Invisible Structures: Australian artist collectives in Tokyo, Singapore and Yogyakarta // Supported by Next Wave and Asialink // 10 December 2010 — 5 February 2011 - http://inside.nextwave.org.au/news/in…Boxcopy Vs Good Paper
Invisible Structures: Australian artist collectives in Tokyo, Singapore and Yogyakarta presents three Australian artist collectives on separate residencies across Asia. The project is the second-stage of Structural Integrity, a high-profile exhibition, residency and cultural-exchange project involving 11 local and international Artist Run Initiatives (ARIs) that was part of the 2010 Next Wave Festival, held in Melbourne, Australia in May 2010. Invisible Structures embraces collaborative and process-based projects, presenting opportunities for an even deeper engagement between the participating Australian and Asian artists, and between the artists and the various local people and communities they encounter. With the support of Asialink, Boxcopy will now travel back to Singapore to work with independent cultural space Post-Museum, another ARI from Structural Integrity. Boxcopy will work on-the-ground in Singapore throughout December 2010 and January 2011.
LIVE FOR SATAN | Ican Harem
22 January – 12 February 2011
Performance documentation»>
Installation documentation»>
LIVE FOR SATAN is a solo exhibition of new and recent work by Indonesian artist Ican Harem. Incorporating performance, video, illustration, design and music, Harem’s practice weaves with a sense of equivalence through a broad field of cultural production. For his exhibition at Boxcopy, Harem focuses on the presentation of a series of short, low-fi videos, made initially as visual accompaniment to his black metal karaoke band, CangKang Serigala. Often darkly humorous, Harem’s karaoke videos shift between visual arbitrariness (a quality true to the karaoke style) and other more composed moments that are unexpectedly disarming.
Developed in response to the size of the Boxcopy gallery, the exhibition LIVE FOR SATAN will re-imagine the exhibition site as part karaoke den, part Islamic mosque. In the absence of the performer, Harem will create an anticipatory zone – a space both open for the viewer to use (for karaoke? prayer? sacrifice?) and a stage awaiting the blood, sweat, and theatrical posturing of a CangKang Serigala performance. Harem playfully negotiates the difficulties of a ‘hybrid place’, using his art practice and on stage persona to test out conflicting identity discourses, a place influenced by nationality, religion and personal interests. LIVE FOR SATAN is Harem’s first solo exhibition in Australia.
(Source: youtube.com)