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MUMA Podcast

MUMA Podcast

Monash University Museum of Art

A short series of conversations with artists and contributors developed as part of the exhibitions and public programs at MUMA | Monash University Museum of Art

8 - Episode 2 of VERS: On Pleasures, Embodiment, Kinships, Fugitivity and Re/Organising
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  • 8 - Episode 2 of VERS: On Pleasures, Embodiment, Kinships, Fugitivity and Re/Organising

    This is a three-part audio series documenting the event ‘VERS: On Pleasures, Embodiment, Kinships, Fugitivity and Re/Organising’. Initiated by Monash University Museum of Art in Naarm/Melbourne, VERS took place over two days on Kaurna Country in Tarntanya/Adelaide at Samstag Museum of Art and ACE in June 2022. VERS was developed by a curatorial panel consisting of Arlie Alizzi, Frances Barrett, Archie Barry, Léuli Eshrāghi, Jeff Khan and Melissa Ratliff, and emerges as a response to their collective discussions and deliberation on queer artistic and curatorial practices. A group of attendants including arts workers, artists and curators from across Australia were invited to come together to reflect on these questions and the title themes of pleasures, embodiment, kinships, fugitivity and re/organising. Seated in a circle, the event was structured around a rolling conversation and a series of performances. For full details on each attendant and theme, please download the VERS program from the MUMA website, monash.edu/muma.

    This is the second episode of VERS, which includes a recording of the curatorial introduction, a reading by Dominic Guerrera and the first half of the conversation which addresses the themes of re/organising, fugitivity and kinships. It took place on 18 June 2022.

    This episode has a strong language warning and includes discussion about mental health.

    Credits:

    This project was commissioned by Monash University Museum of Art and presented on site and in association with Samstag Museum of Art and ACE. It has been supported by the City of Adelaide. VERS graphics by Hana Shimada. VERS performances curated by Frances Barrett. Audio setup, technical support and recording by Mosaic Audio Visual. Podcast editing and production by Tilly Balding, Solstice Podcasting. This podcast is supported by Solstice Podcasting, Monash University Museum of Art and Samstag Museum of Art.

    Link to VERS program: https://www.monash.edu/muma/public-programs/previous/2023/vers-on-pleasures,-embodiment,-kinships,-fugitivity-and-reorganising

    Wed, 30 Nov 2022 - 1h 54min
  • 7 - Episode 1 of VERS: On Pleasures, Embodiment, Kinships, Fugitivity and Re/Organising

    This is a three-part audio series documenting the event ‘VERS: On Pleasures, Embodiment, Kinships, Fugitivity and Re/Organising’. Initiated by Monash University Museum of Art (MUMA) in Naarm/Melbourne, VERS took place over two days on Kaurna Country in Tarntanya/Adelaide at Samstag Museum of Art and ACE in June 2022. VERS was developed by a curatorial panel consisting of Arlie Alizzi, Frances Barrett, Archie Barry, Léuli Eshrāghi, Jeff Khan and Melissa Ratliff, and emerges as a response to their collective discussions and deliberation on queer artistic and curatorial practices. A group of attendants including arts workers, artists and curators from across Australia were invited to come together to reflect on these questions and the title themes of pleasures, embodiment, kinships, fugitivity and re/organising. Seated in a circle, the event was structured around a rolling conversation and a series of performances. For full details on each attendant and theme, please download the VERS program from the MUMA website, monash.edu/muma.

    This is the first episode of VERS, where we listen to a conversation between Brian Fuata, V Barratt, Daniel Jaber and Frances Barrett held on 17 June 2022.

    This episode has a strong language warning.

    Credits:

    This project was commissioned by Monash University Museum of Art and presented on site and in association with Samstag Museum of Art and ACE. It has been supported by the City of Adelaide. VERS graphics by Hana Shimada. VERS performances curated by Frances Barrett. Audio setup, technical support and recording by Mosaic Audio Visual. Podcast editing and production by Tilly Balding, Solstice Podcasting. This podcast is supported by Solstice Podcasting, Monash University Museum of Art and Samstag Museum of Art.

    Wed, 30 Nov 2022 - 41min
  • 6 - Language Is a River: Part 1

    Guests: Akil Ahamat Ellen van Neerven Host: Kate Barber In the first episode we hear from NSW-based artist Akil Ahamat together with Meanjin/Brisbane based writer, editor and educator Ellen van Neerven, whose four poems open the Language is a River publication. NSW-based artist Akil Ahamat introduces their two single-channel video installations in the exhibition, Muscular Dreams 2016 and So the spaces between us can stay soft 2018, and discusses the use of storytelling and very specific vocality within their work, the 1990s film Space Jam and how sneakers have been a major part of their life. The episode concludes with Ellen van Neerven reading their poem, The only blak queer in the world, from the collection Throat, published by University of Queensland Press in 2020. Links: Fanon, Frantz - The Wretched of the Earth, [First published 1961] Valencia, Sayak - Gore Capitalism, Semiotext(e), South Pasadena, CA, The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA [2018] van Neerven, Ellen - Throat, University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Qld [2020] Space Jam, Warner Bros. Pictures, Burbank, CA, Dir: Joe Pytka, [1996]

    Tue, 15 Feb 2022 - 33min
  • 5 - Language Is a River: Part 2

    Guests: Archie Barry Pip Wallis Sarah Rodigari Host: Kate Barber The second episode in the Language is a River podcast commences with a conversation between artist Archie Barry and curator Pip Wallis, discussing Barry's work Scaffolding (Preface) 2021, and speculating about the future potential of vocality together with the recurrence of singing as a medium in their practice. This is followed by artist Sarah Rodigari introducing the sound component of their installation work, Towards an Affective Measure, 2021, developed from a series of walking conversations the artist undertook with accounting academics while on residency within the Monash Business School, Monash University in 2021. Links: Archie Barry's website https://archiebarry.com/ Pip Wallis's website https://pipwallis.com/ Sarah Rodigari's website https://sarahrodigari.org/ Form x Content, Sarah Rodigari and Dr Naomi Stead in conversation 'What is Queer Accounting?' Interview with Dr. Amanda White and A/Prof. Nick McGuigan on the queer aspects of the accounting profession

    Tue, 15 Feb 2022 - 26min
  • 4 - Tree Story: Future Trees

    The final episode of Tree Telling, titled Future Tree, features special guests who are thinking about and actively engaged with the future of trees. Dr Jen Sanger and Steve Pearce from The Tree Projects are on a mission to preserve Tasmania's giant trees for future generations. They will be talking us through the complex logistics involved in photographing one of the southern hemisphere's tallest trees; an 84m tall eucalypt called 'Gandalf's Staff' located in Tasmania's Styx Valley. We are also joined by James Burgmann-Milner, an emerging writer, cultural studies PhD candidate and teaching associate with the Monash Climate Change Communications Research Hub, Monash University. James' doctoral research focuses on narrative forms of climate change communication, and he discusses representations of trees within climate fiction (cli-fi) and a return to focussing on the arboreal world within climate fiction. Guests: Dr Jen Sanger and Steve Pearce, The Tree Projects James Burgmann-Milner, Monash Climate Change Communications Research Hub, Monash University Host: Kate Barber Links: Eucalypt Australia Heat and Light, Ellen van Neerven, UQP, Published 2015 Monash Climate Change Communications Research Hub Tasmanian Big Tree Register The Overstory, Richard Powers, WW Norton & Company, Published 2018 The Swan Book, Alexis Wright, Giramondo, Published 2013 The Tree Projects, Tasmania

    Tue, 21 Dec 2021 - 47min
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