Born June 1985, Battambang Graduated 2007 from Phare Ponleu Selpak — Annie: What is your background and training in … More
Tag: Performance
Conditions for Performance in Cambodia: Interview with Anida Yoeu Ali
Anida Yoeu Ali (b.1974, Battambang) is an artist whose works span performance, installation, public encounters, and political agitation. … More
Conditions for Performance in Cambodia: Interview with Reaksmey Yean
A native of Battambang, Reaksmey Yean is a self-proclaimed art advocate, an early-career art curator and researcher, and an Alphawood … More
Conditions for Performance in Cambodia: Interview with Bo Rithy
Born 1989, in Kampuchea Krom, South Vietnam. Bo Rithy was a student at Phare Ponleu Selpak for ten years before … More
Conditions for Performance in Cambodia: Interview with Amy Lee Sanford
Amy Lee Sanford is a sculptor whose work explores the relationship between trauma and healing. Born in Phnom Penh, Cambodia … More
History Lessons: Fluid Records
Live programme curated by Annie Jael Kwan in association with Something Human and Iniva, followed by Q&A
MAP1: Waterways
Date|Time: 9 June 2017, 10.00am-6.00pm Performance Sites: Palazzo Pisani a Santa Marina, Venice, Italy & various outdoor locations. Artists: Libita Clayton, Lynn Lu, … More
Event Report: Annie Jael Kwan on A Stitch in Time? Situating David Medalla’s ‘Participation-Performance’ between British and Philippine Performance Art History
This report, commissioned by the Tate Research Centre: Asia, is a summary of a panel organised by Eva Bentcheva, independent art historian and curator, at Tate Modern on 21 November 2016. Entitled A Stitch in Time? Situating David Medalla’s ‘Participation-Production Performances’ between British and Philippine Performance Art History, this panel formed part of Contact Points: a seminar in which participants in the 2016 Tate Research Centre: Asia Visiting Fellowship Programme presented their research projects.
Art Asia Pacific: Brothers in Art
I first saw the Le Brothers’s large-scale three-channel video projection installation Into the Sea (2011) at the 2013 Singapore Biennale. The video featured the identical male twins in a series of beautifully filmed scenes set against the languid backdrop of the ocean. On one screen, the long-haired shirtless pair dig into the sand on a beach, and one buries the other in the sand.