26.12.08
7.11.08
Beirut Travelogue
Have only been in the city 48 hours and leaving in another 48, but am really looking forward to coming back and doing a project. This is a place moving as quickly as possible away from its past. The streets are busy and feel very safe, there are cafe's, bars, restaurants both trendy and backwater catering to the glamorous and steadfast locals. The people are incredibly friendly and even in South Beirut where UMAM, the cultural centre I visited is and also the Hezbollah area, it feels relatively at ease, with its backdrop of gunned walls and posters of martyrs. Most of the damage obstructed by advertising for various things to beautify your life, one enormous billboard for a make-up artist...
Senaya house, the flat/open source culture centre I am staying at is huge, its really feels like I am back in Naples, gorgeous tiled floors, 20 ft cielings and enormous doors leading to balconies where I can watch the bored police soldiers pace back and forth with their machine guns drooping at their sides desperately trying to entertain themselves by counting cracks in the pavement. But their presence is no more menacing than the robo-cops at Waterloo or Grand Central Station...
I bought Obama's first book at the airport in London and proudly promoted it my whole flight here to many happy responses. Never before have I crossed into a border with a US passport feeling so unashamed, knowing that regardless of his policies and politics, his symbol would be remembered forever. I had an amazing conversation with Mustafa, the caretaker at UMAM about Bush, Obama, Allah, Marriage and life in general. He speaks not a word of English and me not a word of Arabic but it was certainly an in depth analysis of the world!
This eve is the opening of the show I am helping install, My Place in Between, so I am sure I will get to see some nightlife and network like mad!
13.10.08
Mapping Divergence - Exhibition
Works by three artists surveying landscape, architecture, presence and psychology.
14th thru 19th October 2008 open daily 10:00 to 19:00
Private View: Tuesday 14th October 18:00 to 22:00
The Rag Factory (Brick Lane)
16-18 Heneage StreetLondon
E1 5LJ
T. 020 7650 8749 F. 020 7092 9099
Rachael Champion, Rania Bellou and Roberto Sanchez-Camus present an exhibition of new works that survey landscape, architecture, presence and psychology. These three artists have brought together their differing works developing an exhibition that engages viewers on a trajectory through installation, video, painting and live art. Mapping Divergence delivers a varied body of work, which presented together spark a critical dialogue within the exhibition space.
Rachael's sculpture and installation work engages industry and architecture with interactive situations and physical experiences. Rania's video and installation work investigate the relationship between space, time and perception of the real or the "deformed" sphere of imagination. Roberto's work researches momentum and occurrences through the human condition in paintings, video and performance.
In Mapping Divergence, the viewer is confronted with human social/spatial relations, evoked through an assemblage of landscapes, characters, and machines.
mapping.divergence@gmail.com http://www.trebler.blogspot.com/
St. Christopher's Hospice
19.9.08
Lecturing
6.9.08
Schloss Lüntenbeck Performance
Conference Paper: Aesthetics and Applied Live Art
25.8.08
Masterclass with Andreji Zholdak
Schloss Lüntenbeck
Aristophanes praise of Love, from Plato's Symposium 360 B.C.E..
In the beginning there was a being that was part man, part woman, and part the union of the two.
This primeval being was round, his back and sides forming a circle; and he had four hands and four feet, one head with two faces, looking opposite ways.
As a single being their might and strength were so strong that they dared to scale heaven, creating fear amongst the gods.
Doubt reigned in the celestial councils. Should they annihilate them, as they had done with the giants, but then there would be an end to the worship which men offered to them;
But then Zeus discovered a way. With his thunderbolts he cut them in two, like an apple which is halved, in order that they be diminished in strength yet increased in numbers.
As he cut them one after another, he asked Apollo to give the half face and neck a turn in order that the new beings might contemplate the section of themselves they had just lost: thus learning a lesson of humility.
After the division the two parts of the being, each desiring the other half, came together, and throwing their arms about one another, entwined in mutual embraces, longing to grow into one again. So ancient is the desire of one another, reuniting and making one of two, thus healing the state of being.
Each of us when separated are always looking for our other half. And when one of them meets with the other half, the actual half of themselves, the pair are lost in an amazement of Love and friendship and intimacy, and would not be out of the other's sight, even for a moment. These are the people who pass their whole lives together; yet they could not explain what they desire of one another.
If the god of fire Hephaestus arrives to the reunited Lovers and says to them, "What do you mortals want of one another?" they would be unable to explain.
And if in seeing their perplexity he questioned them further: "Do you desire to be completely one; always day and night to be in one another's company? for if this is what you desire, I am ready to weld you into one and let you grow together, so that being two you shall become one for the rest of your lives. Is this the kind of Love you wish?
There is not one of them who when they heard the proposal would deny the possiblity of melting into one, the very expression of their most ancient need. This reuniting of two becoming the whole once again is the culmination of Love leading us in this life back to our own nature, and giving us high hopes for the future.
This is Artistophanes discourse of Love…