A series of seminars examining processes and materials of composition and decomposition of site and place organized by sensingsite.
24 January 2020, Room A002 CSM, 10.30 – 1.00pm
Pat engages with the [art] practice of site-specificity as contexts for and as research. Her works interrogate the politics of power and its symbolic and active enactment – aesthetic, spatial, social, economic. Who Owns the Sea? is the second in a trilogy of projects that investigate territorial ownership. In Who Owns the Land? (2016) the ownership of the UK’s most valuable asset is made transparent. In Who Owns the Sea? attention is turned towards the political contestation of territorial waters. Pat is a lecturer in MA Contemporary Photography; Practices and Philosophies at Central Saint Martins.
See https://sensingsite.blogspot.com/p/composting-estate-series-of-seminars.html for more information on the presentations and booking. sensingsite is organized by Steven Ball s.ball@csm.arts.ac.uk and Susan Trangmar s.trangmar@csm.arts.ac.uk
For the ‘Approaching Estate’ seminar series Julie presented Assembly at Brick Lane Mosque, a site-specific performance made with and for the mosque community. Since April 2019 Assembly has now moved to a new site; Old Kent Road Mosque renovated from a former pub in Southwark. Old Kent Road Mosque is due for demolition /redevelopment in March 2020 to build a new Islamic centre for the community. It has been recognised by Historic England that the built heritage of marginalised and minority communities is under-represented in the heritage landscape of the nation. This research is now working with the V&A to build a digital archive of this site and community.
Julie is Senior Lecturer and Researcher at CREAM (The Centre for Research and Education in Arts and Media) at University of Westminster.
10 January 2020; Room A002 CSM; 10.30 – 1.00pm
Ingrid uses performance, photography, moving image and installations to address migration and diasporas, and how the loss of home re-structures and transforms identity. Her work explores the role of art in transforming and repairing loss. Ingrid is a recent graduate of MA Fine Art at CSM and has recently completed residencies in Norway and Germany.
Greer explores the relationship between the guest and the host in her project called The Hotel. This site-specific project takes place in two communities in Roscommon, a county in the midlands of Ireland, where the actual ‘hotel’ represents a contested space of hospitality. Through dialogues, exchanges, texts, films and photographic works, The Hotel focuses on everyday practices of hospitality and building relationships over time, exploring the historical and cultural conditions that lie beneath or behind her Irish identity of hospitality, against a backdrop of increasing anxiety in Ireland around hosting and welcoming ‘others’.
Greer is an artist-researcher studying for her PhD at UAL.
See sensingsite.blogspot.com/p/composting-estate-series-of-seminars.html for more information on the presentations.
Book your place
Please note: places are limited to a maximum of 30, so please be sure you can attend and notify Eventbrite of any cancellation.
sensingsite is organized by Steven Ball s.ball@csm.arts.ac.uk and Susan Trangmar s.trangmar@csm.arts.ac.uk
We invite postgraduate students from across CSM to join an exciting experimental project designed to interrogate and reimagine contemporary scientific research centred on heart disease, energy harvesting and cellular sensing.
24 September 2019
Questions to explore:
4-8 November 2019
Monday – Thursday: 2-6pmFriday: 10-1pm + evening public seminar (optional)
The Grow Lab, Central Saint Martins, Kings Cross
17 September 2019
I am pleased to let you know that the British Library has scheduled another season of Doctoral Open Days in January and February 2020.
We are circulating the dates of these now, so that you and your colleagues can include details in any induction pack / training being prepared for your new Doctoral Students. The Box Office will open in mid-October and we will be in touch then with further details.Our Open Days are designed for first year PhD students who are new to the Library. The days explain the practicalities of using the Library and its services – including navigating our physical and online collections. Students are encouraged to choose the event which is of most interest and relevance to their studies, from the following:
We hope you find this advance information useful and will be in touch again with full details of individual events and how to book, once the Box Office is open.
26 April 2019
1–2 November 2019
Professor Howard Caygill, Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy,
Kingston University, LondonProfessor Laura U. Marks, School for the Contemporary Arts, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver
The fields of photography theory and history have in recent years moved away from the assumption of a break between the analogue and digital image to a more nuanced understanding of both past and contemporary photographic practices, images, and technologies. Increasingly photography is discussed in relation to other media, to industry and markets and to climate and the environment. At the same time questions of aesthetics and interpretation are recast and understood in terms of sensual, haptic, embodied and everyday encounters with material images. This conference will examine photography as simultaneously material and immaterial, addressing not only the tangible properties of photographic objects, but also the ecosystems in which they circulate. We live in and through the photographic, in its physical presence in the world, and in our thought. The conference thus also invites considerations of the ways in which a mode of philosophical thinking can be conceived as photographic or vice versa.
We welcome abstracts from colleagues in film or cinema studies working on the physical and chemical aspects of film (celluloid and light for example) and questions of aesthetic / sensual experience; and from colleagues in media, literature, history and philosophy whose work addresses the photographic in its various manifestations and forms. Artists whose work engages with the conference themes are welcome to submit a proposal.
Areas of interest include, but are not limited to:Ecologies of photography: atmospherics (clouds, fogging, aerialism, climate), energetics
Photography and the ineffable: material/immaterial, apparitions, image/imaginationTransience: ephemerality, obsolescence, wear and tear
Materiality: from celluloid to coltan, gelatine and silver, tactility, gesture, embodiment and thingliness
Science and technology: maintenance, glitches, wet and dry photography, chemistry, apparatus
Visibility and illumination: enlightenment and luminescence, flash, phosphorescence
Abstract Submission: Please send abstracts (300 words max.) with your name, title, affiliation (where appropriate) and a short bio (up to 200 words).Please prepare for a 20 minute presentation
by 5th of June 2019 to the conference organizers:
Dr. Michelle Henning — Professor of Photography and Cultural History, University of West London
michelle.henning@uwl.ac.uk
andDr. Junko Theresa Mikuriya — Senior Lecturer in Photography, University of West London
junkotheresa.mikuriya@uwl.ac.uk