Geosigi Hall (Gwangju Biennale Conference Hall), Gwangju Exhibition Hall Conference

Confluences: Stories of Art and the Planetary

Courtesy of Gwangju Biennale Foundation

Explore artistic practices which imagine our planet as a site of resistance, solidarity and care

Gwangju Biennale Foundation and Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational are pleased to announce the 14th Gwangju Biennale's symposium Confluences: Stories of Art and the Planetary taking place on 7 and 8 April 2023.

Entitled soft and weak like water, the biennale lends its title from a chapter of a Daoist text, Dao De Jing. By thinking through the restorative potential of water as a metaphor, force, and method, it proposes to imagine our planet as a site of resistance, coexistence, solidarity and care.

Expanding on these themes, the symposium will centre artistic voices engaged in alternative models and practices that imagine other ways of knowing and existing together. Indeed, as a biennale that features 79 artists with over 40 new works and commissioned projects, the programme invites artists to speak directly to their own practices.

Structured across three panels entitled Source, Undercurrents, and Estuaries, the first day will feature artist presentations and talks which touch on issues related to world-making, contested spaces and memories, shared and collective histories, as well as collaborative and community-engaged artistic practices.

The second day will feature a keynote lecture presented by scholar and writer Macarena Gomez-Barris whose work sits at the intersection of art, environment, queer feminist politics, and decolonial theory and praxis. This will be followed by a roundtable which will bring together the seemingly distinct stories across the programme to explore them as interconnected entanglements. In doing so, the symposium seeks to address the fluid relationality of our planetary issues by emphasizing these transnational artistic narratives.

This symposium is organised by Gwangju Biennale Foundation and Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational.

Programme

Friday 7 April - Geosigi Hall (Gwangju Biennale Conference Hall)

Day 1

09.3010.00

Welcome by Yangwoo Park, President, Gwangju Biennale Foundation

Welcome by Frances Morris, Director, Tate Modern

10.0010.15

Introduction by Sook-Kyung Lee, 14th Gwangju Biennale Artistic Director

10.1512.00

Panel 1 - Source: Artistic Activation

This panel explores how artmaking relates to world-making and how creative impulses are manifested in the subjective. While having their own individual artistic languages, these artists demonstrate how their practices also relate to shared histories and collective experiences.

Speakers include Hera Büyüktaşçıyan, Yuki Kihara, Guadalupe Maravilla, David Zink Yi and Judy Watson. The panel discussion will be moderated by Hera Chan and followed by a Q&A.

12.0013.30

Break

13.3015.00

Panel 2 - Undercurrents: Ambiguous Narratives

This panel highlights artistic practices that are purposefully subjective yet resonating with larger social and historic factors. The discussion looks at the ways in which these artists have continued their work in specific local contexts and in relation to wider cultural narratives.

Speakers include Chang Jia, Hong Lee Hyun Sook, Lee Seung-Ae, and Oh Suk Kuhn. Discussion moderated by Sooyoung Leam.

15.0015.30

Break

15.3017.15

Panel 3 - Estuaries: Navigating Boundaries

This panel looks at how artists have navigated, questioned and challenged dominant systems and established narratives. In working with alternative models, the discussion also highlights collaborative, research-based and community-engaged artistic approaches.

Speakers include Aliza Nisenbaum, Meiro Koizumi, Taus Makhacheva and Abbas Akhavan. Discussion moderated by Harry C. H. Choi.

17.3018.00

Performance (Gwangju Biennale Exhibition Hall Gallery 1)

Buhlebezwe Siwani - Inhlambuluko (To be pure again)

This time-based performance is centered around cleansing ceremonies that heal and open up spaces and the body. Using medicinal plants and sound, the performance is meant to be a meditation rooted in the way of negotiating the body and one's physical space in a tender way, allowing oneself to open up and be ancestrally and spiritually vulnerable. This performance is a meditation on one's own ancestry using healing methodologies to move between the past and present in a spiritual and cognitive landscape.

Saturday 8 April - Geosigi Hall (Gwangju Biennale Conference Hall)

Day 2

9.3010.00

Performance (Gwangju Biennale Exhibition Hall Gallery 3)

Noe Martinez - Mi cuerpo es un cementerio y mi camino un memorial (My body is a cemetery and my path a memorial)

This performance invokes the artist's Huastec ancestors who were enslaved during the colonial regime of the Americas. It symbolizes a cycle of life and death, and at the same time proposes a way to symbolically heal the colonial wound that has persisted through the present. It is staged around and within an installation of ceramic sculptures inspired by Huastec archaeological remains found in areas close to the artist’s familial community. Through his body's movement, Martinez simulates the moving threads on a loom as a metaphor for intertwining the world of the living and the world of the dead. Martinez uses this performance as a way to commune with his ancestors and memorialize a history of trafficked bodies across the Atlantic, and to reflect on contemporaneous forced migration and human trafficking.

10.1010.15

Welcome and Introduction - Sook-Kyung Lee, 14th Gwangju Biennale Artistic Director

10.1511.15

Keynote Lecture - Macarena Gómez-Barris Decompositions at the Sea's Edge

In a series of decompositions, or forms of unwriting the Anthropocene, Macarena Gómez­ Barris invites reflection on the changing role of knowledge, artistic practice, and climate futures through addressing what it means to study and make art from the sea's edge. The focus on sea edges offers micro and submerged perspectives against and within the logics of conquest, apartheid, and extraction that organize and disorganize a climate changing world.

Discussion moderated by Odessa Warren.

11.1511.45

Break

11.4513.15

Tributaries: Together in Separate Ways

This artist roundtable will explore the thematic threads flowing across the programme to ask how we can think together to address current planetary crises with and through art. The discussion will touch on notions of the public and collective, solidarity and friendship, community and ecology, as well as multiple and separate epistemologies. Roundtable moderated by Ming Tiampo.

Geosigi Hall (Gwangju Biennale Conference Hall), Gwangju Exhibition Hall

115 Biennale-ro
Buk-gu, Gwangju, South Korea

Date & Time

7 April 2023 at 09.30–18.00

Online pre-registration required

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