Catalogue > By Keyword > memory
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The Wild Places
An account of visits to various remote places in order to evoke their spirit of wildness punctuated with reflections on climate change, on destruction of habitat, and on the matters of time and belonging. This item is part of the Study Room Guide to Remoteness (P2600).
A Field Guide to Getting Lost
A Field Guide to Getting Lost is a provocative investigation into the nature of loss, losing and being lost. This item is part of the Study Room Guide to Remoteness (P2600).
Diaspora, Memory, Place: David Hammons, Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Pamela Z
An indepth analysis of the work of three significant African diaspora artists – David Hammons, Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons and Pamela Z – with essays examining site specific installations and peformances concieved by these artists for Dak'Art 2004, the Biennale of Contemporary African Art
COLAB Editions: The Publication
The Publication follows the journey of ten collaborations, created by Co-Lab performance art program together with Savvy Contemporary Art Laboratory in Berlin.
Alice Anderson: From Dance to Sculpture
Catalogue of Alice Anderson's 'From Dance to Sculpture' exhibition.
Tania Bruguera
A collection of essays on the installation and performance work of Cuban artist Tania Bruguera. Contributors: Domenico Scudero, Lucrezia Cippitelli, Irma Arestizabal, Roberto Pinto, Simonetta Lux
Trans-global readings: Crossing theatrical boundaries
Gathers the voices of unique artists from the worlds of theatre, music and performance to discuss process and the making of interdisciplinary work. Contributors: Tim Etchells, Rinde Eckert, Richard Foreman, Peter Gabriel, David Greig, Guillermo Gomez-Pena, Phelim McDermott, Peter Sellars
Memories That Smell Like Gasoline
David Wojnarowicz explores memory, the longing for love and sexuality in the specter of AIDS. Cartoons, paintings and writings.
‘That Was Us’ : Contemporary Irish Theatre and Performance
A collection of critical essays and artist reflections considering some of the richest and most important developments to take place in contemporary Irish theatre and performance.
The Stuart Hall Project
John Akomfrah presents an intimate and engaging portrait of Stuart Hall, exploring themes of memory, race and identity through the juxtaposition of events from Hall's life, and a discourse on the wider social and political events of the second half of the twentieth century
