Lara Khaldi Read Bio Collapse
Lara Khaldi is a cultural worker whose projects address colonial issues, the dystopian present, and the impossibilities inherent in language and communication.
In The Shock Doctrine, Naomi Klein describes how when a crisis happens, companies infiltrate society, and the government imposes new rules or cuts. It’s sometimes more possible in the art sector to see individuals, groups, and collectives using these moments to infiltrate the structure that is in crisis or that claims the crisis.
Contemporary art is not the production of the institution, but is rather the institution itself. The relationship between the structure of production and the product is very entangled. They both function on the same economic basis: proposal writing. It is a framework of thinking and an act of language that is always happening in the future tense: “The project aims to …,” “The work will …,” etc. Writing the proposal becomes part of the artwork itself. The person who knows how to explain the proposed piece, mainly in English, will be more likely to get grants. This process relies on the artist’s embeddedness in spaces that hold cultural capital, and not only on the artist’s or the work’s merit. The claim of equality in open calls for funded projects is contested.
Part II of the public seminar Of(f) Our Times: The Aftermath of the Ephemeral and other Curatorial Anachronics
Winner of the 2016–18 Vera List Center Prize for Art and Politics: Maria Thereza Alves
Of(f) Our Times: The Aftermath of the Ephemeral and other Curatorial Anachronics—two-part public seminar