Using theatrical lighting found on-site at Revolution Recovery to create a theatrical stage in this site of daily labor, this experimental documentary engages the artist’s experience in filming dance to the physical movement of non-human actors in the shaping of our world. Initiated during her 2015 RAIR residency, Makary’s video foregrounds the choreographic properties of dust to both contaminate and articulate space. The final work, presented in public for the first time, is J. In the context of RAIR, Silbersee also foregrounds the complicity of artistic film and video imagining with material genealogies of waste and contamination. Walkow’s photographs to examine the environment’s slow desiccation via textual fragments written from the lake’s perspective, juxtaposed against music by composer Natalia Dominguez Rangel. He relentlessly photographed the lake and its surrounding communities during the years of the German reunification, later giving his private archive to the artist to rework. ![]() Namely: embodied sensibilities forced to undergo constant adaptation sensorial montages whose origins are impossible to determine processes that fluctuate between standardization and flexibility multiple-author narrative forms that engage the complexity of history, experience and biography at play within this singular space. Not intended to be an artistic illustration of the social scientific processes, whether general or specific, this video program nonetheless evokes some of the topical drivers to emerge from Digging Deeper. It is presented as a one-night installation of three works in video, two of which were developed through RAIR. ![]() This World Which Thinks Us is a curatorial proposition that aims to contribute to this multi-disciplinary conversation between artistic and social scientific practice by foregrounding artworks that share a certain resonance or common set of concerns with the projects formulated by these four invited researchers. Digging Deeper is a series that airs extended episodes with extra information and unseen footage from the show The Curse of Oak Island that also airs on. This World Which Thinks Us: Artists and Social Scientists across the Waste Stream ![]() As part of this final event, our curatorial advisor, Jennifer Burris, put together an accompanying film screening program:
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