kind of oral and literary culture—one that circulates through digital technologies via messaging and online practices—has transformed how we conceive of and perform language on a daily basis. The class will proceed as both a workshop in which writings and performances are built and discussed and performed, and as a seminar of experimental readings that theorize such work, including the speech act and orality, based on texts pulled from performance studies, poetics, feminist theory, literary theory, fiction, media studies, and anticolonial studies. A series of performance nights—a kind of salon—featuring the students and invited guests will be held over the course of the semester. “Orality ... is inseparable from the body in movement,” Édouard Glissant once wrote. “Putting a door on the female mouth has been an important project of patriarchal culture from antiquity to the present day,” Anne Carson notes. Sound and language, its performance, is about control. We are taught to physically regulate our sounds—often to silence them—from the moment that we are born. This class will attempt to think through the relationship between sound and body in a different way—a different kind of control, no doors, only mouths. |
Leistungsnachweis / Testatanforderung | active participation; 80% presence time |
Termine | October 15, 16, 17; 14:00–19:00 h each day November 19, 20, 21; 14:00–19:00 h each day January 7, 8, 9; 14:00–20:00 e h ach day |
Bewertungsform | bestanden / nicht bestanden |