A wide-ranging collection of inventive maps. This item is part of the Study Room Guide to Remoteness (P2600).
Artist / Author | Katharine Harmon |
---|---|
Publisher | Princeton Architectural Press |
ISBN | 978-1568984308 |
Reference | P2506 |
Date | 2003 |
Type | Publication |
Training Utopias
Performance Research Volume 25 Issue No. 8 December 2020
Pg9-10
Bodies move freely through an ambiguous urban “utopia”…or do they? Shot on 16mm film and digital video.
7 mins
Documentation of projects undertaken by Adrien Sina, Tomasz Kitliński and Paweł Leszkowicz. Includes interviews, photos and promotional material from venues including Marlborough Pub and Theatre, Courtauld Institute of Art and Tate Britain.
Part of the Library of Performing Rights ( P3041).
A special edition of the Cooper Gallery periodical: a complexity of perspectives and positions by artists, curators and writers are brought together reflecting on and interrogating the necessarily shifting nature of identity and its other.
Maps the vast stretch of urban settlement outside London bounded by the M25.
A one-off 30 performance produced in relation to Teching Hsieh's Outdoor film. Part of LADA Screens 4.
In his third one-year performance piece, from 26 September 1981 through 26 September 1982, Hsieh spent one year outside, not entering buildings or shelter of any sort, including cars, trains, airplanes, boats, or tents.
This video was part of LADA Screens, and was available online between 12 and 26 October 2015.
An occasional publication that aims to collate and investigate ideas around place, or more specifically: “indeterminate geographies”. In the second issue, the topic is ‘suburb’.
Combines extracts from over 70 international practitioners, companies, collectives and makers from the fields of dance, theatre, music, live and performance art, and activism to form a sourcebook for students, researchers and practitioners.
Critical analyses of cultural spectacle and social identity by eighteen major Australian scholars and practitioners.
Explores our obsession with the lure of distant lands and their promise of the weird and wonderful, the beautiful and grotesque.
Discusses how citizenship is performed today, through the optic of the arts, in particular the performing arts, but also from the perspective of a wide range of academic disciplines such as urbanism and media studies, cultural education and postcolonial theory.
Part of Library of Performing Rights (P3041)