11th Gwangju Biennale
2. 9. – 6. 11. 2016
Korea

Fellows

The GB11 Biennale Fellows consist of roughly one hundred small- and medium-scale art organizations across the world whose work makes important contributions to the art of today, yet remains under the radar. Biennale Fellows will continue doing the important work they normally do, without GB11 being involved in their activities.
These organizations often function as the research and development department of the art world, generating new ideas, supporting artists to allow them to experiment and cultivate their practices, shaping new curatorial and educational methods, and fostering active relationships to their field as well as to their physical, social, and political environments. Yet the significance of their works for a wider art and social ecology has not been acknowledged enough.

To All the Contributing Factors

The Forum entitled To All the Contributing Factoris, consists of three days of activities dedicated to questions of value, continuity, and scale through the lens of the art organizational practices of the so-called Biennale Fellows, around 100 small and mid-size “differential” art organizations from various parts of the world, and imagining acts in common. Representatives from about 80 of the Fellows will participate in the Forum.



The Forum will take place at several locations, including the Gwangju Biennale Hall, 518 Archives, Gwangju International Center, Mite-Ugro, and May Mother's House.

Curated by Binna Choi and Maria Lind.
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ST PAUL St Gallery, Auckland

self-presentation:

ST PAUL St Gallery occupies Rangipuke ridge, which leads down to Rerenga-ora-iti (later Point Britomart), once the site of the pā Tangihanga Pukeā. Rerenga-ora-iti (the leap of the survivors) commemorates the pā’s capture by Kawharu of Kaipara, commencing Ngāti Whātua occupation of Waitemata from the seventeenth century. Before the arrival of Europeans, two other pā were located here: Te Roroa near the High Court, and Te Horotiu in Albert Park, all close to the natural spring Te Waiariki (“chiefly waters”). Wai Horotiu was a stream that ran down what is today Queen Street, named for its resident taniwha. AUT University’s marae honors this through its name, Ngā Wai o Horotiu.

website
stpaulst.aut.ac.nz