Workshop Residenz für aufstrebene Künstler*innen, Architekt*innen, Designer*innen All Right Angles

All Right Angles © Geoffrey Bawa Trust

Samstag, 23.09.2023 bis Dienstag, 26.09.2023

NUR FÜR AUSGEWÄHLTE TEILNEHMER*INNEN

Dieser Workshop verwendet den Garten als eine Linse für die Auseinandersetzung mit Architektur, Kunst und Ökologie. Eine Vielzahl von lokalen und internationalen Mentor*innen werden die 11 Teilnehmer*innen, die durch einen Open Call ausgewählt wurden, durch die vier Tage in Lunuganga führen. Die Teilnehmer*innen stammen aus Jaffna, Monaragala, Badulla, Batticaloa, Aluthgama und Colombo und setzen sich aus aufstrebenden Architekturstudierenden, Architekt*innen, Künstler*innen und Designer*innen zusammen.

Workshop Mentor*innen

Setareh Noorani Photo Credit: Floor Besuijen, Nieuwe Instituut Setareh Noorani (b. 1995, The  Netherlands) is an architect, researcher and curator at the Nieuwe Instituut (Rotterdam), and is part of various experimental collectives. She uses various media in her projects and artistic contributions to explore ways of publicising and embodying, questioning processes of trauma and time; always moving in the grey space between academic research and art. Her current (curatorial) research at the Nieuwe Instituut focuses on the qualitative, paradigm-shifting notions of decoloniality, feminisms, queer ecologies, non- institutional representations, and the implications of the collective, more-than- human body in architecture, its heritage and ambiguous future scenarios. She was part of the curatorial team of the London Design Biënnale 2023 and its Remapping Collaborations Working Group, and involved in the selection committees of the yearly Nieuwe Instituut Call for Fellows. Setareh holds a master’s degree (MSc) in Architecture (TU Delft, cum laude).

Sarath Kotagama Photo Credit: Diluckshan Puviraj Sarath Kotagama is a Sri Lankan ornithologist and environmentalist. He holds a BSc from the University of Colombo and a PhD from the University of Aberdeen, focusing on the behavioural ecology of the rose-ringed parakeet. Kotagama served as a lecturer at the University of Colombo and the Open University of Sri Lanka, and as Director of the Department of Wildlife Conservation. He was appointed Professor of Environmental Science at the University of Colombo and later became Professor Emeritus. Kotagama has been a consultant to various organisations and held leadership roles in conservation societies. He received the "2003 Distinguished Service Award for Environment Education and Journalism" from the International Society for Conservation Biology. The endemic toad species Duttaphrynus kotagamai was named in his honour. In 2017, he was awarded the title of Vidya Jyothi by the Government of Sri Lanka.

Umeshi Rajeendra Photo Credit: Alice Carfrae Umeshi Rajeendra is Sri Lankan/Ilankai born dance artist, educator, and choreographer whose artistic and academic pursuits address intersectional solidarity through the production of original works since 2012. Umeshi received her Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Dance from University of the Arts, USA, where she was one of the recipients of the President's Fund for Excellence, and she also received a Bachelor of Arts in Dance and Economics from Denison University, USA. She has worked with renowned international artists such as Dada Masilo, Netta Yerushalmy, Jesse Zaritt, Sandra Mathern-Smith, Julie Fox, Stafford Barry, and Olivier Tarpaga and gained extensive experience in America, Europe, and South Asia. Umeshi is the Co-Founder and Artistic Director of MeshGround, A Platform for Movement Arts,
and is currently also a visiting lecturer at universities, striving to unearth our embodied relational agency, where discomfort, difference and alterity are embraced to challenge our performativity.


We Are From Here © We Are From Here We Are From Here is a multidisciplinary artist collective formed by Firi Rahman and Parilojithan Ramanathan. With a focus on Slave Island, a rapidly developing location in the centre of Colombo, their ongoing project explores the threat of socio-political intersections that are gradually being erased for inequitable economic and political drivers that subsequently displaces residents. Firi Rahman’s work often considers the threatened codependent relationships that people and endangered species have with their natural, lived and built environments. Parilojithan Ramanathan is from Batticaloa, Sri Lanka and works with lens-based mediums, primarily dealing with nostalgia and memory.

Creative Island – From Forest School to Sensory Architectures is a project by EUNIC Sri Lanka, Colomboscope, the Geoffrey Bawa Trust and Kälam (Jaffna). EUNIC — European Union National Institutes for Culture — is Europe’s network of national cultural institutes and organizations, with 36 members from all EU member states and associated countries. EUNIC Sri Lanka - consisting of the Alliance Française, the Goethe-Institut, the British Council, the Italian Embassy, and the Dutch Embassy - adopts an integrated approach to building cultural relations and creative collaborations and supporting diversity.

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