Met werk van afgestudeerden Habiba Afifi, Fatemeh Asiri, Naomi de Bruijn, Savvas Gerolemidis, Wenkang “Hohn” Guan, Athina Koutsiou, Nguyễn Ngọc Tú Dung, Cornalijn Overweg-Ramaker, Öykü Özoğul, Natsumi Sakai, Parel Strik, Pan Vanitcharoenthum,
HKU Hogeschool voor de Kunsten Utrecht presenteert in samenwerking met BAK (Dis)comfort Narratives: Moving with the Feeling, als afstudeerevenement van de studenten Master Fine Art 2023-2024.
The diverse range of graduation projects sheds light on the tensions and proximities inherent in the interplay of eco-socio-cultural pressures and intimate, relational dynamics from multiple perspectives and diverse contexts and backgrounds.
Within the shifting relationalities of reality, comfort and discomfort can never be entirely separated. From the social and communal to the personal realm of the mind and body, political dynamics are always at play. To come to terms with oneself, these young artists pose a question: What are alternative ways of storytelling, connecting, and living in current eco-socio-political climates? In their presentations, they bring together the complexities of the relationship between society and the self—to exemplify displacement, alienation, re-location, and coexistence—asking the pivotal question: what does it mean to ‘connect’?
‘To connect’ actually means different things to each one of them, including the internal connection with the self, a connection with the surrounding environment, a connection with society at large, or the immediate community within and around oneself.
Spanning from human communities to non-human ecologies, these narratives explore (dis)comfort through various means. It may take the form of investigations into the moments of encounter through conversations or effectual and intuitive interactions: Parel Strik with her close community, and Natsumi Sakai with the anonymous other. Savvas Gerolemidis creates dream infrastructures, seeking alternative ways of coexistence and co-creation. Habiba Afifi explores the potential coexistence between humans and ecologies through science fiction, while Pan Vanitcharoenthum does so through acts of hunting. Sean Ali Wang highlights the existence of pluralistic but isolated communities. Nguyễn Ngọc Tú Dung is drawn to the educational context, and she practices (un)learning as a way to challenge and play with pedagogical realities. Some are led by introspective exploration: Öykü Özoğul delves into and expands upon a trace of thought, while Athina Koutsiou firmly advocates for acceptance and actively works towards living with mental illness. The research of others focuses on social norms, such as Wenkang “Hohn” Guan's questions on societal restraints through experimental gatherings, and Naomi de Bruijn's challenging social conventions through the culture of protest. Fatemeh Asiri navigates the South of Iran, while Cornalijn Overweg-Ramaker delves into the Eastern Netherlands, questioning the societal expectations imposed on women in these geographically divergent settings.
Throughout these propositions, the emerging artists invite the audience to co-inhabit and, at times, co-author encounters and the narratives created. Moving together with all the feelings present is a concrete attempt to collectively draw possibilities for empathy and solidarity.
VISITING INFO
19–29 juni 2024
Woe-zon, 13–19 hrs
Opening 19 juni, 18–21 uur