Affecting change through Artist-in-Residencies

Online symposium

Image: Kristin Metho

Dates:
December 8: AiR Network meeting & Keynote, 15:00 – 17:00
December 10: Lectures & working sessions, 10:00 – 17:00
January 14: Air Network meeting and final discussion, 14:00 – 17:00
Location: online
Tickets: free
Please sign up here
Full program below

As 2020, a year of political and social turmoil draws to an end, we look inwards at our own role as artist-in-residencies. AiRs offer time and space for research and development and present new and fresh visual art projects to a local and (inter)national audience. AiRs are places where hospitality, reciprocity and inclusiveness form intrinsic parts of the institution’s ways of working; between the artist and the host institution, as well as between the artist, local residents, and the public.

Residencies are strongly rooted in their local environments, where artists often directly engage with people and social issues from the locality of the residency. Following the social and political unrest and the drastically changed ways of life that face us all, as (small) institutions we are now considering ways to positively impact and shape our local contexts and roles in society. How do we work towards reconfiguring our positions and practice –- in the midst of the corona crisis and global protests against inequality?

Hotel Maria Kapel (HMK), Kunsthuis SYB and AiR Platform NL kindly invite residencies, organisers, artists and their audiences for an online symposium spread over three days. The symposium offers lectures, workshops and panel discussions to explore common challenges and aims to strengthen the Dutch – and international – residency network and art community.

This symposium is an initiative of artist-in-residencies Hotel Maria Kapel and Kunsthuis SYB in collaboration with TransArtists – AiR Platform NL.


FULL PROGRAM

Tuesday December 8
Start of the program
15.00 – 17.00: AiR network meeting with keynote by Clare Butcher including Q&A 

Residing Reciprocally
Curator and art educator Clare Butcher will be in conversation with independent arts practitioner Thato Mogotsi. The pair will discuss questions of context-responsiveness, knowledge production and refusal in relation to the shifting role of residencies in contemporary art ecologies of the global pandemic, as well as historical case studies.

 


Thursday December 10

Morning program

10.00 – 10.15  Welcome and introductions
10.20 – 11.00  Miriam Wistreich – Hotel MariaKapel: Slow Burn: Building Institutions of Care including Q&A

Who do we care about and for? How can we qualify care as a feminist politics and avoid the pitfalls of caring badly or too much? How can we build practices and spaces of care within the limits of an exploitative system, with which we are all complicit? In 2020 HMK takes time to reflect on what it means to host and care for artists, bringing  together a range of voices to think about the politics of the  artist residency and how we can navigate through the landscape of the art world with care. 

11.00 – 11.30  Sekai Makoni & G: A Pair of Clogs and Two Brits

Join Sekai and G for a drink of your choice. Lay down and get physically comfortable to talk about the uncomfortable. Think of it as questions to ask yourself and why they still may need answering.

11.30 – 12.00  Moderated discussion with speakers and audience

Afternoon program (sign up needed)
14.00 – 16.30 Work sessions:

Anika Mariam Ahmed: Intercultural Dialogue
The artistic space offers room for different positions and perspectives. But within an art institution there are also stories and contexts that we can overlook, ignore or take for granted. This workshop investigates the relevance of different contexts for an artistic practice. Which sources and stories are relevant when making your work and how much do you want to share with an audience? What are our own blind spots in our ideas about art history and stories?
Please note: Participants will be asked to read two texts before the workshop, which will then be discussed – these will be sent to participants prior to the event.

Claudia Zeiske – Devron Projects: Hosting Translocality
Residencies often contribute to a locality in unexpected ways: in programmes in which local history, identity and current issues are the subject of research, through exchanges between artists, local residents and other experts. At the same time they relate to an (inter)national art discourse. What are the different ways — and conditions — for generating these specific localities, in the short and long term?

Ika Sienkiewicz-Nowacka – Ujazdowski Castle: Care, community, Laboratory
Nowadays one could easily recognize “care” – for today’s world, for humans and nature, as an essence and focus of artistic practice. Residence programs on the other hand worldwide continue to serve as an infrastructure and safe space to artists’ creativity, facilitating the need for space and time to reflect, connect, and engage in experiment and production. Who stand behind those institutional activities facilitating care towards the artists?  In caring for residents, how might one learn to care for themselves? And what is the future of care and its role as a tool for artistic activities?

16.30 – 17.00 Round up and closing session

 



Thursday January 14, 2021

Air network meeting and final discussion, with contribution by artist larose larose
Times to be confirmed.

 


About the contributors

Clare Butcher is a curator and educator from Zimbabwe who cooks and collaborates as part of her practice. She is currently Curator for Public Programming and Learning with the Toronto Biennial of Art’s team. Clare is wondering what the future of gathering and learning together might be, and how art education could transform the curriculum. Previously she co-organized the program unsettling Rietveld Sandberg with Judith Leysner and was aneducation coordinator for documenta 14. Clare has worked with museums, academies and community groups and holds an MFA from the School of Missing Studies, an MA in Curating the Archive from the University of Cape Town, as well as participated in the De Appel Curatorial Program.

Thato Mogotsi is a Johannesburg-based independent arts practitioner with a practice that spans the curatorial, photography and archival research. After an initial start in South African print media houses as a picture researcher, she has since collaborated on and collectively curated contemporary art projects and exhibitions in varying institutions, including Wits School of Arts and the Wits Art Museum the Johannesburg Art Gallery, ROOM Gallery & Projects, the Market Photo Workshop, Constitution Hill, the Apartheid Museum in Johannesburg and Rhodes University (UCKAR), Grahamstown. Mogotsi was a curatorial recipient of the Thami Mnyele Foundation’s Residency Award, Amsterdam, in early 2019.

Miriam Wistreich is a curator, educator and occasional writer and currently Creative Director at Hotel Maria Kapel, a residency and exhibition space in Hoorn, Noord-Holland. Together with artists Griet Menschaert and Maja Bekan she led HMK’s “year of reflection and redirection” through an experimental program entitled Slow Burn, which has tried to understand how we can build institutions of care within neoliberal capitalism. 

Sekai Makoni is an artist, podcaster, writer and workshop facilitator. Her work explores Blackness, particularly centreing the voices of Black women in Europe through her podcast Between Ourselves. Her graduate work explores the Black church, faith rituals and how to reimagine those spaces as queer affirming. As the artist in residence at Hotel Maria Kapel her work explored notions of rest, slowing down and guilt as it pertains to Black women and her current work considers the whiteness of the holistic health space and focuses on African diasporic approaches to maternal and menstrual health. Sekai also hosts panels and workshops on themes such as active listening and anti-racism as part of her artistic practice.

A subject of the neoliberal mobile economy of the arts, larose larose was born in Montréal (CA), holds an MA from the Dutch Art Institute (NL), and currently lives in Porto (PT). Their work in video, performance and installation seeks to counter the contamination of queer imaginaries by heteronormative politics, global capitalism and imperialist pop culture.

G is an Artist and Death doula currently at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten.

Anika Mariam Ahmed
Anika Mariam Ahmed is a painter living in Groningen, the Netherlands. She did her BFA in Painting and BA in English Literature in Dhaka, Bangladesh and MFA at Frank Mohr Institute in Groningen. Her paintings are intimate testaments of being present in the world, often from the viewpoint of an adolescent and in dialogue with everyday encounters. She is currently giving a workshop on intercultural dialogue at Frank Mohr Institute. 

Ika Sienkiewicz-Nowackais a manager of culture, curator and founder of the U–jazdowski residency programme in Warsaw. She graduated from Inter-Faculty Individual Studies in the Humanities (University of Warsaw) and holds the European Diploma for Culture Management (Brussels). She is a member of the Programme Council of Akademie Schloss Solitude. Her research interests centre on the significance of residencies within the fields of artistic and institutional practice. She carries out projects in which visual arts become a tool of social change and are used to shape and promote alternative models of social development.

Claudia Zeiske is the founder of Deveron Projects an international residency programme in the market town of Huntly in North-East Scotland. Here, the town is the venue rather than a gallery or arts centre. With a focus on the rural, Claudia has a unique curatorial interest based on a balanced approach between artistic criticality and community involvement through developing projects with artists from across the globe.
www.deveron-projects.com

Harriet Rose Morley is a multi-disciplinary artist, maker, educator, and facilitator. She works across the disciplines of public art, sculpture, architectural spaces, furniture design, urban planning, and alternative education. Her work and projects often challenge our conceptions of the function of public art, urban objects and space; how they do but often don’t function, and how they can be sources of humorous critique of urban architectural space and planning.

Ika Sienkiewicz-Nowacka is the Head of the Artist Residencies Department at Ujazdowski Castle Centre for Contemporary Art. Ujazdowski is a public institution that has been supporting, collecting, documenting and presenting Polish and international art since 1985. U–jazdowski is located in a former royal residence, reconstructed to its current shape in the 1980s.


This event is initiated by Hotel Maria Kapel, Transartists and Kunsthuis SYB.

Hotel Maria Kapel (HMK) is an artist-in-residence and exhibition space for contemporary visual arts in the city centre of Hoorn. HMK aims to support early practice artists in the production of new work and to promote exchanges between national and international artists, cultural institutions and the public. HMK’s current annual program Slow Burn investigates the concept of care and asks how we can build institutions of care within a capitalist society with which we are all complicit.

AiR Platform NL organizes, together with the AiR organizations and their partners, meetings and programs for mutual exchange of knowledge and experience. Building on the outcomes of previous meetings, research and symposia such as ‘Working on the margins’ in 2018 in cooperation with Kunstloc in Tilburg, TransArtists’ AiR Platform NL works together with HMK and Kunsthuis SYB to investigate the key question of this symposium together with the guest speakers, the AiR organizations, funds and policymakers in the Netherlands.

The symposium is kindly supported by the Pictoright Fonds.