Claire Bishop in conversation with Heiner Valdivia and Fernando Zvietcovich
What does it mean to look?
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Alianza Francesa de Arequipa
In Artificial Hells, Claire Bishop(United Kingdom) followed the trail of artistic practices that discomfort, interrupt and reconfigure what we understand by seeing. Now, in Disordered Attention, in the context of an economy characterised by programmed distraction, she once again asks what it means to look. Her analysis dismantles the idea of pure contemplation and highlights the power of performance, dance and political interventions to mould a new type of perception: emotional, hybrid and shared. In conversation with Fernando Zvietcovichand Heiner Valdivia.
Simultaneous interpretation from English to Spanish available
A fanzine is a homemade publication, one that usually combines different formats and resources (collage, photography, illustration and/or text) along with varied subject matter. Those attending this workshop will be able to explore the memories, interests and emotions that bind their families. A unique opportunity to reflect on family identity, as well as experiences both long past and recent. The workshop will be aimed at Hispanic Literature students of the PUCP, accompanied by two of the course lecturers, Ainaí Morales and María Gracia Ríos.
Claire Bishop, María Galindo and Boima Tucker in conversation with Nereida Apaza
Contemporary art viewed from the global South
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Teatro Arequepay
A chance to discover and debate the matter of contemporary art, and what is being created in the global South, seen through expert eyes and from the point of view of artists themselves. With the art historian and critic Claire Bishop (UK), the feminist activist and performance artist María Galindo (Bolivia); and the musician, writer and cultural manager Boima Tucker (Sierra Leone/USA). Moderated by the multidisciplinary visual artist, Nereida Apaza (Peru).
This event has taken place
With the support of the Chilean Embassy in Peru and the British Council
José Carlos Mariátegui in conversation with Sissi Hamann
What does art contribute to techonology?
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Teatro Arequepay
The British Council publication Why Technology Needs Artists: 40 International Perspectives shows how innovation lead by artists not only boosts technological progress but also generates social and economic value, integrates cultural diversity and puts forward sustainable futures centered on human values where ancestral knowledge offers models of shared wisdom. From this dual economic and political perspective, this conversation with José Carlos Mariáteguiwill reflect on its potential as evidence for public policies, innovation plans and digital governance and will also address the role of copyright in the digital world from diverse knowledge systems. Moderated by Sissi Hamann.