[-empyre-] AMAZON IS BURNING

Sergio Basbaum sbasbaum at gmail.com
Tue Sep 17 21:06:47 AEST 2019


thank you Fabi, this is also a very important part of the nightmare. The
repression and despise for all minority and diversity discourses is a very
important side of the Bolsonaro's agenda. But still, its grounded on an
imaginary of a society not related to reality, but something more alike the
ideology of American Western films, something like that. "Me, my wife, my
land, my riffle" -- remember they have that anachronistic idolatry for
weapons... and that the weapons industry and they congressmen are an
important supporter of this government. Also, this obviously means they
want to guarantee to the big farmers the right to kill those who are
fighting for land, and also indians and the forest.

As for the economic importance of Organic food, remember last year -- still
Temer's government -- congressman have tried to approve a law forbidding
supermarkets of selling organic products, claiming that this kind of food
should be sold in specialized markets. It looks like they're worried about
losing part of the market for healthy foods.

These are only footnotes to the many important topics you've raised and the
narrative you presented.

best
s

On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 2:57 AM fabi borges <catadores at gmail.com> wrote:

> ----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
>
> Hello everyone!
>
> I want to comment on these two points brought by Oliver and Brian Holmes,
> because there are two important things here (all the rest is important as
> well, but it would be too much things to think right now):
>
> In Hobbes' notion of the 'The Leviathan' the state via some kind of
> sovereign power mitigates in 'the war of all against all.'
>
> It seems now what we are seeing is the emergence of 'anti-states' in which
> the only governing principle is the imposition of raw power, not based on
> any rational, even maliciously rational, program.
>
> America under Trump has felt like this. It is the administration's
> pervasive irrationalism that has made it so hard for the left to respond
> rationally. The more contradictions and falsehoods the anti-state
> promulgates, the more its asserts its raw power.
>
> I was wondering if this is what is happening under the Bolsonaro. Are
> irrationality and brutality its main selling points to a nihilistic
> electorate?
>
> - - – - - – - - -
>
> The consequences of the fires in the Amazon know no borders, and neither
> do the forces that ignited them. If the developed nations want a greater
> say in the stewardship of the rainforest, they might need to provide more
> than the modest $20 million offered by the G-7 last month. They might need
> to pay for it in higher prices for agricultural imports. Most important,
> they might have to readjust their own consumption habits.
>
> Bolsonaro, as he has on so many other occasions, is also missing the
> point — and an opportunity. If he really wants to revitalize Brazil’s
> economy, he could take advantage of the world’s renewed interest in the
> Amazon and ask developed countries just how much they’re willing to pay to
> help preserve it. Allowing further deforestation may be a tempting
> short-term economic lifeline, but this policy puts at risk the future of
> his country and of its neighbors around the globe.
>
>
> From the Bolsonaro perspective (and all that this implies in political /
> economic / social terms) Europe has destroyed its forests and now
> (colonially) wants to interfere with the Brazilian forest as its last
> resort, making it the “lung of the world”. Transform the Amazon into an
> untouchable reserve for the good of humanity, and thereby take away the
> autonomy of the Brazilian state to use its land for its own enrichment.
> Damn humanity, Brazil needs to boost its economy and agriculture is its
> best talent. Indigenous “vagabonds” stand on top of productive land and
> gold mines without exploiting it, complaining about having more money and
> spending for the state rather than producing, so “let's change that” as he
> always says. Indigenous have to modernize, and this implies becoming
> farmers, entering into export projects, "feeding humanity", and stopping
> this litany of human rights, this victimistic whim of wanting to maintain
> evidently outdated life forms.
>
> In this perspective really the $ 20 million offered by the G-7 or the $ 80
> million by Angela Merkel from Germany is a big joke, as he said: "I want
> to send a message to dear Angela Merkel, who suspended $ 80 million to the
> Amazon. Take that money and reforest Germany, okay? It needs a lot more
> than here."
>
> This “hardworking” perspective is what he preserves, the rest is mimimi, (and
> here we all come in): lazy indigenous people, vagabond artists,
> intellectuals sucking on state ceilings flaunting eruditism, teachers bon
> vivant doing conspiracy at state expense, fat, flabby quilombolas to let
> it all hang out, gay movement that only thinks about sex and depravity
> instead of working, aggressive, unproductive feminists, landless,
> homeless, roofless... His point of view blends Italian immigration into
> Brazil (farmers, planters, workers) with American Protestantism, which he
> greatly admires, transformed into prosperity theology + the winner project.
> The alliance with the United States has to do with this desire to ally
> itself with a prosperous, rich, powerful country with which Brazil has
> always identified, much more than with South America. In their minds,
> Brazil will finally enter in its devotional path which is to feed
> humanity with food, metals, etc and get rich !!!
>
> It is also a revenge against the identity movements that for 10 years
> have empowered themselves to the point of exactly inhibiting the role of
> male, macho, provider, productive, to turn everything into a bunch of
> weak, full of rights and vagabonds. The image he wants to rescue is that of
> the worker, the rich man, the power, becoming a strong, potent, big, hard
> cock country on which much of humanity depends for food and feedstock.
>
> I see nothing irrational here, quite the contrary, although I see nihilism
> towards the “end of the world” and a lack of confidence in the theories of
> “anthropocene, humans as geological forces that are destroying the planet,
> etc.”, I see a kind of historical revenge, (we don’t understand really,
> but in the middle of it has the idea of no submission, and anti-colonialism
> – in a very strong and complex form - and anti- communism - evidently).
>
> Some dams will give way, some forests will burn, some people will die, but
> that's part of the growing process, stop crying!!
>
> Destroying institutions is part of the project because institutions hinder
> the progress, but not the corporations which in turn are the only way to
> create political and economic strength!
>
> "The lefts" has answers to this, but they are not yet financially
> effective in countering the status brought by Bolsonaro and his gang. The
> MST for example (Landless Workers Movement) during the Lula era has greatly
> strengthened its awareness of the Earth/land, becoming a reference in
> Brazil and even in the world regarding agroforestry, community agriculture,
> permaculture, organic farming, but it* still* does not represent the
> force of the monoculture and livestock.
>
> The conflict of perspectives is on the table, the madness and
> irrationality are unfortunately no consolation. The developmentalist
> project is still in full swing and the consciousness of the earth,
> interspecies relations, ayahuasca rituals, organic gardens, the diversity
> of peoples and their modes of existence are still largely ghetto
> conversations that do not earn enough in the world of market or stock
> market. Despite the incomparable openness of the left in Brazil in recent
> years to social movements, human rights, ecology, the heavy
> developmentalist project was there, on a large, huge scale, with the
> opening of hydroelectric platform amid indigenous lands (xingu, amazonas),
> petroleum and gas pipelines, construction, etc, etc.
>
> I conclude this part by saying that if Europe now want to take an
> interesting political stance on the importation of soybeans, meat, food
> from Brazil, it should invest a large part of its money buying from the
> Landless workers Movements, those trained in what is most accurate in
> terms of agroecology (not all of them, but many). $100 milhons is still
> little, but already gives a boost. *And Keep the value dispute.*
>
> Examples:
>
>
> http://www.mst.org.br/2015/06/16/sem-terra-reescrevem-historia-do-cacau-no-sul-da-bahia.html
>
> *https://globaljusticeecology.org/brazil-mst-land-activists-to-win-prestigious-agroecology-award/
> <https://globaljusticeecology.org/brazil-mst-land-activists-to-win-prestigious-agroecology-award/>*
>
>
> keep on
>
> fabi.
>
> On Tue, 17 Sep 2019 at 07:01, Sergio Basbaum <sbasbaum at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> ----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
>> Oliver,
>>
>> Dark times. The way that has lead to that tragedy is very controversial,
>> since it involves populist goverments in all Latin America, with certain
>> social impact but other aspects not so healthy, to say the least, and out
>> the scope of the debate. Also, an impeachment process in Brazil. But I
>> don't think it is too radical to say that the controversy about what was
>> right or wrong in these governments is paralizing mass resistance in
>> Brazil. There's no party or leadership or set of discourses able to capture
>> mass participation in the process of resistance. On the other hand,
>> Bolsonaro's government is violently destroying all social structures in
>> which resistence usually develops: culture, arts, education, universities
>> and anything which may resemble any kind of free thinking. Public
>> universities, post graduate programs, research scholarships are being
>> explicitly attacked.
>>
>> You mention psychonalysis. I will make use this space precious freedom to
>> advance some insights of mine in the current state of things. However, the
>> state of things demands urgent reaction we don't see, and the conditions
>> here resemble the kind of apathy mentioned by Geert Lovink in a recent
>> email, but, still, I think here things are more severe.
>>
>> I mean that, as I see it, Brazil as an enormous country, full of
>> sub-cultures and different dialects and peoples, has always been unified by
>> fictional narratives. The pre-republic stage, when Brazil was a kingdom
>> governed by an emperor, created a narrative of its grandeur, and the
>> grandeur of colonizers, which is almost fictional, with heroes that were
>> not, real monsters in fact. In the XXth century, during the populist Vargas
>> dictatorship, from 1937-1945, another fake identity, with new fake heroes
>> like Tiradentes -- who's been hanged and quartered by the Portuguese, in
>> the XVIIIth century --, whose was created for public opinion resembling
>> Jesus in the cross, and also creating the known image of Brazil as a
>> country free of racial conflicts -- also fake,
>>
>> Later, the military dictatorship (1964-85) also created its official
>> ufanist version of the country, full of lies, and kept intelectuals and
>> artists silent through all kind of repressive means. When the dictatorship
>> was over, once again we haven't been able to face the truth of the horrible
>> crimes committed by the military governments: a general amnesty has
>> guaranteed many torturers and murderers to remain free, sometimes
>> celebrated as heroes in an imaginary war against communism. Ironically,
>> president Jair Bolsonaro, a radical right-wing captain who had expelled
>> from the army because he was -- believe me -- planning to set off a bomb at
>> the barracks to demand better pay -- was also benefited with amnesty, and
>> was free to become a congressman, and later, surfing in this strange
>> conservative wave we're experiencing in the globe (also with the help of
>> Cambridge Analytica election strategies), suddenly became the
>> representative of all the worse forces in the country, in a time when
>> progressive forces are under a huge crisis.
>>
>> This is how I see things.
>>
>> In terms of resistance strategies, we're trying to react this
>> radical-right tsunami.I'm sure the strategies will emerge. As for Amazon, I
>> think it is very importat now to support
>> Chief Raoni Metuktire of the Kayapó tribe as a candidate for the 2020
>> Peace Nobel Prize, both because of his lifetime fight for the fores as for
>> his lifetime fight for native peoples in Brazil.
>>
>>
>> https://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2019/09/14/world/europe/14reuters-brazil-environment-raoni.html?fbclid=IwAR1H-5wdgTTiGN8HTGXa_HBHs_R_qA56--6MWIFFpV3PoWEOFKIv_oI47_Y
>>
>>
>> That's not much, but that's something.
>>
>> Best from Brazil
>>
>> s
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 12:52 AM Oliver Kellhammer <okellhammer at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> ----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
>>> Sergio:
>>>
>>> Firstly, my heart goes out to you and everyone (human and nonhuman)
>>> suffering from this cataclysm.
>>> I am interested too in your description of 'people not being able to
>>> believe it is true.' I wonder how much shock and disavowal play into the
>>> global stasis around the climate emergency and the extinction crisis. Real
>>> disasters are unfolding globally in the biosphere, but also in the
>>> psychoanalytical space. Yes, there are repressive, ecocidal and genocidal
>>> regimes but they are aided and abetted by a significant portion of the
>>> population. The hypnotic powers of populists seem almost a type of dark
>>> magic. Do you and Fabi and any of the others on the ground there in Brazil
>>> have any thoughts on that? What is happening here in America seems so
>>> analogous but I am sure there are major differences too?
>>>
>>> On Mon, Sep 16, 2019 at 5:15 PM Sergio Basbaum <sbasbaum at gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> ----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
>>>> From Brazil, I reinforce that the situation is really very very bad and
>>>> it may come up to a point in which there's no return. The government in
>>>> Brazil is committing every conceivable crime in terms of violations of
>>>> native people territories and environmental rules. It's been so explicit up
>>>> to the point of people not being able to believe this is true.
>>>>
>>>> Every support and every help spreading this state of things may help us
>>>> stop this nightmare.
>>>>
>>>> best
>>>> s
>>>>
>>>> On Mon, Sep 16, 2019 at 10:32 AM margaretha haughwout <
>>>> margaretha.anne.haughwout at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> ----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
>>>>> I write from Oneida territory in what is currently central New York
>>>>> within the so-called United States. The Oneida are one of the 5 nations
>>>>> that comprise the Haudenosaunee confederacy, and this land from which I
>>>>> write has never been ceded. The apocalypse began here 500 years ago.
>>>>>
>>>>> ...
>>>>>
>>>>> Amazon is burning. forest, cows, soybeans, machines, trades, global
>>>>> food/trade politics
>>>>>
>>>>> This week's discussants hope to think together about disasters, and
>>>>> disaster capitalism/ vs. possibilities in ruins: how, as Oliver Kellhammer
>>>>> puts it, ruins are the porous interface between imagining possible futures
>>>>> on one hand and disaster capitalism on the other. Here we must think hard
>>>>> about the relationships between Amazon fires, opportunities for soybean
>>>>> production as food and feed, and cattle ranching (noting the "soy-cattle
>>>>> pasture-deforestation dynamic"). We must think hard about what emerges
>>>>> intentionally and unintentionally from the disturbance. Soybeans (and we
>>>>> might think of the crop here as cheap energy, nitrogen fixer, endocrine
>>>>> disruptor, as allergen generator), and cows (as frontier, as cheap energy,
>>>>> cheap labor, as domesticating 'wilderness')  are intentionally introduced
>>>>> of course, and they are implicated in the larger dynamics of global
>>>>> capital, and the processes of what Jason Moore calls "making cheap."
>>>>> Specifically they are implicated in the trade poitics of the moment:
>>>>> Trump's trade war with China. Soybeans were the biggest export from the US
>>>>> to China; new tariffs position Brazil to take over the drop in US shipments.
>>>>>
>>>>> ...What other species emerge and travel from the fires? What viruses
>>>>> hop, what ghosts.
>>>>>
>>>>> ...This week, let's also ask, how can we do time and dreams in
>>>>> relation to food/ trade/ politics. To return, always to Benjamin's 9th
>>>>> Thesis. How do we stop the storm of progress and tend to the catastrophe?
>>>>> What are the practices that change time? Fabi Borges will share with us
>>>>> (among other amazing interstellar work she is doing) indigenous wisdom she
>>>>> has learned from the Amazon, asking, how do we stop dreaming the same
>>>>> dream? How do we imagine more worlds than one?
>>>>>
>>>>> ...What are the ways that we know? Using interstellar satellite
>>>>> imagery to know about fires, we use technology that itself emerges from
>>>>> coloniality and ways of knowing from above, as if there can be a whole, a
>>>>> point of neutrality not implicated in totalizing regimes of control. How
>>>>> are we caught up and inadvertently worlding with this technology -- can
>>>>> this entanglement make more than one world? More than one dream?
>>>>>
>>>>> ...I'd love to ask the discussants and invite the readership to
>>>>> imagine together what a revolt of  unpaid machines and unpaid natures could
>>>>> look like. What plants can disrupt monocrop cultivation of soybeans? What
>>>>> kin do soybeans thrive with? What invasive species will act as a scab on
>>>>> the scorched earth? What technologies can be hijacked for different ends
>>>>> than global capital and control.
>>>>>
>>>>> ...Always, we must recognize who and what worlds are lost. The
>>>>> indigenous (Munduruku, Huni Kuin, Xingu to name 3 of over 300 in Brazil)
>>>>> and their kin. The marmosets, the spider monkeys, the tamarin, the jaguars,
>>>>> the sloths, frogs, lizards, parakeets, mahogany, ironwood, brazil nuts,
>>>>> cocoa, passiflora vines, orchids, bromeliads....
>>>>>
>>>>> A few thoughts to begin.
>>>>>
>>>>> Amazon is burning. forest, cows, soybeans, machines, trades, global
>>>>> food/trade politics
>>>>>
>>>>> (Note: originally the title She Lea gave me was: "amazon is burning.
>>>>> on forest, machines, interspecies, interstellar, plantationocene, cows,
>>>>> soybeans and global food/trade politics," and after agonizing over it, now
>>>>> I realize I am somewhat attached to it. Consider the additional terms stars
>>>>> in a constellation that are usually hard to see)
>>>>>
>>>>> ...
>>>>>
>>>>> I am honored to have a set of artists and thinkers with me this week
>>>>> to work on remembering together -- re-member-ing as reassembling a body,
>>>>> reassembling worlds. A forest.
>>>>>
>>>>> I like to mix up the format for -empyre- a little, and so I'm
>>>>> introducing a *caravan* of creative thinkers, and Shu Lea will add as the
>>>>> week goes on. This week will need a LOT of voices, to inch toward the
>>>>> catastrophe, to try and turn away from the future, to deal with NOW. So I
>>>>> hope the readership will feel very invited to participate. Needed.
>>>>>
>>>>> Fabi Borges (BR)
>>>>> Fabiane M. Borges: Acts at the intersection between clinic, art and
>>>>> technology. She works as a Psychologist (in person and online) and as an
>>>>> essayist, having written and organized publications between academic
>>>>> journals, collections and personal books. She articulates two international
>>>>> networks/festivals: Technoshamanism (technology & ancestry) and
>>>>> Intergalactic Commune (art & space sciences). She has a Post-phd in Visual
>>>>> Arts at EBA / UFRJ - School of Fine Arts, Federal University of Rio de
>>>>> Janeiro / 2016-2018. She did a Phd in Visual Arts at Goldsmiths University
>>>>> of London / 2011, and currently she is doing two post-phd: one at ECA / USP
>>>>> (School of Communication and Arts at the University of São Paulo / 2019)
>>>>> the other at ETE / INPE (Space Engineering and Technology at the National
>>>>> Institute for Space Research / 2019), both dedicated to art and science
>>>>> focused on space projects that also include terrestrial systems and
>>>>> Philosophy of science. Since July 2019, she organizes SACIE (Subjectivity,
>>>>> Art and Space Sciences) a research program and artistic residencies in the
>>>>> Brazilian space program (INPE), where she develops a series of activities
>>>>> focused on Space Culture. She is the organizer of Extremophilia magazine,
>>>>> launched in 2018. As her academic background is in Psychology, with a
>>>>> master's degree and phd in Clinical Psychology (PUC / SP), all her work has
>>>>> a focus on the production of subjectivity. Acting on the frontier between
>>>>> Art and Clinic, having developed several immersive programs focused on
>>>>> dream and imaginary levels, operating with fiction, speculation, creation.
>>>>> Some of her actions have been supported by institutions such as Goethe
>>>>> Institute, SESC, MAC, MAST, MAR, Museum of Tomorrow, Valongo Observatory,
>>>>> Ibirapuera Planetarium, Nucleus of Arts and New Organisms PPGAV / UFRJ -
>>>>> (Brazil), Center for Contemporary Art (Ecuador), Aarhus University -
>>>>> Department of Information Studies & Digital Design (Denmark), STWST / Ars
>>>>> Electronica (Austria), SenseLab Concordia University (Canada), XenoEntities
>>>>> (Germany), Transmediale (Germany), Grow Tottenham, Si Shang Art Museum
>>>>> (China), etc. She lives in São Paulo in a collective house that plants
>>>>> organic, organizes parties, concerts, meetings, workshops, etc (Casa
>>>>> Japuanga, SP).
>>>>>
>>>>> Amanda McDonald Crowley (USA)
>>>>> Amanda McDonald Crowley is an independent cultural worker and curator.
>>>>> Amanda’s work has largely been at the intersection of art + technology
>>>>> working with artists and groups who have a research based practice; and
>>>>> current research interests include #artfoodtech #growfoodmakeart. Amanda
>>>>> develops platforms to generate dialogue, bringing together artists with
>>>>> professionals and amateurs from varied disciplines, and creating space for
>>>>> audience engagement.  In recent years Amanda has developed projects with
>>>>> Kulturföreningen Triennal (Malmo), Bronx Arts Alliance, YMPJ (Bronx), New
>>>>> Media Scotland / Edinburgh Science Festival (Edinburgh), Pixelache
>>>>> (Helsinki), PointB (Brooklyn), Bemis Center (Omaha). Amanda has curatorial
>>>>> and advisor roles on Mary Mattingly’s Swale (NYC), Di Mainstone’s Human
>>>>> Harp (UK), Juanli Carrion’s OSS Project (NYC), Shu Lea Cheang’s CycleX (NY)
>>>>> and Vibha Galhotra’s S.O.U.L Foundation (Delhi), and in summer 2019 Amanda
>>>>> curated Amy Khoshbin’s pop up tattoo parlor in a hotel room for Detroit Art
>>>>> Week in a project that addressed gun violence in America. Amanda has
>>>>> previously worked with Eyebeam art + technology center NY, Australian
>>>>> Network for Art and Technology, ISEA2004, Finland, Adelaide Festival 2002
>>>>> and has done curatorial residencies at Helsinki International Artists
>>>>> Program (FI), Santa Fe Art Institute (US), Bogliasco Foundation (IT), Sarai
>>>>> New Media Institute (IN), and Banff Center for the Arts (CA).
>>>>> publicartaction.net
>>>>>
>>>>> Oliver Kellhammer (USA)
>>>>> Oliver Kellhammer is an artist, writer, and researcher, who seeks,
>>>>> through his botanical interventions and social art practice, to demonstrate
>>>>> nature’s surprising ability to recover from damage. Recent work has focused
>>>>> on the psychosocial effects of climate change, decontaminating polluted
>>>>> soil, reintroducing prehistoric trees to landscapes impacted by industrial
>>>>> logging, and cataloging the biodiversity of brownfields. He is currently a
>>>>> lecturer in sustainable systems at Parsons in NYC.
>>>>>
>>>>> He has lectured and given artists talks on bio-art, ecological design,
>>>>> urban ecology and permaculture at universities and cultural institutions
>>>>> throughout North America and abroad, including New School, NYU, Rensselaer
>>>>> Polytechnic, OTIS College, University of Oregon, Emily Carr University,
>>>>> Smith College, University of British Columbia, Bainbridge Graduate
>>>>> Institute, University of Windsor, Aalto University (Finland) Tohoku
>>>>> University (Japan).
>>>>>
>>>>> Escher Tsai (TW)
>>>>> Escher Tsai, New Media Art Artist, Producer, Creative Director of
>>>>> Dimension Plus,
>>>>> Director of Arts and Technology: Creative Innovation and Counseling
>>>>> Project, Production supervisor of “3x3x6”Taiwan Exhibition in 58th Venice
>>>>> Biennale. He devotes himself into open culture and new media art research,
>>>>> promotion and creation. He was project manager of Acer Digital Art Centre,
>>>>> planner of many new media arts creation and centre, host of Digital art
>>>>> exchange platform.
>>>>>
>>>>> Established by Escher Tsai and Keith Lam, well-known curator and
>>>>> artist from Taiwan and Hong Kong, Dimension Plus is a creative team that
>>>>> devotes themselves to the interactive digital environment. We are
>>>>> constantly been generating new ideas that deal with digital and analog
>>>>> technologies. We also dedicate ourselves to digital art education and
>>>>> environment change. http://dimensionplus.co/,
>>>>> http://www.dimensionplus.co/en/projects/soybean.html, (see also:
>>>>> http://www.makery.info/2019/09/10/les-futurs-du-soja-nourrissent-le-debat-en-marge-dars-electronica/?fbclid=IwAR0zdRyzTktIVHHOsXsM1C1JHgec0eg5E7Yvz0g0JO-W0UDRa-AEZtDFRCE
>>>>> )
>>>>>
>>>>> Dan Phiffer (USA)
>>>>> Dan Phiffer is a software developer and artist who builds web-based
>>>>> tools for the American Civil Liberties Union. His previous job was working
>>>>> on an open data gazetteer called Who’s On First (part of the open source
>>>>> mapping company Mapzen). This Fall he’s teaching a hacktivism course at
>>>>> Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and has started organizing with Extinction
>>>>> Rebellion in the New York Capital Region.
>>>>>
>>>>> Dawn Weleski (USA)
>>>>> Dawn Weleski’s art practice administers a political stress test,
>>>>> antagonizing routine cultural behavior by re-purposing underground brawls,
>>>>> revolutionary protests, and political offices as transformative social
>>>>> stages. Recent projects include The Black Draft (with Justin Strong), a live
>>>>> mock sports draft event during which ten Black former Pittsburghers,
>>>>> from all professions, are drafted to return home and City Council
>>>>> Wrestling, a series of public wrestling matches where citizens, pro-am
>>>>> wrestlers, and city council members personified their political passions
>>>>> into wrestling characters. She co-founded and co-directs Conflict Kitchen
>>>>> (with Jon Rubin), a take-out restaurant that serves cuisine from countries
>>>>> with which the U.S. government is in conflict, which has been covered by
>>>>> over 900 international media and news outlets worldwide and was the North
>>>>> American finalist for the Second Annual International Award for Public Art
>>>>> in 2015.
>>>>>
>>>>> Weleski has exhibited at The Mercosul Biennial, Brazil; the Hammer
>>>>> Museum, Los Angeles; the San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose; Anyang Public
>>>>> Art Project, South Korea; The CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Art,
>>>>> San Francisco; Project Row Houses, Houston; Townhouse Gallery, Cairo;
>>>>> Festival Belluard Bollwerk International, Switzerland; The Mattress Factory
>>>>> Museum, Pittsburgh; Arts House, Melbourne; and 91mQ, Berlin; has been a
>>>>> resident at The
>>>>> Headlands Center for the Arts, SOMA Mexico City, and The Atlantic
>>>>> Center for the Arts; is a 2017 Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts
>>>>> Curatorial Fellow.
>>>>>
>>>>> Currently, Weleski is NEH Visiting Assistant Professor of Art & Art
>>>>> History at Colgate University.
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> beforebefore.net
>>>>> --
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> empyre forum
>>>>> empyre at lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au
>>>>> http://empyre.library.cornell.edu
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> -- Prof. Dr. Sérgio Roclaw Basbaum
>>>> -- Pós-Graduação Tec.da Inteligência e Design Digital - TIDD (PUC-SP)
>>>> -- Coordenador Pós-Graduação em Música e Imagem (FASM)
>>>>
>>>> -- http://soundcloud.com/sergiobasbaum
>>>> -- http://soundcloud.com/pantharei <https://soundcloud.com/pantharei>
>>>> -- [:a.cinema:] <http://acinemaperformance.blogspot.com.br/>
>>>> ...sai dessa fila, vem pra roda festejar..
>>>> <http://soundcloud.com/sergiobasbaum/choror-bye-bye>
>>>> -- a.cinema <http://acinemaperformance.blogspot.com>
>>>> -- pantharei_tube
>>>> <https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlPdYtxV5bj5uAQwXC-M_Q>
>>>>
>>>> B'H'
>>>>
>>>> "Do mesmo modo como a percepção da coisa me abre ao ser, realizando a
>>>> síntese paradoxal de uma infinidade de aspectos perspectivos, a percepção
>>>> do outro funda a moralidade (...)"
>>>> Maurice Merleau-Ponty
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> empyre forum
>>>> empyre at lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au
>>>> http://empyre.library.cornell.edu
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> http://www.oliverk.org
>>> twitter: @okellhammer
>>> mobile: 917-743-0126
>>> skype: okellhammer
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> empyre forum
>>> empyre at lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au
>>> http://empyre.library.cornell.edu
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> -- Prof. Dr. Sérgio Roclaw Basbaum
>> -- Pós-Graduação Tec.da Inteligência e Design Digital - TIDD (PUC-SP)
>> -- Coordenador Pós-Graduação em Música e Imagem (FASM)
>>
>> -- http://soundcloud.com/sergiobasbaum
>> -- http://soundcloud.com/pantharei <https://soundcloud.com/pantharei>
>> -- [:a.cinema:] <http://acinemaperformance.blogspot.com.br/>
>> ...sai dessa fila, vem pra roda festejar..
>> <http://soundcloud.com/sergiobasbaum/choror-bye-bye>
>> -- a.cinema <http://acinemaperformance.blogspot.com>
>> -- pantharei_tube
>> <https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlPdYtxV5bj5uAQwXC-M_Q>
>>
>> B'H'
>>
>> "Do mesmo modo como a percepção da coisa me abre ao ser, realizando a
>> síntese paradoxal de uma infinidade de aspectos perspectivos, a percepção
>> do outro funda a moralidade (...)"
>> Maurice Merleau-Ponty
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> empyre forum
>> empyre at lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au
>> http://empyre.library.cornell.edu
>
>
>
> --
> http://catahistorias.wordpress.com
> _______________________________________________
> empyre forum
> empyre at lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au
> http://empyre.library.cornell.edu



-- 
-- Prof. Dr. Sérgio Roclaw Basbaum
-- Pós-Graduação Tec.da Inteligência e Design Digital - TIDD (PUC-SP)
-- Coordenador Pós-Graduação em Música e Imagem (FASM)

-- http://soundcloud.com/sergiobasbaum
-- http://soundcloud.com/pantharei <https://soundcloud.com/pantharei>
-- [:a.cinema:] <http://acinemaperformance.blogspot.com.br/>
...sai dessa fila, vem pra roda festejar..
<http://soundcloud.com/sergiobasbaum/choror-bye-bye>
-- a.cinema <http://acinemaperformance.blogspot.com>
-- pantharei_tube <https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlPdYtxV5bj5uAQwXC-M_Q>

B'H'

"Do mesmo modo como a percepção da coisa me abre ao ser, realizando a
síntese paradoxal de uma infinidade de aspectos perspectivos, a percepção
do outro funda a moralidade (...)"
Maurice Merleau-Ponty
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