L’École du soir Cinéma #4
| INFINITY minus Infinity

Yes
Sit-in Curriculum #3 L’École du soir Cinéma #4
INFINITY minus Infinity
A close up of a black woman's face with a triangle painted on her forhead. Another woman with a triangle on her forehead is superimposed standing full height next to the looming head. A mic boom cuts across the image, the set is purple.
Design and Art

Screening

The Otolith Group, INFINITY minus Infinity (2019)
Duration: 56 minutes 51 seconds
4K video, colour, stereo sound

INFINITY minus Infinity draws on several inspirations: the modernist verse of the Jamaican poet Una Marson, the alluvial invocations of the Martinican philosopher and poet Édouard Glissant, the black feminist poetics of the Brazilian philosopher Denise Ferreira da Silva, and the racial formation of geology theorised by British geographer Kathryn Yusoff amongst others in order to envision a black feminist cosmos animated by the principles of mathematical nihilism. The phrase “hostile environment” invokes the covert policy of targeting migrants enacted by the UK Conservative government since 2014. It stands for the criminalization of the Afro-Caribbean women and men that migrated to Britain in the 1950s to help reconstruct its industrial infrastructure after the war. The recent effort to detain and deport the women and men of the “Windrush generation”—so called because they followed in the wake of the men that emigrated to Britain from the Caribbean on board the HMS Empire Windrush in 1948—reveals the commitment of the British State to disarticulating the forms of attachment and belonging of Afro-Caribbean settlement that helped decolonize the British empire from within. 

INFINITY minus Infinity extends its confrontation with the Tory policy of the ongoing hostile environment into an interscalar movement between times and spaces. It brings together dance, performance, music, recital, and digital animation to compose a transhistorical zone in which the unpayable debts of racial capitalism cannot be separated from the ongoing crimes of climate catastrophe. INFINITY minus Infinity enacts the past distress, present duress and future dread of the British Capitalocene through the assembly of a chorus of transtemporal deities whose utterances, expressions, gestures, and movements allude to the accumulated times and spaces of the United Kingdom’s environmental hostility. INFINITY minus Infinity confronts the compounded timelines of the afterlife of slavery enacted by British imperial capitalism with the forces and the fictions of 21st Century black feminist digital cosmology. Commissioned by Sharjah Architecture Triennial SAT01, 2019. Co-produced with Z33 House for Contemporary Art, Design and Architecture.

The Re-Action of Black Performance
A response by Sabrina Henry and Ashanti Harris

The Re-Action of Black Performance is a British Art Network research group led by Sabrina Henry (Curator, CCA Glasgow) and Ashanti Harris (multidisciplinary artist, Glasgow) which explores how the state of being reactive (re-active) is used as a theme in Black British performance art; not only as an act of agency and resistance but additionally as a creative catalyst in the form, process, intention and legacy of the works created.

In response to the film Infinity Minus Infinity (2019), by the Otolith Group, Sabrina and Ashanti are collaborating with Award winning choreographer and Director Mele Broomes to facilitate a live, improvised, call and response performance, exploring the themes of the film alongside some of the research gathered as part of The Re-Action of Black Performance. The improvisation will be performed by  Scotland-based, BPOC performance artists, each working with their own embodied medium - a dancer, a DJ, a performance artist, a costume designer, and a multidisciplinary artist. Mele Broomes, Plantainchipps, Saoirse Amira Anis, Marios Ento-Engkolo.

With support from British Art Network, Cooper Gallery, and Centre for Contemporary Arts Glasgow 
 

Schedule

5.45pm
Doors open

6pm
Intro: The Otolith Group (audio recording)
Screening: INFINITY minus Infinity (56 minutes 51 seconds)
Artist response: Ashanti Harris and Sabrina Henry with collaborators Mele Broomes, Plantainchipps, Saoirse Amira Anis, Marios Ento-Engkolo

8pm 
Doors close
 

Booking 

The screening event is free and open to all. Book a ticket via Eventbrite.
The screening is raising funds for medical Aid for Palestinians, donate the cost of a cinema ticket or what you can directly to MAP. 
QR code available at the event. 

Free
A close up of a black woman's face with a triangle painted on her forhead. Another woman with a triangle on her forehead is superimposed standing full height next to the looming head. A mic boom cuts across the image, the set is purple.

L’École du soir Cinéma 

Inspired by Senegalese film director Ousmane Sembène’s concept of cinema as ‘night school’ or l’école du soir for collective study, Cooper Gallery will transform into a temporary cinema over four evenings of screenings of moving image by The Otolith Group. Each screening will be complemented by audio readings from The Otolith Group and responses from invited artists and writers in Scotland. These screenings from part of The Ignorant Art School Sit-in Curriculum #3

> View all events
> More about the exhibition
 

Biographies

Ashanti Harris is a multi-disciplinary artist, researcher and lecturer, working to disrupt historical narratives and reimagine them from a Caribbean diasporic perspective. Ashanti originally trained in sculpture and so, engaging with materials and physical making processes is an important part of her work. Alongside this, she is drawn to the expanded ways an artwork can be experienced and this has led her to work with performance, movement and dance as elements within her multidisciplinary art practice. She works with both sculpture and performance as processes which embody cultures, ancestral legacies and human lived experience, physically embodying histories, through the act of making. 

Recent solo exhibitions and commissions include: Walking With The Ancestors in Joy and Healing, Performance Now Commission for Take Me Somewhere Festival, Glasgow (2023); A Carnival Of Overlapping Histories, Platform, Glasgow (2023); Black Gold, Fringe of Colour film festival, Edinburgh, (2023); Jerwood Staging Series 2022, Jerwood Arts, London (2022); Dancing a Peripheral Quadrille, Edinburgh Sculpture Workshop, Edinburgh (2022). Ashanti is also co-founder of Project X Dance - platforming dance of the African and Caribbean diaspora in Scotland.

 

Sabrina Henry is a costume designer and curator based in Scotland whose practise uses research and collaboration, with artists of various disciplines, to connect pre-colonial traditions with the British experience as a way to re-imagine the future.  Sabrina researches performance and ritual traditions of the Black Atlantic as a way to re-remember diasporic identity in a contemporary context.  She is interested in dance and movement as a method of non-verbal communication that connects universally and how costume can be used as the supporting character in performance practises.

Sabrina's most recent costume work includes RESET (Alberta Whittle) for Freize and Wrapped up in This (Mele Broomes)Sabrina is also a curator at the Centre for Contemporary Art, Glasgow.

 

Mele Broomes is an artist and director whose work embodies stories from the collective voice, creating visceral and sensory collaborations. Her work GRIN was presented at Battersea Art Centre, London, alongside the film production which was also screened at Theatre Centre Canada and as part of Cultura Inglesa Festival in Brazil. In 2021 Mele was commissioned by Scottish Dance Theatre, where she created Amethyst, a theatre production and digital publication. Mele is co-founder of Project X Dance and was co-director (2017-2021), an organisation that champions dance and performance within the African and Caribbean Diaspora in Scotland. Mele is the director and founder of Body Remedy, a [forming] ecology that centres on physical practice for self-recovery for black people and people of colour.

Mele was the recipient of the Total Theatre Award for VOID, a collaboration with MHz in 2018. She has presented work at Take Me Somewhere, Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA), Glasgow; White Chapel Gallery, London; Daughter of Cups Festival, Isle of  Mull; BUZZ CUT, Glasgow; London Contemporary Dance School; The Centre For The Less Good Idea, JJohannesburg; Dundee Rep Theatre; Festival del Silenzio, Milan; SPLAYED Festival, London; Fringe of Colour Films, Edinburgh; Edinburgh Fringe Festival; Traverse Theatre, Jupiter Art Land, Edinburgh; Dance International Glasgow; Tramway, Glasgow;Dance Base, Edinburgh; CONTACT, Manchester; and Black Gold Arts, Manchester. 

Mele is one of the board of directors for Take Me Somewhere, mentor for Music Space artist development programme and various artists through her independent practice. Previously mentor for Dancers Emerging Bursary Scheme at Dance Base and Contemporary Performance Practice third years for their module Collaborations at Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.

 

Glasgow based DJ, Plantainchipps is all about upbeat and fast-paced sounds. Music that uplifts and excites all those that listen to it. Her selection covers such genres as afrobeats, house and dancehall, however, she enjoys exploring other genres and adding them to her mix. 

Plantainchipps has played a variety of gigs around Glasgow in venues that include The Berkley Suite, The Art School and Stereo, as well as supported such artists like Peach, Shygirl, Bonvaventure, Jamz Supernova and Lorraine James. She has always had an interest in music and the different genres that it includes and occasionally makes some of her own under the name Nwanneka.

 

Saoirse Amira Anis is a Dundee-based artist and curator whose practice prioritises radical care, informality and empathy. Saoirse’s work is informed primarily by Black queer literature, her personal ancestry, and her own body as it moves through the world. She considers the ways in which the body holds ancestral and lived memories – particularly in relation to feelings of guilt, shame and inadequacy.

Recent solo exhibitions include: Symphony For A Fraying Body, Dundee Contemporary Arts, 2023; Breach of a fraying body, performance for Art Night, Dundee, 2023; For No Other Reason Than Joy, Cample-line, Dumfries, 2022.  

 

Marios Ento-Engkolo is a Glasgow-based dance artist, who is interested in storytelling and emotional expression through movement. Marios is half Greek and Half Cameroonian and was born and raised in Athens, Greece. His journey with movement started in 2017 and has become the primary medium of expression, connection and release ever since. Marios has worked with many artists and dance forms ranging from Street Dance, such as Hip-Hop and Afrobeats, to Contemporary and Experimental movement. Experimental dance and contemporary performance have become his main mediums, as they allow him to combine many different art forms and connect with what feels authentic. Marios has participated in various projects and programs, such as performing for the European Championships in 2018 with Ignite Theatre, Dance International Glasgow 2022 with the dance company Three60, in which he is a member. Lastly, he undertook the Dancers Emerging Bursary Scheme, where he was under the mentoring of Mele Broomes.

 

The Otolith Group is an award-winning artist led collective founded by Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshun in 2002.

Their moving image, audio works, performances and installations are characterized by an engagement with the legacies and potentialities of diasporic futurisms that explore modes of temporal anomalies, anthropic inversions and synthetic alienation.

Approaching curation as an artistic practice of building intergenerational and cross-cultural platforms, the collective has been influential in critically introducing particular works of artists such as Chris Marker, Harun Farocki, Anand Patwardhan, Etel Adnan, Black Audio Film Collective, Sue Clayton, Mani Kaul, Peter Watkins, and Chimurenga in the UK, US, Europe, and Lebanon.
 

Access

The gallery is on two floors. First floor has ramped access and disabled toilet.

Second floor is accessible via lift and for wheelchair access via a stairclimber. The screening will take place on the second floor. 

Please email in advance if you require lift or stairclimber access so we can arrange support.

Large print versions of the exhibition information handout are available, please ask our Guides.

All enquiries please contact: [email protected]

Image credit

The Otolith Group, INFINITY minus Infinity, 2019 (video still)
Courtesy the artist and LUX.

Funding support

The Ignorant Art School at Cooper Gallery, DJCAD is supported by the National Lottery through Creative Scotland. 
Ashanti Harris and Sabrina Henry's response is supported with funds from the British Art Network.

British Art Network logo block Paul Mellon Centre Yale Arts Council England Tate
Logo block. Cooper Gallery, DJCAD, Creative Scotland, National Lottery Funded
Cooper Gallery
Cooper Gallery Cooper Gallery The Ignorant Art School Sit-in Curriculum #3 The Ignorant Art School | Sit-in 3 | The Otolith Group
No
Yes
Screening with artist response by Ashanti Harris and Sabrina Henry & collaborators (In-person)

L’École du soir Cinéma #3
| In the Year of the Quiet Sun

Yes
Sit-in Curriculum #3 L’École du soir Cinéma #3
In the Year of the Quiet Sun
A postage stamp Gold Coast Ghana Independence 6th March 1957 with a profile of Queen Elizabeth II
Design and Art

Screening

The Otolith Group, In the Year of the Quiet Sun (2013)
Duration: 33 minutes 57 seconds
HD video, colour, stereo sound

This video essay takes its name from the solar phenomenon that occurs every eleven years when the sun’s surface cools enough to allow observatories to study solar activity. From November 1964 to November 1965, the countries of the world, including many newly independent African states, issued stamps to commemorate the first scientific expedition to study the surface of the sun.

As these stamps turned their face towards the sun, they overlooked the instability on the ground in Africa’s newly independent states: the military coups planned by soldiers against the governments of Nigeria and Ghana, the popular and murderous uprisings in Zanzibar, the crisis of sovereignty in the Congo instigated by the Force Publique, sustained by Union Miniere de haut Katanga and worsened by the intervention of the United Nations.

In this work, the astronomical time of the quiet sun converges with the political calendar of conferences that took place in cities such as Bandung, Cairo, Belgrade, Accra, Addis Ababa, Saniquelle and Casablanca throughout the 1950s and 1960s, when politicians, activists and journalists gathered to debate and plan the continental programme of Pan Africanist policy.

In the Year of the Quiet Sun focuses on magnified details of postage stamps generating scenes that allude, often indirectly, to the making and the unmaking of polity on a continental scale.
 

Schedule

5.45pm
Doors open

6pm
Intro: The Otolith Group (audio recording)
Screening: In the Year of the Quiet Sun (33 minutes 57 seconds)
Artist response by Anne-Marie Copestake
Exhibition viewing

8pm 
Doors close
 

Booking 

The screening event is free and open to all. Book a ticket via Eventbrite.
The screening is raising funds for medical Aid for Palestinians, donate the cost of a cinema ticket or what you can directly to MAP. 
QR code available at the event. 

Free
A postage stamp Gold Coast Ghana Independence 6th March 1957 with a profile of Queen Elizabeth II

L’École du soir Cinéma 

Inspired by Senegalese film director Ousmane Sembène’s concept of cinema as ‘night school’ or l’école du soir for collective study, Cooper Gallery will transform into a temporary cinema over four evenings of screenings of moving image by The Otolith Group. Each screening will be complemented by audio readings from The Otolith Group and responses from invited artists and writers in Scotland. These screenings from part of The Ignorant Art School Sit-in Curriculum #3

> View all events
> More about the exhibition


Biographies

Anne-Marie Copestake lives in Glasgow, working with moving image, sound, sculpture, print and performance. Attentive to temporary and longer term communities, narrative and emotion, her work is concerned with entangled social political conditions surrounding individual and collective choices, or a lack of choices, and an exploration of environments that may contribute essentially to these conditions. She often works collaboratively, most recently with musician Ailbhe Nic Oireachtaigh.

The Otolith Group is an award-winning artist led collective founded by Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshun in 2002.

Their moving image, audio works, performances and installations are characterized by an engagement with the legacies and potentialities of diasporic futurisms that explore modes of temporal anomalies, anthropic inversions and synthetic alienation.

Approaching curation as an artistic practice of building intergenerational and cross-cultural platforms, the collective has been influential in critically introducing particular works of artists such as Chris Marker, Harun Farocki, Anand Patwardhan, Etel Adnan, Black Audio Film Collective, Sue Clayton, Mani Kaul, Peter Watkins, and Chimurenga in the UK, US, Europe, and Lebanon.
 

Access

The gallery is on two floors. First floor has ramped access and disabled toilet.

Second floor is accessible via lift and for wheelchair access via a stairclimber. The screening will take place on the second floor. 

Please email in advance if you require lift or stairclimber access so we can arrange support.

Large print versions of the exhibition information handout are available, please ask our Guides.

All enquiries please contact: [email protected]

Image credit

The Otolith Group, In the Year of the Quiet Sun, 2013 (video still)
Courtesy the artist and LUX.


Funding support

The Ignorant Art School at Cooper Gallery, DJCAD is supported by the National Lottery through Creative Scotland. 

Logo block. Cooper Gallery, DJCAD, Creative Scotland, National Lottery Funded
Cooper Gallery
Cooper Gallery Cooper Gallery The Ignorant Art School Sit-in Curriculum #3 The Ignorant Art School | Sit-in 3 | The Otolith Group
No
Yes
Screening with artist response from Anne-Marie Copestake (In-person)

L’École du soir Cinéma #2 | I See Infinite Distance Between Any Point And Another

Yes
Sit-in Curriculum #3 L’École du soir Cinéma #2
I See Infinite Distance Between Any Point And Another
A close up of an elderly woman's head as she reads a book at a table
Design and Art

Screening

I See Infinite Distance Between Any Point And Another (2012)
Duration: 33 minutes 32 seconds
HD video, colour, stereo sound
Response by Daisy Lafarge
 

Etel Adnan's highly influential writings, in French, English and Arabic have been read around the world. Her epic poem, Sea and Fog, published by Nightboat Books, in 2012, evokes the sea and the fog as metaphors for power and time, exploring the nature of the individual spirit and the sentience of the natural world. 

The Otolith Group's film, shot largely in Adnan's Paris apartment, centres on a reading of the first chapter of her poem, Sea. The sound of Adnan's gentle voice, and the quiet but ever present ambient noise in her apartment, create a powerful, meditative atmosphere that draw upon the powers of philosophy to pursue the continuous mutation of matter into velocity. If poetry can be understood as a study in constraint, the film, I See Infinite Distance Between Any Point and Another, can be understood as an experiment in concentration and a study of gestures, that speaks of the mobility of language and the movement of the ocean.

I See Infinite Distance Between Any Point and Another (2012) following from Hydra Decapita (2010), is part two of The Otolith Group's trilogy of works on hydropolitics and hydroaesthetics. The Radiant (2012), completes this trilogy.


Schedule

5.45pm
Doors open

6pm
Intro: The Otolith Group (audio recording)
Screening: I See Infinite Distance Between Any Point And Another (33 minutes 32 seconds)
Response: Daisy Lafarge
Exhibition viewing

8pm 
Doors close
 

Booking 

The screening event is free and open to all. Book a ticket via Eventbrite.
The screening is raising funds for medical Aid for Palestinians, donate the cost of a cinema ticket or what you can directly to MAP. 
QR code available at the event. 

A close up of an elderly woman's head as she reads a book at a table

L’École du soir Cinéma 

Inspired by Senegalese film director Ousmane Sembène’s concept of cinema as ‘night school’ or l’école du soir for collective study, Cooper Gallery will transform into a temporary cinema over four evenings of screenings of moving image by The Otolith Group. Each screening will be complemented by audio readings from The Otolith Group and responses from invited artists and writers in Scotland. These screenings from part of The Ignorant Art School Sit-in Curriculum #3

> View all events
> More about the exhibition

 

Biographies

Daisy Lafarge is a writer based in Glasgow. She is the author of the novel Paul (Granta 2021), which was a New York Times Editor’s Choice, and the poetry collection Life Without Air (Granta 2020), which was shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize. Lovebug, a book on the poetics of infection, is published by Peninsula Press in 2023.

The Otolith Group is an award-winning artist led collective founded by Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshun in 2002.

Their moving image, audio works, performances and installations are characterized by an engagement with the legacies and potentialities of diasporic futurisms that explore modes of temporal anomalies, anthropic inversions and synthetic alienation.

Approaching curation as an artistic practice of building intergenerational and cross-cultural platforms, the collective has been influential in critically introducing particular works of artists such as Chris Marker, Harun Farocki, Anand Patwardhan, Etel Adnan, Black Audio Film Collective, Sue Clayton, Mani Kaul, Peter Watkins, and Chimurenga in the UK, US, Europe, and Lebanon.


Access

The gallery is on two floors. First floor has ramped access and disabled toilet.

Second floor is accessible via lift and for wheelchair access via a stairclimber. The screening will take place on the second floor. 

Please email in advance if you require lift or stairclimber access so we can arrange support.

Large print versions of the exhibition information handout are available, please ask our Guides.

All enquiries please contact: [email protected]

Image credit

The Otolith Group, I See Infinite Distance Between Any Point And Another, 2012 (video still)
Courtesy the artist and LUX.

Funding support

The Ignorant Art School at Cooper Gallery, DJCAD is supported by the National Lottery through Creative Scotland. 

Logo block. Cooper Gallery, DJCAD, Creative Scotland, National Lottery Funded
Cooper Gallery
Cooper Gallery Cooper Gallery The Ignorant Art School Sit-in Curriculum #3 The Ignorant Art School | Sit-in 3 | The Otolith Group
No
Yes
Screening with response by Daisy Lafarge (In-person)

L’École du soir Cinéma #1 | Otolith II

Yes
Sit-in Curriculum #3 L’École du soir Cinéma #1 Otolith II
Two sleeping children hugging laying down on a pillow. The shot is in red.
Design and Art

Screening

The Otolith Group, Otolith II (2007)
Duration: 48 minutes 42 seconds
SD video, colour, sound

Otolith II is set in the near future and mixes fiction, archival material and documentary footage filmed in Mumbai and Chandigarh. The film explores the affective pressure exerted upon inhabitants residing within contrasting and competing versions of the city of tomorrow. Otolith II investigates the politics of futurity in which predictive models of the masterplan, the corporate scenario and real estate speculation converge to extract labour, convert attention and capture potential for profit.
 

Schedule

5.45pm
Doors open

6pm
Intro: The Otolith Group (audio recording)
Screening: Otolith II (48 minutes 42 seconds)
Response by Rae-Yen Song

8pm
Doors close
 

Booking 

The screening event is free and open to all. Book a ticket via Eventbrite.
The screening is raising funds for medical Aid for Palestinians, donate the cost of a cinema ticket or what you can directly to MAP. 
QR code available at the event. 

Free
Two sleeping children hugging laying down on a pillow. The shot is in red.

L’École du soir Cinéma 

Inspired by Senegalese film director Ousmane Sembène’s concept of cinema as ‘night school’ or l’école du soir for collective study, Cooper Gallery will transform into a temporary cinema over four evenings of screenings of moving image by The Otolith Group. Each screening will be complemented by audio readings from The Otolith Group and responses from invited artists and writers in Scotland. These screenings from part of The Ignorant Art School Sit-in Curriculum #3

> View all events
> More about the exhibition
 

Biographies

Rae-Yen Song (b. 1993, Scotland, based in Glasgow) works expansively across mediums, including drawing, sculpture, installation, costume, video, sound, performance, and family collaboration. Song’s work explores self-mythologising as a survival tactic: using fantasy and fabulation to establish a richly visual world-building practice informed by autobiography, ancestral journeys, Taoist philosophy, family ritual, multi-species interdependency, and science fiction. For Song, world-building becomes a tool for imaginative self-definition, with familial logics becoming the foundations of an alternative reality untethered from linear conceptions of space and time. It allows Song to resist colonial tropes and conventions, crafting multidimensional personal records and offerings for the future. These narratives yield a mix of humour, empathy and absurdity, whilst speaking broadly and politically about foreignness, identity, survival and what it means to belong ― or not.

The Otolith Group is an award-winning artist led collective founded by Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshun in 2002.

Their moving image, audio works, performances and installations are characterized by an engagement with the legacies and potentialities of diasporic futurisms that explore modes of temporal anomalies, anthropic inversions and synthetic alienation.

Approaching curation as an artistic practice of building intergenerational and cross-cultural platforms, the collective has been influential in critically introducing particular works of artists such as Chris Marker, Harun Farocki, Anand Patwardhan, Etel Adnan, Black Audio Film Collective, Sue Clayton, Mani Kaul, Peter Watkins, and Chimurenga in the UK, US, Europe, and Lebanon.
 

Access

The gallery is on two floors. First floor has ramped access and disabled toilet.

Second floor is accessible via lift and for wheelchair access via a stairclimber. The screening will take place on the second floor. 

Please email in advance if you require lift or stairclimber access so we can arrange support.

Large print versions of the exhibition information handout are available, please ask our Guides.

All enquiries please contact: [email protected]

Image credit

The Otolith Group, Otolith II, 2007 (video still)
Courtesy the artist and LUX.

Funding support

The Ignorant Art School at Cooper Gallery, DJCAD is supported by the National Lottery through Creative Scotland. 

Logo block. Cooper Gallery, DJCAD, Creative Scotland, National Lottery Funded
Cooper Gallery
Cooper Gallery Cooper Gallery The Ignorant Art School Sit-in Curriculum #3 The Ignorant Art School | Sit-in 3 | The Otolith Group
No
Yes
Screening with response by artist Rae-Yen Song

DXG #6: Thinking with Improvisation Critically

Yes
Sit-in Curriculum #3 DXG #6: Thinking with Improvisation Critically
Shiori Usui by a piano from above
Design and Art

An experimental music/sound performance that explores the idea of the improvisation with and of that which is understood as Blackness within that which is understood as culture. 

Live performances by Maria Chávez, Lore Lixenberg, Elaine Mitchener and Shiori Usui.

This live event forms part of The Ignorant Art School Sit-in Curriculum #3 programmed in collaboration with the Department for Xenogenesis.

Booking

The performance is free and open to all. Book a ticket via Eventbrite.

Audience Info

In-person at Cooper Gallery. The four performances will happen across both floors of the gallery.
Alcoholic drinks will be served. Non alcoholic refreshments will also be available.

Free
performer head shots

Biographies

Born in Lima, Peru and based in NYC, Maria Chávez is best known as an abstract turntablist, sound artist and DJ. Chavez’s abstract turntablism work is known for taking the detritus of vinyl and repurposing them into sonic sculptures that can sometimes be compared to improvised musique concrete pieces, or, conceptually, improvised sonic sculpture sessions. Maria is the only turntablist in the world that was performing with a rare double headed needle called the RAKE. Chavez’s 2012 book on abstract turntablism, Of Technique: Chance Procedures on Turntable, written and illustrated by Maria, has developed a reputation as both an academic resource and a foundational text for a new generation of turntablists. 

Maria was on the cover of the Wire Magazine, UK (March, 2023) and is also on the cover of the textbook on the History of Experimental & Electronic music by Routledge Publishing.

Lore Lixenberg is an opera maker and vocalist. Her own work extends into coding, soundart, radiophonic work, film and direction according to the needs of the idea. Having studied with Galina Vishnevskaya and David Mason as a mezzo soprano, she went on to apply operatic voice to physical theatre with UK based, leCoq trained, Theatre de Complicite and the revolutionary controversial comedy club, KUUUB ZARATHUSTRA. She has also performed worldwide as a mezzo premiering many new works written for her voice in music festivals and opera houses working closely on productions with composers such as Acquaviva, Aperghis, Oliveros, Hind, Stockhausen, Turnage and Wishart.

Studies in composition with Maxwell Davies, Saxton, Woolrich and Vores, led her to harnessing the voice in her own works, including ‘200 Birdsong Studies by Lore Lixenbenbird and Birds’, ‘INNANACARA’, ‘theVoicePartyOperaBotFarm[myMuseIsMyFury] winning the Phonurgianova international soundart prize 2021.

Elaine Mitchener is a British Afro-Caribbean vocalist, movement artist and composer working between contemporary/experimental new music, free improvisation and visual art. She is a Wigmore Hall Associate Artist (2021-26); a DAAD Artist-in-Berlin Fellow (2022) and an exhibiting artist in the British Art Show 9 (2021-22). Elaine is founder of the collective electroacoustic trio The Rolling Calf (with Jason Yarde and Neil Charles). In March 2024, DAAD  Gallery (Berlin) will host Mitchener’s first performative exhibition curated by The Otolith Collective. 

Originally from Japan, Shiori Usui is a BBC Proms commissioned composer, improvising musician (playing inside and under piano and noise vocal), and performer based in Dundee. Shiori is currently developing a sensory theatre show for/with disabled young people in a hydro-pool, using sound and music as core materials of the work.  

The Otolith Group is an award-winning artist led collective founded by Anjalika Sagar and Kodwo Eshun in 2002.

Their moving image, audio works, performances and installations are characterized by an engagement with the legacies and potentialities of diasporic futurisms that explore modes of temporal anomalies, anthropic inversions and synthetic alienation.

Approaching curation as an artistic practice of building intergenerational and cross-cultural platforms, the collective has been influential in critically introducing particular works of artists such as Chris Marker, Harun Farocki, Anand Patwardhan, Etel Adnan, Black Audio Film Collective, Sue Clayton, Mani Kaul, Peter Watkins, and Chimurenga in the UK, US, Europe, and Lebanon.
 

About the exhibition

...But There Are New Suns is the first major exhibition in Scotland by the Turner Prize nominated artist collective The Otolith Group; and is the third iteration of The Ignorant Art School: Five Sit-ins towards Creative Emancipation.

Visit:
13 October – 16 December
Monday – Saturday, 12–5pm

Read more on our exhibition page.


Access

The gallery is on two floors. First floor has ramped access and disabled toilet.

Second floor is accessible via lift and for wheelchair access via a stairclimber. The event will take place on both levels of the gallery.

Please email in advance if you require lift or stairclimber access so we can arrange support.

Large print versions of the exhibition information handout are available, please ask our Guides.

If you require live captions for the discussion please email to request.

All enquiries please contact: [email protected]

 

Funding support

The Ignorant Art School at Cooper Gallery, DJCAD is supported by the National Lottery through Creative Scotland. 

Image credit

Maria Chávez by Alicia Gardès
Lore Lixenberg by Ross Fraser McLean
Elaine Mitchener, The Rolling Calf 2 by D Djuric
Shiror Usui by Sarah Smart

Logo block. Cooper Gallery, DJCAD, Creative Scotland, National Lottery Funded
Cooper Gallery
Cooper Gallery Cooper Gallery The Ignorant Art School | Sit-in 3 | The Otolith Group The Ignorant Art School Sit-in Curriculum #3
Yes
Yes
Live performances by Maria Chávez, Lore Lixenberg, Elaine Mitchener and Shiori Usui. (In-person)
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