Kick My Butt’lins!
Notes
Documentation from the DIY 13 project, interrogating how re-‘creation’ impacts the creative process.
Artist / Author | Stacy Makishi |
---|---|
Publisher | LADA |
Digital Ref | EF5266 |
Date | 2016 |
Type | Digital File |
Keywords
Similar items
Burlington Contemporary Journal Issue 8: Drawing
This special issue of Burlington Contemporary Journal is dedicated to drawing and has been realised in collaboration with Drawing Room. Surveying work made over the last sixty years, this issue examines the radical potential of drawing and its varied role in artistic practice. The issue includes artist commissions by Jade Montserrat and Emma McNally, and a profile of Massinissa Selmani by Roger Malbert.
Anomalous Tradition, Queer Enchantment: On the Work of siren eun young jung
Afterall Journal
Issue 49 Spring/Summer 2020 – ‘Extractivism’ – looks at a nexus of practices engaging with environmental issues and extractivist capitalism. In parallel, it covers alternative ways in which artists are occupying spaces of art, history or economics.
pg.49-57
Hyunjin Kim contextualises siren eun young jung’s audio-visual work at the 2019 Venice Biennale in relation to queer performance in South Korean history.
Shortlist LIVE! Issue 2
Publication on a new entity of events as part of ANTI Festival, where the artists shortlisted for the International Prize of Live Art present their work.
In English and Finnish.
Elmgreen & Dragset : Inconvenient Truths
Art Review Issue 26 / October 2008
pg. 74-81
Feature on Elmgreen & Dragset : Inconvenient Truths
André Stitt: Dingo - A treatment towards a new communionism
Over three days in August 2007 Cardiff-based performance artist André Stitt undertook a major ‘akshun’ work at Artspace. Utilizing Joseph Beuys’ famous “I Like America and America Likes Me (or ‘Coyote’)” performance of 1974 as a template through which a performative engagement with acts of arrival and the attendant trauma of colonialism could be developed, Stitt shared a caged-in area of the gallery with a dingo, exploring forms of possible connection between the human figure and dog. This book provides extensive documentation and critical reflection upon one of the most significant and sustained performance works undertaken in Sydney in recent years.
Taking Receipts: A Log of Aggression for People of Color
“Sadly, as people of color we experience discrimination everyday. It’s exhausting. And when it happens, we often question ourselves, thinking: Did that just happen? Am I being too sensitive? And when we can identify that it is discrimination and speak to it, we’re often questioned and others often don’t believe us or brush us off, calling us too sensitive or angry. The burden falls on us to prove that we are being discriminated against. This book is here for you to take detailed logs of your everyday aggressions so that you can show off your receipts–proof.” Aram Han Sifuentes
Designed and illustrated by Ishita Dharap.
Essential Work : Eastern European Immigrants and Models of Participation
Contemporary Theatre Review, Volume 33, Issue 3 (2023)
Essential Work : Eastern European Immigrants and Models of Participation, Bojana Janković
This article investigates the relationship between a marginalised community of essential workers and dominant models of participation.
Between Journeys : an Interview with Lee Wen
Performance Research Vol 6. No. 1. Spring 2001
Departures
The first of three related issues which engage with the migrations of people, performance and performance cultures, generating writing around differing geographies and histories of travel and travelling performance in a diversity of written and visual forms.
Between Journeys : an Interview with Lee Wen
Woon Tien Wei
pp. 3 – 7
Delaine Le Bas : Secession
A publication with an essay by Stephen Ellcock in which he exemplifies the spiritual and mythological references in Delaine Le Bas’s work and in particular in the installation conceived for the Secession with references from Greek mythology and ancient Egyptian death cults.
Languages: German, English
Aesthetic Taiwan
Can Taiwan performing/performance art be an avant-garde strategy for cultural exchanging with Shanghai e-Art Festival?
-Referring to the changing face of British Live Art.
Research study by Catherine Jiang.
Bobby Baker : Redeeming Features of Daily Life
This fully-illustrated book brings together for the first time an account of Baker’s career as an artist – from her first sculptures at Central St Martins in the early 1970s to her most recent work, ‘How to Live’ and ‘Diary Drawings’ – with critical commentary by reviewers and academic practitioners.
They Are All at Least Seventy - An exploration of female resistance to the decline narrative in theatre and live art
On Ageing (&Beyond)
Performance Research Volume 24 Issue No 3 April/May 2019
pg 40-48