Skip to main content

Field Notes: Two Destination Language

Notes

In June 2020, a group of 23 creative practitioners came together in virtual spaces to think, talk, listen and dream, learning from each other and through the act of dialogue. These writings reflect some of their thinking, on where we are now and some of the paths forward. FIELD notes is a call for change with care and transparency at its core.

Editor Alister Lownie
Publisher Two Destination Language
ISBN 978-1-8381515-0-8
Reference P4191
Date 2020
Type Publication

Keywords

Similar items

Small Acts: Performance, the Millennium and the Marking of Time

Artist/Author: Adrian Heathfield | Reference: P4264 | ISBN: 1-901033-57-0 | Type: Publication

Documents the work of fourteen performance artists who marked the personal and political resonances of the new Millennium in a series of site-specific actions. Contrasting with the epic, populist and homogenising nature of the official celebrations, these works focused on forgotten and ephemeral experiences, enacting small but significant interventions in the public sphere.

Becoming an Artwork

Artist/Author: Boris Groys | Reference: 4255 | ISBN: 978-1-5095-5197-2

Before we begin to practice self-design, we find ourselves already designed by the gaze of others. That is why the practice of self-design mostly takes a critical and confrontational turn. We want to bring others to see us in the way we want to be seen – not only during our earthly life but also after our death. This is a complicated struggle, and the aim of this book is to describe and analyze it.

Nomography

Artist/Author: Eloy Fernández Porta | Reference: P4254 | ISBN: 978-1-5095-4395-3 | Type: Publication

This book proposes a provocative interpretation of the relationship between the normative imagination defined as a cognitive mode characteristic of the era of affective capitalism. Porta analyzes gender, fashion, artistic creation, and surveillance from the perspective of a regulatory drive, a continuously renovated and imperative push for normalcy that now comes not from the state or mass media, but from citizens themselves. These, united in a spontaneous popular court, armed with smartphones, and driven by a juridical compulsion, become the axes of societies of control. In this way, the distinctive pathology of our times gives rise to a globalized game: normopathy for all.

RESHAPE: A Workbook to Reimagine the Art World

Artist/Author: Various | Reference: P4241 | ISBN: 978-90-743-5157-7 | Type: Publication

This Workbook is the result of RESHAPE – REflect, SHAre, Practice, Experiment, a bottom-up, collaborative research and development project that brought together artists, art workers, and organisations from Europe and the southern Mediterranean to create alternative ways of working towards a fairer arts ecosystem. The project was a response to the challenges of the art sector, infusing its practices with fairness, solidarity, and sustainability and aligning them with with society and its evolutions. The authors – including artists, scholars, and critical thinkers – analyse and contextualise current challenges, thus outlining the spirit of our times that informs and inspires the prototypes.

America: The Troubled Continent of Thought

Artist/Author: Avital Ronell | Reference: P4239 | ISBN: 978-1-5095-6027-1 | Type: Publication

What position does America occupy in the recent history of western philosophy?

At a time when the syntagm “America” has come to crystallize a certain understanding of the world order, interrogating the place that it occupies in our intellectual and haunted tradition is also a way to engage critically with the violence attached to it. America’s self-understanding involves violence, but this violence may well be different from what we imagined.

Playing With Fire Live Reading Documentation

Artist/Author: Jet Moon | Digital Reference: EF5403 | Type: Digital File

Documentation from an online live reading of peer to peer survivor writing organised by the artist Jet Moon in April 2021. This reading features commissioned contributions read by Jet, Dolly Sen, Elinor Rowlands, Ayotomi IF, Andie Macario, and readings by attendees of  two peer to peer survivor writing workshops organised by Jet in March 2021.

 

 

 

 

LADA Screens: Sahera Khan in Conversation

Artist/Author: Sahera Khan | Digital Reference: EF5398 | Type: Digital File

Video documentation of an artist conversation with Sahera Khan on 1st March 2024 at The Garrett Centre. This conversation followed screening of Sahera’s film My Glow as part of our LADA Screens programme on Voice, Care and Healing. Following the screening Sahera engaged in a Q&A with the audience and gave a short BSL lesson.

In My Glow (2023), Aa mature, Deaf, Muslim, British Sign Language (BSL) mother shares her pregnancy journey through the pandemic, and how she coped with limited communication with others such as the health service.

This is a video file. For a version with closed captions, visit our vimeo channel

LADA Screens: Lucy Sheen in Conversation

Artist/Author: Lucy Sheen | Digital Reference: EF5397 | Type: Digital File

Video documentation of an artist conversation with Lucy Sheen on 28th June 2024 at The Garrett Centre. This conversation followed screening of Lucy’s film Abandoned, Adopted Here as part of our LADA Screens programme on Voice, Care and Healing. Following the screening Lucy gave a performative reading of the poem I Know This Face, followed by a panel on the complexities of post-pandemic working in cultural and performative spaces for British East and Southeast Asians. With Jennifer Lim (Chair), Rosa Fong, Lucy Sheen, and Moi Tran.

Abandoned Adopted Here explores the nature of belonging in the British society and the unheard, silenced, and often erased voices of British East and Southeast Asians with mixed heritages and complex identities.

This is a video file. For a version with closed captions, visit our vimeo channel

LADA Screens: Lateisha Davine Lovelace-Hanson in Conversation

Artist/Author: Lateisha Davine Lovelace-Hanson | Digital Reference: EF5396 | Type: Digital File

Video documentation of an artist conversation with Lateisha Davine Lovelace-Hanson, on 26th APril, 2024 at The Garrett Centre. This conversation followed a screening of Lateisha’s film The Gift as part of our LADA Screens programme on Voice, Care and Healing. Lateisha was  joined by collaborators Kes Gill-Martin and Ava Riby-Williams for a discussion and interactive sonic/music offerings.

The Gift (2022) is a single-take style short film, weaving together performance for camera, original sound composition and poetic storytelling that fuses speculative fiction and autobiography. We are invited into the artist’s home, to witness them playfully uncover (and reclaim) stories of grief, body, love, nature and home-making.

This is a video file. For a version with closed captions, visit our vimeo channel

Criticism : In Search of Its Placing

Artist/Author: Alja Lobnik, Simon Kardum, Jasmina Založnik, Pia Brezavšček | Editor: Andrea Kopač, Alja Lobnik | Reference: A0938 | ISBN: 1318-0509 | Type: Article

From the special edition of Maska on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the Contemporary Dance Association Slovenia. In Slovenian and English.

Exercises For Solidarity As Performance Art

Artist/Author: Tomaž Simatović | Reference: A0920 | Type: Article

This article presents the research and performance practice behind ‘The Performing Solidarity Project’.

Training Artists in Times of Crisis

Artist/Author: Laura Bissel, Gary Gardiner, Sarah Hopfinger, Rachel O'Neill | Editor: felipe Cervera, Elizabeth De Roza, Michael Earley, Richard Gough | Reference: A0917 | Type: Article

Training Utopias

Performance Research Volume 25 Issue No. 8 December 2020

Pg42-50

 

Donation

£