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Teresa Cos Rebollo

Van Abbemuseum, NL

Teresa Cos Rebollo studied Art History in the University of Barcelona and Cultural Economics and Entrepreneurship in Erasmus University Rotterdam. Since 2019 she has worked in the Van Abbemuseum where, as assistant curator, has coordinated several projects and exhibitions, including: The Otolith Group Xenogenesis (2019-2023), Parallel Lives, Parallel Aesthetics: Gülsün Karamustafa & León Ferrari (2021-2022), and the Decolonial Summer School 2020-2023.

She is currently working on a research project and collaboration (since 2020) that will develop into an upcoming exhibition called Soils (opening on June 2024) dealing with issues around land use, farming, extractivism and exploring our cultural and spiritual connection to land and territory.

https://vanabbemuseum.nl

Secondment destination:
TBD

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Charles Esche

Van Abbemuseum, NL

Charles Esche is director of Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven and professor of contemporary art and curating at Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts, London where he works with Exhibition Studies. He is a visiting professor at Jan van Eyck Academie, Maastricht and chair of CASCO, Utrecht.

For his secondment he will visit Dublin, Cork and Cobh. In 2023 he will investigate archives and artists that could be useful for the development of the Soils exhibition planned in 2024, dealing with topics around farming, extractivism and land use will also join the Sirius Summer School organised by Mia Lerm-Hayes from University of Amsterdam and Miguel Amado, director at Sirius Art Centre.

In June 2024 he will organise the Sirius Summer School and also spend time in Dublin with NCAD and intend to visit artists including Gerard Byrne whose work is in the Van Abbemuseum collection.

For his secondment he will visit Dublin, Cork and Cobh. In 2023 he will investigate archives and artists that could be useful for the development of the Soils exhibition planned in 2024, dealing with topics around farming, extractivism and land use will also join the Sirius Summer School organised by Mia Lerm-Hayes from University of Amsterdam and Miguel Amado, director at Sirius Art Centre.

In  June 2024 he will organise the Sirius Summer School and also spend time in Dublin with NCAD and intend to visit artists including Gerard Byrne whose work is in the Van Abbemuseum collection. 

https://vanabbemuseum.nl

Secondment destination:
NCAD national college of Art & Design Dublin (SIRIUS, Project Arts), Summer 2023 and Summer 2024

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SPACEX Training Event 3: Behavioural Economics and Commoning Practices; From Cultural Value to Social Wealth

The third SPACEX training event will take place in Dublin from 2-3 March 2023. The focus will be on behavioural economics and commoning. It is being delivered by SPACEX researchers from the National College of Art & Design (NCAD) in conjunction with the Geary Institute, School of Economics at University College Dublin (UCD) and Project Arts Centre, Dublin.

Travel to NCAD here: https://www.ncad.ie/about/visitor-info/
Please book your accommodation in Dublin early as it can get very expensive. The areas Dublin 1, Dublin 2, Dublin 7 and Dublin 8 are within walking distance to training event venues.


This is a draft schedule which may change slightly, but starting and finishing times will remain the same.

Day 1: Thursday 2nd March

Locations: From 10.00am: Estelle Solomons Room, Grace Gifford House, National College of Art and Design John St. West Campus. John St. West, off Thomas Street, Dublin 8. From 7.00pm: Project Arts Centre, 39 Essex St E, Temple Bar, Dublin 2, D02 RD45

10.00-10.30am: Registration and Coffee, Estelle Solomons Room, Grace Gifford House, National College of Art and Design John St. West Campus

10.30-11.45am: SESSION 1: Basics of Behavioural Economics, hosted by Kevin Denny (SPACEX Researcher, UCD), 

11.45am-1.00pm: SESSION 2: World of Work, Cooperative Board Game, designed and hosted by Michelle Browne (SPACEX Researcher, NCAD), 

1.00-2.00pm: Sustenance for Hungry Souls by Luncheonette, https://luncheonettedublin.com/ABOUT

2.00-3.30pm: SESSION 3: Participatory Practices and their Engagement with Urban and Digital Infrastructures and Systems. This discussion-based workshop will be led by Paul O’Neill (SPACEX Researcher, UCD)

3.30-3.45pm: Coffee Break

3.45-5.00pm: SESSION 4: Walking Tour of The Liberties led by Seoidín O’Sullivan (SPACEX Researcher, NCAD), http://www.seoidinosullivan.com/; and Anthony O’Brien of In Our Shoes Walking Tours, https://inourshoeswalkingtours.ie/

5.30-5.45: Jennie Moran introduces Luncheonette, a long term art project centred around hospitality and food, started by Jennie in 2013. It is a prolonged exploration into the complex alchemy of placemaking, centred around the provision of shared experiences using nourishment, shelter, comfort, warmth, light, and tone to treat places so that they feel easier for people to be in and more poetic, , https://luncheonettedublin.com/ABOUT

5.45-7.00pm: Sustenance for Hungry Souls by Luncheonette, https://luncheonettedublin.com/ABOUT 

7.00-7.30pm: Exhibition tour of Being Horizontal / Sínte at Project Arts Centre, https://projectartscentre.ie/. Led by Sara Greavu (SPACEX Researcher, Project Arts Centre)

7.45-8.30pm*: Performance of Manifest at Project Arts Centre, which forms part of What Does He Need?  – a long term collaborative project by Fiona Whelan (SPACEX Researcher, NCAD), Brokentalkers, Rialto Youth Project and a Dublin city network of individuals and organisations. www.whatdoesheneed.com & https://projectartscentre.ie/event/manifest/

*PLEASE RESERVE A TICKET BY EMAILING [email protected]

9.00pm Move to a local pub for drinks and conversation

Day 2: Friday 3rd March

Locations: From 9.30am: Harry Clarke Lecture Theatre and NCAD Gallery, NCAD, 100 Thomas Street, Dublin 8, D08 K521

9.30-11.15am: SESSION 1: Theories of Commoning. Speakers Stavros Stavrides (SPACEX Researcher, LUC) and Gary Hall (SPACEX Researcher, CU). Chaired by Emma Mahony (SPACEX Researcher, NCAD)

11.15am-12.00pm: Elevenses for the “Hungry Months”. Hosted by Gareth Kennedy (SPACEX Researcher, NCAD) and NCAD FIELD students

12.00-1.00pm: Principles of Space Detection. Performance by Irina Gheorghe in NCAD Gallery. Hosted by Anne Kelly (SPACEX Researcher, NCAD)

1.00-2.00pm: Sustenance for Hungry Souls by Luncheonette.

2.00-3.00pm: SESSION 2: The 60 min Commoning Parkour: An embodied commoning experience with Susanne Bosch.

3.20-4.30pm: SESSION 3: Commoning as Care Practices in the Community Part 1: Organisations, Rosie Lynch, Callan Workhouse Union; Siobhan Geoghegan, Common Ground; Ellie Kisombe, Our Tablechaired by Tom O’Dea (SPACEX researcher).

4.30-4.45pm: Coffee Break

4.45-5.45: SESSION 3 Cont. Commoning as Care Practices in the Community Part 2: Artists, Fiona Whelan (SPACEX researcher); Evelyn Broderick, A People’s Shed; chaired by Michelle Browne (SPACEX researcher).

6.00-6.20: Our Table. Ellie Kisombe introduces Our Table a social enterprise which focuses on producing an inclusive community through food and campaigning to end direct provision in Ireland. 

6.30-8.30: CLOSING SESSION: Trad Around Our Table. Event in NCAD Gallery and Foyer with a live Trad music session led by Evelyn Broderick; and sustenance by Our Table.

9.00pm: Move to local pub for drinks and foot tapping conversation


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Alexandra Landré

Stroom Den Haag, the Netherlands

Alexandra Landré is artistic director of Stroom Den Haag since 2021. She has been involved in a large number of national and international cultural projects, with a particular focus on innovative forms of co-creation, new commissions and audience participation. Her current research interest focus on artistic practices in the public domain which center around the relationship of conflict and conviviality, especially in the context of complex ‘hyperobjects’ like climate change and social justice. Until 2020 she was the artistic director of Kunstvereniging Diepenheim (NL) where she presented acclaimed exhibtions like Disconnection (2019/20), programmed a living collection of land art projects with artists like a.o. herman de vries, as well as artists-in-residency-programs in collaboration with the Mondriaan Fonds. In her curatorial career she has collaborated with De Appel, Amsterdam, Stedelijk Bureau Amsterdam, Synch Festival, Athens, Jindrich Chalupecky Society, Prague, Kunsthalle Muenster and Kunsthalle Wien.

https://stroom.nl/index_en.php

Secondment destination:
TBC

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Ilga Minjon

Stroom Den Haag, the Netherlands

Ilga Minjon is a curator, researcher and advisor working at Stroom Den Haag and a tutor at Design Academy Eindhoven with a background in Art History, and interests in societal questions around public space, ecology, and technology. She aims to weave future imaginaries from artistic practices that speculate on the senses and (networked) relations, as well as on queer, decolonial and feminist re-writings of belonging. At Stroom she has curated Attempst to Read the World (Differently): Three Exhibitions in Five Acts, with Max de Waard, Monira al Qadiri and Jean Katambayi Mukendi, Lawrence Lek: Nøtel The Hague, Yvonne Dröge Wendel: To Be To Gather; and most recently From the Sea to the Clouds to the Soil a group exhbition mapping kinship relations across time and technologies with Femke Herregraven, Risk Hazekamp, Urok Shirhan, Yeon Sung and Natasha Tontey. Since 2017, Ilga has initiated the Uncertainty Seminars an ongoing cycle of experimental exchanges, platformfing interdisciplinary ways to imagine doubt as a cultural strategy.

https://stroom.nl/index_en.php

Secondment destination:
TBC

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Vincent de Boer

Stroom Den Haag, the Netherlands

Vincent de Boer is a senior advisor of art in public space. Graduated at the sculpture department from the Rietveld academy, he curated the first public space group exhibition EXHANGE/MOSCOW 1993. Working as a free lance curator for Sonsbeek (2001), SKOR (foundation for art in public space), Cultural Embassy Lloyd Hotel and various artist as Tadashi Kawamata, Lily vd Stokker, Maria Roosen, Suchan Kinoshita and Ram Katzir. Since 2009 working for Stroom Den Haag as an advisor art in public space, advising the municipality with the public sculpture collection, De Beeldengalerij (The Sculpture Gallery), art commissions for schools, ‘Scaffold’ by Sam Durant, ‘Resetting’ by Toby Paterson and recently involved with the forthcoming monument to commemorate Slavery in The Hague. He also curated two exhibitions at Stroom ‘A matter of Time, Thom Puckey and the Thorbecke monument’ and photography group exhibition ‘Capturing Corona’.

https://stroom.nl/index_en.php

Secondment destination:
TBC

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Lua Vollaard

Stroom Den Haag, the Netherlands

Lua Vollaard is a curator based at Stroom Den Haag, with a background visual cultures, image theory, and human rights. She has been working as a curator at Stroom Den Haag for the past five years. At Stroom, she is particularly interested in investigating the systems and materials that govern society, with a particular focus on infrastructure and notions of justice. In The Hague, her curatorial practice responds to the local branding of ‘the city of peace and justice’.  

Recent projects include the presentation grounds for denial by Anna Dasovic, on the spatial presence of genocide denial in Republika Sprska; the programme Reenactment , on reenactment of acts of state violence as an artistic strategy; an edition of Uncertainty Seminars (2020-21) in collaboration with Ilga Minjon titled There, there, on artistic strategies to challenge conventional notions of distance. Other projects include Hybrid Peace by the Visual Culture Research Center (2019), on the Russian war on Ukraine; andTowards a Black Testimony by Languid Hands (2019), on the (im)possibility of Black testimony in the Western legal system.

https://stroom.nl/index_en.php

Secondment destination:
TBC

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Ilidio Louro

A Reserva (Portugal)

Ilídio Louro (1972) is an architect and a designer, working since 2012 at the Portuguese consultancy Mapa das Ideias as a designer and project manager and in the fields of Heritage, Culture and Public Participation. After an early career as a junior architect, he studied journalism and worked later on as a journalist, a communications officer and a consultant for different design, architecture and engineering firms.

He has been involved in the development and implementation of several European and local cooperation projects, among which the Museum Mediators Europe, ADESTE plus and MEMEX, working with a number of academic, cultural and arts organisations like the Gulbenkian Modern Art Museum, Fondazione Fitzcarraldo, the Portuguese National Plan for the Arts and Culture Action Europe.

As a member of the non-profit A Reserva since 2015, he has been interested in investigating the particular character of cities, that close-grained juxtaposition of talent and cultural diversity that allows societies to thrive.

As a member of the Oeiras’27 bid book team between 2021 and 2022, he focused on the opportunity to leverage Oeiras’ bid to European Capital of Culture 2027 as a participatory groundswell, giving real agency to communities and individuals, opening up the possibility of artistic exploration and expression on their own terms.

http://www.a-reserva.org/

Secondment destination:
TBC

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Frances Yeung

Coventry University / UK

Frances Yeung is an AHRC M4C funded Collaborative Doctoral first year student and an artist. Her research project is a collaborative between the Centre for Postdigital Cultures (CPC), Coventry University and NN Contemporary Art (NNCA), based in Northampton.

Post-pandemic, like many other art organisations, NNCA is more than ever invested in digital curation and online programming, finding innovative ways to disseminate art and culture. My research focus will be utilising the NNCA’s Library Stack Archives and open-source digital resources, platforms and infrastructures, to articulate digital engagement programmes for the public, with a more caring, inclusive and socially-just approach, and therefore benefit the local communities.

https://www.home4cooperation.info

Secondment destination:
Home for Cooperation, Cyprus

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Carlos Noronha Feio

A Reserva (Portugal)

Carlos Noronha Feio (1981) holds a PhD from the Royal College of Art in London, he lives and works in Oeiras and Moscow. Noronha Feio exhibits internationally, selected locations include the Garage Museum of Contemporary Art – Moscow; Nada Miami Sculpture Park; CCA Vilnius; Nottingham Contemporary; National Museum of Contemporary Art Lisbon; CCA Londonderry/Derry; Sazmanab Contemporary Art Tehran; Centro Cultural Helio Oiticica Rio de Janeiro.

Noronha Feio is included in “The Art of Not Making” as well as in “Nature Morte: Contemporary Artists Reinvigorate the Still Life Tradition”, published by Thames & Hudson. His work is present in selected collections: MAAT—Lisbon; Saatchi Collection-London; MAR—Museu de Arte do Rio.

From 2009 to 2014 he was a director of The Mews Project Space in London.

From 2020 until 2022 he was a core member, and the coordinator for Art and Creativity, of Oeiras’ bid to European Capital of Culture 2027.

http://www.a-reserva.org/

Secondment destination:
tbc

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