Seminar Indigestion Languages ​​and Visual Policies

Languages ​​of Indigestion and Visual Policies is the title of Daniel Sepúlveda's seminar and performance reading. The notions of aesthetics, language and visuality are crossed by the white colonial heritage, a factor that determines the ways in which these concepts were materialized throughout the so-called universal history. The seminar “Languages ​​of indigestion and visual policies” is proposed as a place to put these categories in tension, in order to imagine other forms of perception that, in turn, intervene in the field of production of the sensory to disengage / disable oculocentrism and its colonial dictatorship (Valencia, 2019).

 This seminar lasts 8 months and will be held in person and online with several invited professors and intervention actions in the public space. We are calling on all artists, researchers and people interested in the topics raised by the seminar. The first block has the following form: -visual languages ​​and coloniality of seeing -cartographies of coloniality, oculocentrism and its colonial dictatorship ** @ laryssamachada will be our first invited teacher in this first block

 

 

The Seminar on Indigestion Languages ​​and Visual Policies (@cipei_) along with the 
# CAPACETE2019_2020 program features:

Workshop with Laryssa Machada * on days 2 (from 17 to 20h) and December 3 (from 16 to 19hr)

SOMETIMES TO ACCESS THE LAND WE NEED TO FALL
the fiction of the end has arrived; One of the paths passed through the leaves is to double time space. 
It's all made up now, the world I'll tell you. ///
"Sometimes to Access the Earth We Must Fall" are imaginary (and energetic) rituals of reconnecting 
with our [non] memories to enter the future from a critical eye on colonial historicity and the 
transit of non-hegemonic bodies through the city. . Through the construction of photoperformances 
that include symbols / objects / gestures from Amerindian and aphrodiasporic populations, the idea 
is to visit the healing process that racialized bodies build daily from their [re] creations of reality.
 In the ambition to redesign the future, it is impossible to do so from the oblivion of these violence.
 Thus, we evoke imaginary rituals to realize the axes of cleansing, discharging negative ebos, 
historical quizilas.
The purpose of the workshop is to visit the participant dxs memories seeking to double time-space, 
building new imagery references and rewriting the historicity of the land we ascended. 
|| LIMITED VACANCIES || * @ laryssamachada is a visual artist, photographer and filmmaker.
 builds images as rituals of decolonization and reinvention of reality. His works discuss 
the construction of image about LGBT's, indigenous people, quilombolas, people of the street. 
believe in the weather and storms.
This seminar is made possible by @princeclausfund



The second block of the seminar Languages of Indigestion and Visual Policies begins in the second week of January.
In collaboration with @pencecoletivo @cipei_ and our resident Daniel Sepúlveda.

The notions of aesthetics, language and visuality are crossed by the white-colonial heritage, a factor that determines the ways in which these concepts were materialized throughout the so-called universal history.
The seminar [Languages] of indigestion and visual policies is proposed as a space to put these categories in tension, in order to imagine other forms of perception that, in turn, intervene in the field of production of the sensory to disable / disable oculocentrism and
his colonial dictatorship (Valencia, 2019) - Burn after indigestion, first meeting of this second bloc. El Consumo de Imágenes de Linchamientos, Raiford, Leigh.




Residency CAPACETE + Mophradat

 

Open call: Residency for a curator at Capacete in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, April 1 to June 30, 2019
Deadline: September 14

دعوة مفتوحة: إقامة فنية لقيم فني/قيمة فنية مدتها ثلاثة أشهر في كاباسيتى في ريودي جانيرو، البرازيل، من ١ ابريل حتى ٣٠ يونيو/حزيران، ٢٠١٩
أخر موعد للتقدم: ١٤ سبتمبر/أيلول

Mophradat in collaboration with Capacete in Rio de Janeiro, #Brazil, is offering a residency opportunity for one curator from the Arab world to develop their practice in a professional context. The residency lasts for three months, with flights, accommodation, visa and insurance costs, and monthly stipend provided, and includes the opportunity to participate in all of Capacete’s programs and a suggested program of visits to galleries and sites of interest in Rio de Janeiro, as well as to meet arts practitioners in the Brazilian art scene. More details and to apply: http://mophradat.org/projects-we-organize/residencies/apply/

تتعاون «مفردات» مع كاباسيتى في ريودي جانيروعلى فرصة إقامة للقيمين الفنيين من العالم العربي لتطوير ممارستهم في سياق محترف وإنتاج مشاريع جديدة تعكس تجاربهم وبحثهم. تستمر الإقامة ثلاثة أشهر ويتم تغطية تكاليف السفر والإقامة والفيزا والتأمين والمصاريف اليومية وتضمن فرصة الإشتراك في كل برامج كاباسيتى وبرنامج مقترح لزيارات لمعارض ومواقع مثيرة للاهتمام في ريودي جانيرو بالإضافة لمقابلة ممارسين فنيين في المشهد الفني البرازيلي. للمزيد من المعلومات ولطلب الالتحاق، إضغط هنا: http://mophradat.org/projects-we-organize/residencies/apply/
طلب الالتحاق باللغة الانجليزية فقط لأنها سوف تكون لغة عمل الإقامة.


What’s a (art) school to do?

 

 

 

The great thing about art schools is that all the stereotypes that they carry along are
true. The lazy idler, the oversensitivity, the abstruse psychobabble, it’s all true. And
it’s the best part. The very last leftovers of the artist’s lifestyle have been perverted by
our late capitalist society, which has naturalized its vocabulary of performance and
personal achievement, emptying their meaning. Can the art school still be a place for
resisting the dominant values, and all that is taken for granted? This is what we would
like to discuss publically in collaboration with the International Art Residency
CAPACETE and the School of Visual Arts Parque Lage.

François Piron is an art critic and a curator. He runs the post-graduate program at the
art school in Lyon (France), an artists’ residency within an art academy.
He will share experiences with the five resident artists of this year: Sophie T. Lvoff
from the USA, Irene Melix from Germany, Lou Masduraud and Georgia René-
Worms from France, and Maha Yammine from Lebanon.