November 17–19, 2021
Violence: the fourth PARSE biennial research conference organised by the Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing Arts, University of Gothenburg, Sweden takes place online November 17–19, 2021. Three days featuring five parallel research strands address the question of violence in different formats—panels, performances, screenings and discussions—proposing an encounter between contemporary artistic research and other domains of enquiry.
Plenary speakers: Aesthetics. Salad Hilowle, Katarina Pirak Sikku & Temi Odumosu / Embodiment. Eleonora Fabião & Jay Pather / Environment. Axelle Karera / Materiality. Jennifer Walshe / State Violence as Practice. Yasmine Eid-Sabbagh, Denise Ferreira Da Silva & Doreen Mende.
The event will take place entirely online. Visit the individual research strand pages for session details and presentation abstracts. For more information and details on how to register please visit the PARSE website. Please contact us if you have any questions: parse2021 [at] meetx.se.
PARSE issue 13, “On the Question of Exhibition” a three-part issue with contributions from: part one—Dave Beech, Kathrin Böhm, Alaina Claire Feldman, Samia Henni, Steven Henry Madoff, Saul Marcadent, Lisa Rosendahl and Jéssica Varrichio; and roundtables with Rasha Salti, Nick Aikens, Kristine Khouri and Anthony Gardner; and with Yolande Zola Zoli van der Heide, Gavin Wade, and Franciska Zólyom. Part two—Ingrid Cogne, Patrizia Costantin, Kris Dittel & Jelena Novak, Catalina Imizcoz, Barbara Neves Alves, Joey Orr, Mateusz Sapija, Vladislav Shapovalov, Sasha Shestakova, and Joshua Simon. Part three—Sabine Dahl Nielsen, Cătălin Gheorghe, Ola Hassanain, Li Yizhuo, Ginevra Ludovici, Doreen Mende, David Morris & Grace Samboh, Paul O’Neill and a Roundtable with Jeanne van Heeswijk, Maria Hlavajova & Damon Reaves. Issue editors: Nick Aikens, Kjell Caminha, Jyoti Mistry and Mick Wilson.
PARSE is an artistic research and publishing platform at the Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing arts, University of Gothenburg committed to interdisciplinarity and internationalization.