calendar-icon

Artist In Residence: 2023-2024

Our 2023/2024 Partner: Performance Space New York

맨해튼에 본사를 둔 Performance Space New York은 지난 40년 동안 문화적, 이론적 및 정치적 담론을 이끌어 왔습니다. 미래와 새로운 세계를 창조하는 정신을 공유하는 Performance Space New York의 작품들은 공연 예술, 무용, 연극, 음악, 시각 예술, 시와 산문, 의식, 밤문화, 음식, 영화, 기술의 경계를 허물고 예술적 및 사회적 규범을 무너뜨립니다.

Gerardo Gonzalez

Gerardo Gonzalez, a California native, is an artist who intertwines cultural heritage, gastronomy and activism to create a singular tapestry of creativity. Inspired by his Mexican heritage and California upbringing, he reimagines the status quo through flavors, performance and social consciousness. With his events, collaborations and culinary creations including acclaimed restaurants like El Rey and Lalito, he unites people and cultures. Going beyond sheer food-making, Gonzalez blends performance, music, flower design and holistic medicine, pushing boundaries of art and culture. Guided by José Esteban Muñoz’s words, he amplifies queer voices of color and envisions a compassionate queer future with new potentialities.

SJ Norman

SJ Norman is a cross-disciplinary artist, writer and curator. He is a non-binary transmasculine person and a diasporic Koori of Wiradjuri heritage, born on Gadigal land. His practice is routed through the volatile interstices of the social and the corporeal. He works with the body as both site and material and frequently utilizes relational and process-based choreographies as a mode of structural critique. Norman is interested in the space between bodies, the forces that occupy it, and how the live act might be utilized as a means to examine, disrupt and reinscribe prevailing systems of social power.

Richard Kennedy

Richard Kennedy’s multidisciplinary practice is interested in relationships and navigating sexuality as it occurs at the intersection of class, race and gender. Considering opera through a language of African American experience — drawing on the oral histories told through spirituals and chain gang songs — Kennedy disrupts the tradition of Western theater in order to generate new participatory modes of viewership. Through creating costumes and set design for opera, Kennedy was drawn to painting, sculpture and video, drawing on a process of layering, obfuscation and temporality (slowness) that contradicts their practice in live performance.

Keioui Keijaun Thomas

Keioui Keijaun Thomas’ artistic practice engages with the multifaceted realms of Black identity formation, encompassing affective, material and economic dimensions. Through a captivating fusion of sculpture and performance, Thomas explores the transient nature of the “doll” as both a work in progress and a formidable elemental force. Utilizing an array of materials such as plastic, hair, sugar, rubber, tape, acrylic, water, enamel, glitter and skin, Thomas creates tableaus that are intricately intertwined with her own body.