
Muddy Fields and Pink Possums: field work and color work as an entry point for embodied writing
Workshop by Helena Sanders
22 mrt. 2022 AKI Enschede
(archive)
Toegang: The workshop is fully booked.Host: Rana Ghavami
taal: English Spoken
In this three hour workshop we will use hands-on inquiry and the practice of keeping observational field notes as methods to wrestle with the question, what is color? In the attempt to answer this question, can we perhaps attune ourselves to the many sensorial registers and positions our bodies occupy at any given time?
Together with Helena Sanders, we will collectively discuss ways we can write/create with - rather than write out - our own complex experience, anomalies, slippery and shifting territories. Through a study of color, we will explore “stories that resist a single interpretation / the story as a renewable energy.” 1)
During the workshop Helena will present examples from her own artwork and writing which draws on folklore, oral tradition, ethnographic field research, and popular science. We will look at the poetic and practical potential of keeping a note book, and the many different ways of recording and sharing information and communicating the ineffable.
1) McKenzie Wark, “Freaky Realism: Michael Taussig’s Palma AfricanaI,” The Brooklyn Rail, May 2019
2) Nancy N. Chen, “Speaking Nearby: A Conversation with Trinh T. Minh-ha,” Visual Anthropology Review, Volume 8 Number 1, Spring 1992
Together with Helena Sanders, we will collectively discuss ways we can write/create with - rather than write out - our own complex experience, anomalies, slippery and shifting territories. Through a study of color, we will explore “stories that resist a single interpretation / the story as a renewable energy.” 1)
During the workshop Helena will present examples from her own artwork and writing which draws on folklore, oral tradition, ethnographic field research, and popular science. We will look at the poetic and practical potential of keeping a note book, and the many different ways of recording and sharing information and communicating the ineffable.
How can we learn from color - as a material, and as shade and shadow - to attune ourselves to many registers we occupy, to listen near-by? 2)
1) McKenzie Wark, “Freaky Realism: Michael Taussig’s Palma AfricanaI,” The Brooklyn Rail, May 2019
2) Nancy N. Chen, “Speaking Nearby: A Conversation with Trinh T. Minh-ha,” Visual Anthropology Review, Volume 8 Number 1, Spring 1992
related content

Helena Sanders
more in this series:
29 nov. 2022 - Body and power(lessness)
A Paper folded in half with a pen punched through it
25 okt. 2022 - Body and power(lessness)
Op bezoek bij Nieke Koek
05 okt. 2022 - Body and power(lessness)
Extreme Slow Walk - Listening to the In-Between
30 mei 2022 - Body and power(lessness)
Vivian Caccuri - De herkomst, politieke context en het sexleven van de mug
13 apr. 2022 - Body and power(lessness)
Trifecta ... the visceral, the virtual and the vulnerable
23 mrt. 2022 - Body and power(lessness)
Manipulatie door technologie
07 mrt. 2022 - Body and power(lessness)
Rabiaâ Benlahbib: De macht van de maker – ethische dilemma’s in de kunstpraktijk
02 feb. 2022 - Body and power(lessness)
Online Lunch event: Traumasporen in het lichaam
01 dec. 2021 - Body and power(lessness)
Leesgroep Het Lichaam en (on)macht - met Jules Sturm (online)
23 nov. 2021 - Body and power(lessness)
Kitchen Table Conversations - Het Lichaam en (on)Macht
14 okt. 2021 - Body and power(lessness)
Leesgroep Het Lichaam en (on)macht - met Dagmar Bosma
25 feb. 2019 - Body and power(lessness)