Hostings 13 - GHost-dance III: time travelling mediums
February 17th 6.30 - 9.30
Central St. Martins College of Arts and Design, LVH E003
Granary Square London, Nr Kings Cross
London
N1C 4AA
GHost hosts an evening of presentations and performative presentations exploring the idea of ghosts as material transmutations in time.
GHost Hostings 13 is supported by the Centre for Performance, Central St Martins School of Arts
Hostings 13 image - Anne Robinson Is It You
PROGRAMME
Vicky Smith Haunting a medium through physical residue.
Jessica Worden Materialising the Body: Material Phenomena and Sartre's Theory of Viscosity.
Anne Robinson Is It You? Time travel and Physical Thinking.
Eleanor Bowen Drawing and Longing
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Vicky Smith’s practice incorporates experimental animation and performance. Her work will be shown at The Tate Britain this Feb, 2014, and has recently been exhibited at: No. w.here, London (2013) Lo and Behold, London (2012/2013), 100 Feet touring (2013-14) Edinburgh Film Festival (2012), Melbourne Experimental Film Festival (2012). Recently published work includes: Full Body Film in Sequence (2013). She was Workshop Organiser at the LFMC , lectured in Film Studies at UWE, and is currently at UCA, teaching Digital Film and Screen Arts and researching into the aura and trace using films made without cameras.
Jessica Worden. Materialising the Body: Material Phenomena and Sartre's Theory of Viscosity (because slimy substances stick to the hands , and clothes, and because they stain) — Sartre, 1943.
Sartre describes the viscous in terms of its qualities, trying to create parameters around a state that is ‘always fleeing’. (Sartre, 1943) There is ample critique of Sartre's theory of viscosity (the slimy)— particularly the use of feminine metaphors to describe its negative attributes. By applying the properties of viscosity to the role of material phenomena in altering definition(s) of the female body, it is possible to underline the radical nature of these performances and potentially reclaim the viscous. Ectoplasms have been extensively cataloged and documented since the 1880's; the advent of their distinctly material ormations occurred simultaneously with the changing roles of women in society. Viscosity defies definition; it is my intention to suggest through visual and textual re-appropriation ways in which women utilised ectoplasmic manifestations to influence the definition their bodies and modes of (re)production by embracing viscosity.
I am a Dutch/American artist currently undertaking a practice-based PhD in Breathlessness in Performance in the Contemporary Performance department at Brunel University. I have been working with live art since 2005, having also run a live-arts platform from 2006-2008 in Rotterdam, NL. My practice is influenced by photography, but based in performance writing. I produce artist books, installations and performance pieces. My aim is to explore writing-as-performance and the interplay between the visual and the textual
Anne Robinson. Is It You? Time Travel and Physical Thinking
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Anne Robinson’s practice encompasses painting, moving image and performance and is concerned with the perception and politics of time passing, recently working with the Commonist Gallery, ‘Winter Shuffle’, Supernormal, Psi19 and GHost IV following a PhD on temporality, film and painting. In summer 2013, she took part in the ‘DeTours’ residency inMarseilles, resulting in the performative song-film ‘Inside Out Blues’. She works with film as an artist and educator, currently senior lecturer in Film at LMU, curating the event One More Time there in 2011.
Eleanor Bowen. Drawing and Longing (performed text with slide projections)
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