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Beberemos El Vino Nuevo : Let Us Drink the New Wine Together

SKU: 9780473637484
Regular price $95.00
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    LONGLEY Alys
  • ISBN:
    9780473637484
  • Publication Date:
    January 2022
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    125
  • Binding:
    Paperback
  • Publisher:
    University of Auckland
  • Country of Publication:
    New Zealand
Beberemos El Vino Nuevo : Let Us Drink the New Wine Together
Beberemos El Vino Nuevo : Let Us Drink the New Wine Together

Beberemos El Vino Nuevo : Let Us Drink the New Wine Together

SKU: 9780473637484
Regular price $95.00
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    LONGLEY Alys
  • ISBN:
    9780473637484
  • Publication Date:
    January 2022
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    125
  • Binding:
    Paperback
  • Publisher:
    University of Auckland
  • Country of Publication:
    New Zealand

Description

Let Us Drink The New Wine, Together! explores practices for continuing artistic friendships and creative exchanges through conditions of intense separation. An archive of miniature works of art created in collaboration with more than 60 artists from all continents of the world during 2020-2022 spirals through space, organized as a kind of affective weather system of human connection, moving beyond the human control.

The project has explored methods to allow artists from around the world, with whom artists alys longley and Mximo Corvaln-Pincheira had previously worked, to collaborate through a series of counter maps, mail art works, performance strategies and experiments in the creation of virtual exhibitions. spaces, inspired by the surreal game of the 'exquisite corpse'. To begin with, more than 34 artists from around the world were invited to physically and digitally intervene on a world map, via email. Next, miniature mail art, postmarks, and video art pieces were accumulated as the project traveled from artist to artist, viewing artistic practice and solidarity as an essential service. As Catalina Mena writes in her curatorial text about this project:

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  • Let Us Drink The New Wine, Together! explores practices for continuing artistic friendships and creative exchanges through conditions of intense separation. An archive of miniature works of art created in collaboration with more than 60 artists from all continents of the world during 2020-2022 spirals through space, organized as a kind of affective weather system of human connection, moving beyond the human control.

    The project has explored methods to allow artists from around the world, with whom artists alys longley and Mximo Corvaln-Pincheira had previously worked, to collaborate through a series of counter maps, mail art works, performance strategies and experiments in the creation of virtual exhibitions. spaces, inspired by the surreal game of the 'exquisite corpse'. To begin with, more than 34 artists from around the world were invited to physically and digitally intervene on a world map, via email. Next, miniature mail art, postmarks, and video art pieces were accumulated as the project traveled from artist to artist, viewing artistic practice and solidarity as an essential service. As Catalina Mena writes in her curatorial text about this project:

Let Us Drink The New Wine, Together! explores practices for continuing artistic friendships and creative exchanges through conditions of intense separation. An archive of miniature works of art created in collaboration with more than 60 artists from all continents of the world during 2020-2022 spirals through space, organized as a kind of affective weather system of human connection, moving beyond the human control.

The project has explored methods to allow artists from around the world, with whom artists alys longley and Mximo Corvaln-Pincheira had previously worked, to collaborate through a series of counter maps, mail art works, performance strategies and experiments in the creation of virtual exhibitions. spaces, inspired by the surreal game of the 'exquisite corpse'. To begin with, more than 34 artists from around the world were invited to physically and digitally intervene on a world map, via email. Next, miniature mail art, postmarks, and video art pieces were accumulated as the project traveled from artist to artist, viewing artistic practice and solidarity as an essential service. As Catalina Mena writes in her curatorial text about this project: