Spectra Ex Machine / RELEASE PARTY
Samedi 18 mai 2024 – 17h-19h
Réservation obligatoire par mail à : gauthier@subrosa.net
À l’occasion de la sortie du nouveau volume de son anthologie sonore des
phénomènes occultes, l'auteur et réalisateur radio Philippe Baudouin vient
présenter son projet Spectra Ex Machina (Sub Rosa), lors d'une soirée
exceptionnelle.
Le second volume de cette anthologie sonore explore les liens entre musique et
médiumnité, art vocal et sorcellerie : Aleister Crowley, Uri Geller, Rosemary
Brown ou bien encore Elvis Presley font ainsi résonner leur voix de l'au-delà.
Au programme de cette soirée : séance d'écoute de quelques extraits du disque et
discussion avec Philippe Baudouin, Stéphanie Peel et Christian Chelman sur
l'histoire du spiritisme et ses croisements inattendus avec la question
musicale.
À cette occasion, les deux premiers volumes de Spectra Ex Machina seront
proposés à la vente.
Philippe Baudouin est réalisateur radio et maître de conférences associé à
l’Université Paris-Saclay. Il est l’auteur de plusieurs ouvrages et articles sur
l’histoire de l’occultisme dont Apparitions : Les Archives de la France hantée
(Hoëbeke, 2021) et Surnaturelles : une histoire visuelle des femmes médiums
(Pyramyd, 2021). Depuis 2019, il poursuit en collaboration avec le label Sub
Rosa le projet Spectra Ex Machina, consacré aux archives sonores du paranormal.
Stéphanie Peel est chercheuse indépendante et doctorante à l’Université libre de
Bruxelles. Son compte Instagram « Les Occultées » est consacré à l’histoire des
femmes médiums.
Christian Chelman est illusionniste et collectionneur. Il est également le
fondateur et l’actuel conservateur du Surnatéum, Muséum d’Histoire Surnaturelle
de Bruxelles.
06september 2023
-23december 2023
Argos
Rue Du Chantier - Werfstraat 13, 1000 Bruxelles, Région de Bruxelles-Capitale, Belgique
Description
C0N10UR and 𝚊𝚛𝚐𝚘𝚜 present Small Acts of Violence. You’re invited to walk through a low landscape of broken ceramics vases, moldy collages and brick walls. Wait in the seating area for a caring guide to welcome you into a fabric cocoon, and experience the artist Aay Liparoto’s immersive cinematic virtual reality work at the heart of this exhibition.
Do you consent to participate in this loving experience? Do you choose to stay or will you leave? In this exhibition, you cannot just watch passively. You choose the family situations you gaze on, or turn away from. Small Acts of Violence makes you physically feel how the boundaries constantly shift between safe and unsafe, between love and violence. It’s surreal, recognizable, and elusive at the same time. You enter a loving, volatile universe. Stories of intimate violence are not shunned; instead motivations are explored and unpacked. You’re invited to reflect on your own behaviors and assert your own boundaries. On your path in this sensuous, enticing world, you’re surrounded by soft fabrics and sharp edges.
Afterwards, you’ll be cared for by the guide, as you’re invited to reflect on your experience in the seating area. Listen to the story your body is telling you.
--
What actions do you perform in the name of love? What bad behaviors do you blame on love? Small Acts of Violence makes you aware of the relationship between love and nonconsensual violence. As your body is immersed in a beautiful, sexual, tender, and grotesque environment, you hear overlapping and melting testimonies and observe domestic scenes. A central figure devotedly guides you through a soft bubble of familiar objects, kitschy and colorful.
The stories are based on true personal experiences of women, nonbinary and non-cis male perpetrators of domestic violence and self harm and have been collected in Belgium and the United Kingdom. The testimonies, fused with the intimate performances of a fictional family, challenge assumptions about domestic violence. Who is a victim? Who is perpetrator?
With this exhibition, Brussels-based artist Aay Liparoto (1987, New Jersey, USA) reminds you of your autonomy. As often in their work, they explore the (social and institutional) boundaries that define our intimate relationships and the power relations that intervene on our daily lives and bodies. Small Acts of Violence wants you to reflect on how you love. It is an invitation to collectively pursue a love free of violence.
Curators: Auguste Orts
Do you consent to participate in this loving experience? Do you choose to stay or will you leave? In this exhibition, you cannot just watch passively. You choose the family situations you gaze on, or turn away from. Small Acts of Violence makes you physically feel how the boundaries constantly shift between safe and unsafe, between love and violence. It’s surreal, recognizable, and elusive at the same time. You enter a loving, volatile universe. Stories of intimate violence are not shunned; instead motivations are explored and unpacked. You’re invited to reflect on your own behaviors and assert your own boundaries. On your path in this sensuous, enticing world, you’re surrounded by soft fabrics and sharp edges.
Afterwards, you’ll be cared for by the guide, as you’re invited to reflect on your experience in the seating area. Listen to the story your body is telling you.
--
What actions do you perform in the name of love? What bad behaviors do you blame on love? Small Acts of Violence makes you aware of the relationship between love and nonconsensual violence. As your body is immersed in a beautiful, sexual, tender, and grotesque environment, you hear overlapping and melting testimonies and observe domestic scenes. A central figure devotedly guides you through a soft bubble of familiar objects, kitschy and colorful.
The stories are based on true personal experiences of women, nonbinary and non-cis male perpetrators of domestic violence and self harm and have been collected in Belgium and the United Kingdom. The testimonies, fused with the intimate performances of a fictional family, challenge assumptions about domestic violence. Who is a victim? Who is perpetrator?
With this exhibition, Brussels-based artist Aay Liparoto (1987, New Jersey, USA) reminds you of your autonomy. As often in their work, they explore the (social and institutional) boundaries that define our intimate relationships and the power relations that intervene on our daily lives and bodies. Small Acts of Violence wants you to reflect on how you love. It is an invitation to collectively pursue a love free of violence.
Curators: Auguste Orts
Billets
Info:
Free