Plague and Locusts 2020: Carlotta Storelli
International and interdisciplinary artist, she studies theater, dance and art. She is dedicated to interdisciplinary language research as an interpreter, choreographer and pedagogue. Born in Switzerland on April 4, 1990, in the city of Locarno where she receives her baccalaureate at the CSIA school. After graduating she moved to Spain
Read on!Plague and Locusts 2020. November: Matteo Campulla.
Continuing a series of interviews with video artists who responded to our artist call Plague and Locusts 2020 with had a virtual Q&A with Matteo Campulla. Outside, Matteo Campulla. I am 38 years old and I am a Sardinian artist based in Milan, Italy. After graduating from the artistic high
Read on!Plague and Locusts 2020. November: Eija Temisevä.
“I perform myself in many of my videos. Pictures tell more than my words about my video work.” Eija Temisevä. I am a Finnish sculptor who started to make videos 2013 after teaching sculpture for 26 years. I am a self educated video artist. Now I get a little pension
Read on!Plague and Locusts 2020: Katherine Sweetman
Answering our questions, Katherine Sweetman shares her thoughts on current creative climate, her inspirations and plans, and showing her work that she submitted to Ephemereye Plague and Locusts 2020 virtual show. Weird, Katherine Sweetman. 2020. Today, I tend to classify myself as an artist, content creator, and/or documentary filmmaker. About
Read on!Plague and Locusts 2020: Pierre Ajavon
Pierre Ajavon is a visual artist, composer & musician. He lives in Paris and exhibits internationally. After sociology studies focused on psychedelic culture, he embarked on a long musical journey as a composer and multi-instrumentalist. He moved into video art when he saw the possibility of bringing the sound and
Read on!Plague and Locusts 2020. July. Featured artist: Dmitrii Kilaga
© Dmitrii Kilaga. Courtesy of the artist. Exhibiting artist Dmitrii Kilaga lives and works in Murmansk – a city in northwestern Russia, above the Polar Circle at the end of a deep bay off the Barents sea. He is a painter and videographer. He began to work with video in
Read on!Kgaugelo Rakgwale
It is not always simple to separate the artist’s statement from the artist whose work doesn’t appear to manifest what it claims to be manifesting. A nod to ‘contemporary discourse’ seems to be the norm while discussing art. It is sometimes overlooked that contemporary discourse is a living and breathing
Read on!Plague and Locusts 2020. June.
Primer for Pandemic, © Nancy Wyllie, 2020 Holding My Breath, digital video, 2020. © Timo Kahlen At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, we published a call for artists, entitled ‘Plague and Locusts 2020′. As we face a pandemic of über-Biblical proportions, together with the rise of right-wing politicians, loss and deterioration
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