Ortsbezogene Kunst: Lecture by Talya Feldman
Zeitgenössische Kunst Vortrag
We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Verbindung zu esel.at
Unfortunately cancelled due train strike in Germany
Abteilung Ortsbezogene Kunst
WIR SIND HIER (WE ARE HERE)
A digital space for individual and collective mourning and resistance.
WIR SIND HIER is a digital cartography project claiming remembrance in public space, from city streets to monuments, through the voices and demands of survivors and families of victims of racist and antisemitic violence.
As a living archive, it invites users to imagine how remembrance could and should look like today as an active form of resistance and change. By scrolling over the names of victims, users of the platform are given an overview of right-wing extremist attacks and police brutality in Germany and the former GDR within the last 40 years, including cases that have not yet been properly recognized as hate crimes by state and local authorities.
Talya Feldman is a time-based media artist from Denver, Colorado. She earned her MFA from the Hochschule für bildende Künste Hamburg and her BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Through her intercultural and collaborative practice, Feldman generates social transformation through artistic and educational projects that offer alternative and reparative narratives to violence. She has received global recognition for her works combating right-wing terror in cooperation with activist and research-based networks in Germany and abroad. Feldman has achieved numerous awards including the 2023 Federal Prize for Art Students in Germany, the 2022 Berenberg Culture Award, the 2021 German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) Scholarship Award and the 2021 DAGESH Art Prize for her sound installation ‘The Violence We Have Witnessed Carries a Weight on Our Hearts’ at the Jewish Museum in Berlin.
https://www.talyafeldman.net/
https://wir-sind-hier.digital/
Lecture: as part of the course “Sprache*Gewaltig Performen // Performing linguistic power - powerful linguistic interventions” by Lann Hornscheidt.
www.ortsbezogenekunst.at