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  • Elusive Self -
    ELUSIVE SELF A room installation which deals with the capacity of our brain to remember - and to forget, focusing on how we constantly revalue and recreate our relation to ourselves and to our past. Our memory is not like a printed book with an
  • Solitary -
    An interactive digital video projection installation 1 interactive video projection, black and white, silent 8 x 12 x 6 metres The piece is based on the texts of the late Roman philosopher Boethius, and deals with the fluid and ultimately
  • Ricardo Mbarkho spoke about the emerging artists’ approaches and positions in today’s Lebanese multi-cultural society, where religion, politics, war and post-war environments are always affecting the identity and belonging crisis. The aim of the
  • WRINGER/WASHER TV is a pink, white and chrome wringer washer which has a colour monitor fitted in the bottom of the wash tub facing up. This installation deals with the issue of abortion in Canada, interspersing opinions and arguments with video
  • Golem -
    Digital video installation 2 monitors and 12 channel audio, colour, sound audio by Hans Peter Kuhn Golem was a two channel video installation where the two monitors were arranged like the pages of an open book. The imagery was derived from
  • Church of St. Gregory the Illuminator, Hill Street, Singapore 2006. In 1909 the Armenian Church of St Gregory the Illuminator was the first building in Singapore to acquire electric lights and fans. This fact no doubt had its resonances with the
  • Seven artists and seven museums – they constituted the nodes of the homonymous exhibition which was shown in North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) from September 16th to November 11th 2007. The project, initiated by the registry of culture of NRW, Gütersloh,
  • Logo.Hallucination -
    Artworks Logo.Hallucination November, 2006 Is the economic dynamics of the collective hallucination leading us towards a privatization of the glance? Logo.Hallucination continuously monitors the images circulating on the Internet looking
  • Thomas Tallis, one of the most influential English composers of sixteenth century, wrote Spem in Alium nunquam habui, a choral work for eight choirs of five voices, to mark the fortieth birthday of Queen Elizabeth I in 1575. This piece of music