Please join us and CIRCUIT Artist Moving Image at the Athenaeum Theatre on Friday, June 6 from 6pm for a screening of five new moving image works by artists who resist or relinquish ocularcentrism through multisensorial knowledge systems. With works by Kah Bee Chow, Selina Ershadi, Kite, Sonya Lacey and James Tapsell-Kururangi. Curated by Erin Robideaux Gleeson and commissioned by CIRCUIT with support from Creative New Zealand.
Upcoming Event
Kite with the Wihanble S’a Center for Indigenous AI, Makȟóčhe Kiŋ Oíč’iwa (The Land Paints Itself) (still), Digital video, sound, 2025.
Leap to the Place of Two Pools presents five new moving image works by artists who, by inheritance, instinct or desire, rely on multisensorial ways of knowing that resist, relinquish, or supplant ocularcentrism.
Taking into account cinema's traditional emphasis on the visual, this project seeks to reimagine cinema as both a projected moving image event, yet one shaped by multi-sensory approaches. How does surety and attachment to the two pools—the seeing eyes—leap and transmigrate to other sensing sites of and through the body? Even as the two pools participate in the making and spectatorship of moving images, what can a relational itinerary of the senses offer?
Sonya Lacey’s immersive work is a stop-frame animation painstakingly constructed from acid-etched copper frames, and revels in the opaque surface effects used in animated screen productions to transition the viewer from wakefulness to a dreamstate. James Tapsell-Kururangi follows the call of Tūtānekai’s flute to performrecreate his tūpuna Hinemoa’s forbidden swim to Mokoia Island to meet her beloved. Selina Ershadi stitches traces of previous works, reflected images and poetic text to her faltering attempts to tell a story spun from eroded memories, unfurling its inevitable unknowability in deep shadow and inky darkness. Malmö-based Kah Bee Chow revisits her own filmic archive to produce an intimate and heartfelt memorial to the sensory pleasures of her late father’s garden and the conversations they shared in it. Lakȟóta artist Kite imagines Indigenous futures extending across unceded land, marked by stones whose own language emerges as a conduit to multivocal storytelling.
Leap to the Place of Two Pools is the latest edition of CIRCUIT’s annual series in which an international curator is engaged to develop a programme of new artist commissions based in the moving image. Erin Robideaux Gleeson's title is adapted from Anna Tsing and Sarah Shin’s conversation that prefaces Ignota Books’ edition of Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Carrier Bag of Fiction.
CIRCUIT Director Mark Williams will introduce the film programme at the beginning of the event, and the screening will be free to attend.
The Athenaeum Theatre can be found at 23 the Octagon, and is fully wheelchair acessible. Please contact director@blueoyster.org.nz if you have any specific accessibility requirements.
Kah Bee Chow is an artist from Penang, Malaysia and Tāmaki Makaurau, Aotearoa, living and working in Malmö, Sweden. In her practice, Chow works with forms of protective architecture, including looking at forms for the body such as shields and shells, as well as architectural mechanisms of enclosure, paying close attention to the particularities of space and site. Her work has been shown at institutions including: Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Malmö Konsthall; Den Frie Centre of Contemporary Art, Copenhagen; Kunstlerhaus Bregenz, Austria; Te Tuhi, Aotearoa; Tranen Contemporary Art Centre, Copenhagen; Signal Center for Contemporary Art, Malmö; Rupert, Vilnius; Magenta Plains, New York; Blank Canvas, Malaysia; Artspace Aotearoa, among others.
Selina Ershadi is an Iranian-born, Aotearoa-based artist working within a lineage of experimental and hybrid forms across filmmaking and writing. Often drawing on personal and familial histories and archives, her works complicate autobiography, exploring the slipperiness of storytelling, memory and language, as well as the risks and failures that haunt documentation. Her work has been exhibited and screened at Te Papa Tongarewa, Te Whanganui-a-Tara; Heretaunga Hastings City Art Gallery, Heretaunga; The Physics Room, Ōtautahi; Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, Ngāmotu; Dunedin Public Art Gallery, Ōtepoti; Enjoy Contemporary Art Space, Te Whanganui-a-Tara; Granville Centre Art Gallery, Gadigal Sydney; Seventh Gallery, Naarm Melbourne; and RM Gallery, Tāmaki Makaurau.
Erin Robideaux Gleeson is a curator, writer and educator based on Dakota lands of Mní Sóta Makhóčhe (Minnesota), or Lands Where Waters Reflect Clouds. She is currently Lecturer in Critical Theory and Curatorial Studies in the Art Department of the University of Minnesota (2020–) and Director and Curator of FD13 (2021–), a residency program focusing on liveness, most recently with Raven Chacon, Kablusiak, Anocha Suwichakornpong, Pio Abad, Yee I-Lann, and Moe Satt. Her recent advisory work includes with Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, the George Morrison Catalogue Raisonné Project and Han Nefkens Foundation. Living in Phnom Penh (2002–19), Erin co-founded and directed SA SA BASSAC (2011–18), a non-profit multidisciplinary art center focusing on contemporary art and its histories in Southeast Asia. Over the past 10 years, Erin has worked with several artists and curators from Aotearoa, most recently at Legacies | Routes, an exhibition and gathering presented by CIRCUIT at Storage Art Space, Bangkok, in 2023.
Kite (Dr. Suzanne Kite) is an Oglála Lakȟóta performance artist, visual artist, and composer raised in Southern California, with a BFA from CalArts in music composition, an MFA from Bard College’s Milton Avery Graduate School and a Ph.D. in Fine Arts from Concordia University, Montreal. Kite’s scholarship and practice investigate contemporary Lakȟóta ontologies through research-creation, computational media and performance, often working in collaboration with family and community members. Kite has published in The Journal of Design and Science (MIT Press), with the award-winning article, ‘Making Kin with Machines.’ Recently, Kite was a 2023 Creative Capital Award Winner, a 2023 USA Fellow and a 2022–23 Creative Time Open Call artist with Alisha B. Wormsley. She is currently Director of the Wihanble S’a Center for Indigenous AI, Distinguished Artist-in-Residence and Assistant Professor of American and Indigenous Studies at Bard College. She is an enrolled member of the Oglala Sioux tribe.
Sonya Lacey is an artist based in Tāmaki Makaurau. Her practice focuses on rest and restlessness in the context of labour, and the physiological consequences of abstractions such as time structures and the work environment. She works primarily with moving image and sculptural installation. Lacey’s exhibition Weekend was nominated for the Walters Prize in 2021 and exhibited at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki. Recent exhibitions include: No distance at all, Robert Heald Gallery, Te Whanganui-a-Tara, 2023; The Polyphonic Sea, Bundanon Art Museum, New South Wales, Australia, 2023; Thresholds, Several Degrees of Attention, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, Ngāmotu, 2022; Totally Dark, Dunedin Public Art Gallery; Ōtepoti, 2021; Crossings, Te Pātaka Toi Adam Art Gallery, Te Whanganui-a-Tara, 2021; and State of Motion 2020: Rushes of Time, Asian Film Archive, Singapore.
James Tapsell-Kururangi (Te Arawa, Tainui, Ngāti Porou) is an artist based in Ōtautahi, where he is the Director of The Physics Room. Recent exhibitions include: My throat a shelter, The Physics Room, Ōtautahi, 2023; Indigenous Histories, Museo de Arte de Sāo Paulo Assis Chateaubriand, Sāo Paulo, 2023; The long waves of our ocean, National Library, Te Whanganui-a-Tara, 2022; twisting, turning, winding: takatāpui + queer objects, Objectspace, Tāmaki Makaurau, 2022; and Matarau, City Gallery Wellington Te Whare Toi, Te Whanganui-a-Tara, 2022.