Left to be Desired

Socialist Anthropocene in the Visual Arts

A Socialist Anthropocene in the Visual Arts Podcast. Tune in to hear Maja & Reuben Fowkes talk to artists and researchers about their practice and exchange ideas at the intersection of ecology, climate change, art and the Socialist Anthropocene.

  1. 2日前

    Left to be Desired Episode 13: Terike Haapoja

    Episode 13 of the SAVA podcast Left to be Desired features a conversation with artist and researcher Terike Haapoja.  Left to Be Desired is available to listen to on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music/Audible and Audacy. You can also access it via the podcast website:   https://lefttobedesired.libsyn.com/site   Left to Be Desired explores the distinctiveness of the socialist path through the Anthropocene by bringing together artistic and scholarly insights into the ecologies of global socialism. Maja & Reuben Fowkes invite artists and researchers to talk about their practice and exchange ideas at the intersection of ecology, climate change, art and the Socialist Anthropocene. Terike Haapoja  This episode of Left to be Desired was recorded in the Sainsbury Centre University of East Anglia on the occasion of sixth SAVA Research Week on Eco-Socialist Alliances that stretch across global geographies but also traverse species boundaries. Focusing on Terike Haapoja's work in reimagining planetary histories from a more-than-human perspective, the podcast deals with the project History According to Cattle, shedding light on the forms of oppression and exploitation faced by animals in the intensive farming systems of the Anthropocene and raising the question of whether and how things were or could be different under socialism. At the core of Haapoja's art-activist project (Against) Animal Capitalism is not just the exploration of how nonhumans are relentlessly subjugated through mechanisms of value accumulation, but also the goal of rekindling of multispecies solidarities that recognize animals as part of the working class. Terike Haapoja is an interdisciplinary visual artist. Her large scale installations, writings, and collaborations explore the possibility of nonviolent coexistence across differences, with a specific focus on multispecies politics. While rooted in environmental thought and drawing from critical animal studies and posthumanism, Haapoja's work is in dialogue with intersectional feminist and post-colonial discourses, critically reflecting on structures of exclusion that emerge from Western traditions. Haapoja is currently working on a long term project '[Against] Animal Capitalism' that seeks to build a foundation for a multispecies left politics. She is the co-editor of seven publications on art and politics/environment, and her work has been exhibited widely in solo and group shows internationally. Haapoja represented Finland in the 55th Venice Biennale with a solo show in the Nordic Pavilion.

    26分
  2. 2025/05/21

    Left to Be Desired Episode 12: Ângela Ferreira

    Episode 12 of the SAVA podcast Left to Be Desired features a conversation with artist and researcher Ângela Ferreira.  Left to Be Desired is available to listen to on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music/Audible and Audacy. You can also access it via the podcast website:   https://lefttobedesired.libsyn.com/site    Left to Be Desired explores the distinctiveness of the socialist path through the Anthropocene by bringing together artistic and scholarly insights into the ecologies of global socialism. Maja & Reuben Fowkes invite artists and researchers to talk about their practice and exchange ideas at the intersection of ecology, climate change, art and the Socialist Anthropocene.  Ângela Ferreira  Continuing our exploration of global perspectives on the Socialist Anthropocene, in this episode of Left to Be Desired, Maja and Reuben Fowkes talk to artist and researcher Ângela Ferreira about her work on revolutionary Mozambique. We learn that the artist's main focus is on the first post-independence years, when the government opted for a tolerant form of socialism that was open to forms of creative experimentation, before the adoption of the Soviet model of social and political organization. The podcast includes discussion of Ferreira's collaborative project Experimental Field (2024), which explores the material and archival residues, as well as the social and environmental dimensions, of the radical agrarian practices developed at a university agricultural laboratory in the 1970s.   About the Speaker  Ângela Ferreira  Ângela Ferreira  is an artist and researcher teaching Fine Art at the University of Lisbon (FBAUL) in Portugal and in Mozambique. Ferreira's multi-disciplinary practice is concerned with the ongoing impact of colonialism and post-colonialism on contemporary society, an investigation that is conducted through in-depth research and distillation of ideas into concise and resonant forms. The contribution of this artistic practice lies in the construction of a solid and non-pamphleteering artistic decolonial discourse. The source of her archival reference materials often triangulates the three countries of her personal history: South Africa, Mozambique and Portugal, which she represented Portugal at the 52nd Venice Biennale in 2007.

    25分
  3. 2025/05/14

    Left to Be Desired Episode 11: Reinaldo Funes Monzote

    Episode 11 of the SAVA podcast Left to Be Desired features a conversation with Reinaldo Funes Monzote conducted by Maja and Reuben Fowkes and Sorcha Thomson.  Left to Be Desired is available to listen to on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music/Audible and Audacy. You can also access it via the podcast website:   https://lefttobedesired.libsyn.com/site   Left to Be Desired podcast explores the distinctiveness of the socialist path through the Anthropocene by bringing together artistic and scholarly insights into the ecologies of global Socialism. Maja & Reuben Fowkes will invite artists and researchers to talk about their practice and exchange ideas at the intersection of ecology, climate change, art and the Socialist Anthropocene.   Reinaldo Funes Monzote   This episode of Left to be Desired engages Reinaldo Funes Monzote in conversation on the environmental history of Cuba and its place in the Socialist Anthropocene. Maja and Reuben Fowkes, joined by SAVA Research Fellow Sorcha Thomson, discuss with Reinaldo his work on the different eras of Cuban environmental transformation - from the entangled processes of deforestation and sugar cultivation since 1492 to the projects of geotransformación after the 1959 Revolution and what they tell us about attitudes to nature under Cuban socialism.   The conversation reflects on the impact of the end of the Soviet Union on Cuba in the 1990s and how the need to find new means of survival shaped eco-socialist and agroecological initiatives. In tracing these histories, Reinaldo complicates binary visions of the ecological imprint of socialist Cuba, instead highlighting an adaptability of Cuban approaches to the environment since the Revolution, with variable ecological impacts, in relation to the shifting conditions and legacies of colonial extraction, imperial exploitation, and global socialism that have shaped the Caribbean island.  About the Speaker Reinaldo Funes Monzote  Reinaldo Funes Monzote is a Professor of History at the University of Havana and Coordinator of the Geo-Historical Research Program at the Antonio Núñez Jiménez Foundation in Cuba. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Spain, Brazil, Puerto Rico, and the US, and has been a Fellow at Princeton's Davis Center for Historical Studies and the Hamburg Institute for Advanced Studies. Reinaldo is also a member of the Academy of History of Cuba and President of the Cuban Society for the History of Science and Technology.

    48分
  4. 2025/05/02

    Left to Be Desired Episode 10: Lisa Blackmore

    Episode 10 of the SAVA podcast Left to be Desired features a conversation with Lisa Blackmore, researcher, curator and educator working with art and water cultures in Latin America.  Left to Be Desired is available to listen to on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music/Audible and Audacy. You can also access it via the podcast website:  https://lefttobedesired.libsyn.com/site   Left to Be Desired explores the distinctiveness of the socialist path through the Anthropocene by bringing together artistic and scholarly insights into the ecologies of global socialism. Maja & Reuben Fowkes invite artists and researchers to talk about their practice and exchange ideas at the intersection of ecology, climate change, art and the Socialist Anthropocene. Lisa Blackmore on Troubled Waters  This episode of Left to be Desired seeks points of reference and comparison between the Anthropocene histories of Latin America and the environmental transformation of Europe and Central Asia during the socialist period. Lisa Blackmore shares insights into the brutal hydroforming of the rivers of Sao Paulo, and the dramatic consequences of paving over, channelizing and even inverting the flow of its liquid arteries through flash floods made more frequent and perilous by climate breakdown. The conversation with Maja and Reuben Fowkes also explores the ways in which artists have sought to restore connections with hydro-worlds and engage with post-human aqueous ontologies. While eco-socialist approaches can be identified in localized forms of hydrocommoning that incorporate post-human, biocentric and spiritual approaches to land and water, "degrowth is not on the table" in systems governed by extractive capitalism. About the Speaker Lisa Blackmore is a researcher, curator and educator, working with art and water cultures in Latin America. Since 2018, she has been directing entre—ríos, a platform whose collaborative methodologies (re)connect diverse communities to bodies of water through curatorial, editorial and pedagogical projects. She is Senior Lecturer in Art History and Interdisciplinary Studies at the University of Essex, UK. In 2023, she was a British Academy Mid-Career Fellow for her project "Imagining the Hydrocommons: Art, Water and Infrastructure in Latin America." Her recent publications include "Water" in Handbook to Latin American Environmental Aesthetics (2023) and the co-edited volume Hydrocommons Cultures: Art, Pedagogy and Care Practices in the Americas (2024). https://lisablackmore.net/

    27分
  5. 2025/04/30

    Left to Be Desired Episode 9: Mario Bianchini

    Episode 9 of the SAVA podcast Left to Be Desired features a conversation between SAVA Research Fellow Alexander Petrusek and Mario Bianchini, Research Fellow at the Center for the Study of Contemporary History (ZZF) in Potsdam.   Left to Be Desired is available to listen to on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music/Audible and Audacy. You can also access it via the podcast website:   https://lefttobedesired.libsyn.com/site   Left to Be Desired podcast explores the distinctiveness of the socialist path through the Anthropocene by bringing together artistic and scholarly insights into the ecologies of global Socialism. Maja & Reuben Fowkes will invite artists and researchers to talk about their practice and exchange ideas at the intersection of ecology, climate change, art and the Socialist Anthropocene.   Mario Bianchini: Utopia, Entropy, and the GDR's Socialist Anthropocene  Recorded in the heart of the former East German capital of Berlin, episode 9 of Left to Be Desired is a conversation between SAVA Research Fellow Alexander Petrusek and Mario Bianchini, Research Fellow at the Center for the Study of Contemporary History (ZZF) in Potsdam. Alexander and Mario, both historians of ideals and utopia in East Germany, discuss the evolution of scientific-technological utopia in the 1960s, its influence over the socialist imaginary of the decade, and how practicing this utopia in part devastated the country's environment in the 1970s and 1980s. Alexander and Mario also examine alternatives to growth-first economics that arose from the GDR's ecological crisis, as well as the activist circles who sought to practice them from within, and through, the Socialist Anthropocene. About the Speakers Mario Bianchini   Mario Bianchini is a research fellow at the Potsdam Leibniz-Center for Contemporary Historical Research (ZZF), where his research focuses on the history of technology, utopia, and energy in East and West Germany. His work has appeared in Science, Technology, and Human Values and German Studies Review. His first book manuscript, Real Existing Utopia, is soon to be completed.  Alexander Petrusek  Alexander Petrusek is a historian of modern Germany, the environment, and the global Cold War. He is a SAVA Research Fellow at PACT, UCL Institute of Advanced Studies. His research has included investigating East German support for the Namibian independence movement during the Border War in southern Africa, and how the East German practices of solidarity criticized, and at times uncomfortably reflected, the South African state's self-designated 'civilizing mission' in Namibia and its underlying exploitative extractivism.

    42分
  6. 2025/01/22

    Left to Be Desired Episode 8: Anca Benera and Arnold Estefan

    Episode 8 of the SAVA podcast Left to be Desired features a conversation with artists Anca Benera and Arnold Estefan.   Left to Be Desired is available to listen to on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music/Audible and Audacy. You can also access it via the podcast website:   https://lefttobedesired.libsyn.com/site   Left to Be Desired explores the distinctiveness of the socialist path through the Anthropocene by bringing together artistic and scholarly insights into the ecologies of global socialism. Maja & Reuben Fowkes invite artists and researchers to talk about their practice and exchange ideas at the intersection of ecology, climate change, art and the Socialist Anthropocene. Anca Benera and Arnold Estefan: Along the River Timiș  Recorded on the banks of the river Timiș in Romania, episode 8 of Left to Be Desired is a conversation with SAVA Creative Fellows Anca Benera and Arnold Estefan, who reflect on their solo exhibition Unworlding at Art Encounters Foundation in Timișoara (on view till 1 March 2025) and also the unexpected story of the drought stone Who Controls the Weather, which they previously submerged in the river for an uncertain future. The discussion with Maja and Reuben Fowkes flows on to touch on some of the works in their survey exhibition, from the installation Debrisphere, a starting point for their artistic explorations of the Anthropocene, to Missing Mountain, a project developed through their creative fellowship with the SAVA project.    About the Speakers   Anca Benera and Arnold Estefan are collaborators who have worked together since 2011, currently based in Vienna and Bucharest. Their work in installation, video and performance uses research-based methodologies to reveal the invisible patterns that lie behind certain historical, social, or geopolitical narratives. Their recent work investigates the phenomenon of man-made landscapes around the world, where the making and marking of landscape (as a form of spatial modification) goes hand in hand with heightened state violence and the overexploitation of resources. They are the recipients of The Birgit Jürgenssen Prize 2022, awarded by The Austrian Federal Ministry for Education, Arts and Culture and the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna and are Creative Fellows at UCL's Postsocialist Art Centre in London.

    26分
  7. 2024/10/21

    Left to Be Desired Episode 7: 60th Venice Biennale with Vlatka Horvat, Șerban Savu, and Oto Hudec

    Episode 7 of the SAVA podcast Left to be Desired features a conversation with artists Vlatka Horvat (Croatia), Oto Hudec (Slovakia), and Serban Savu (Romania) in their respective pavilions in the Venice Biennale 2024.    Left to be Desired is available to listen to on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music/Audible and Audacy. You can also access it via the podcast website:  https://lefttobedesired.libsyn.com/site    Left to be Desired podcast explores the distinctiveness of the socialist path through the Anthropocene by bringing together artistic and scholarly insights into the ecologies of global Socialism. Maja & Reuben Fowkes will invite artists and researchers to talk about their practice and exchange ideas at the intersection of ecology, climate change, art and the Socialist Anthropocene.    60th Venice Biennale with Vlatka Horvat, Șerban Savu, and Oto Hudec.   In episode 7 of Left to be Desired, Maja and Reuben Fowkes visit the artists Vlatka Horvat (Croatia), Șerban Savu (Romania), and Oto Hudec (Slovakia) in their respective national pavilions in the 60th Venice Biennale 2024.  The conversations aimed to discuss issues around ecology, sustainability, the legacies of socialism, and how they relate to the Biennale's theme of the year "Foreigners Everywhere", as a focus on artists who are themselves foreigners, immigrants, expatriates, exiles, and refugees, particularly those who move between the Global South and the Global North.  Vlatka Horvat talked about the potentialities of circulating art through alternative logistics of migrant networks.  The conversation with Șerban Savu was focused on his artistic project around the relationship between work and leisure. And finally, Oto Hudec's proposal showcased the protection of trees and crucial role of protestors against deforestation.    About the Speakers   Vlatka Horvat (Croatia)  Vlatka Horvat is a Croatian-born London-based artist who uses a range of media such as sculpture, installation, drawing, performance, photography, video, and writing. In her work, she explores the relationship between the body and its surroundings, as well as questions related to presence and the ways in which things occupy and share space. She has had exhibitions at institutions such as the Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, PEER (London), Kunsthalle Wien (Vienna), Hessel Museum – Bard Center for Curatorial Studies (Annandale-on-Hudson, NY), and MoMA PS1 (New York City), and her work has been included in the Croatian Pavilion at the Biennale Architettura 2018 (Venice), Aichi Triennale (Nagoya), and the 11th Istanbul Biennale.   Șerban Savu (Romania)   Șerban Savu lives and works in Cluj, Romania. He attended the University of Art and Design in Cluj, Romania (2001), after which he was awarded a two-year postgraduate research grant to Venice. Considered part of the group of painters known as the Cluj-school, Savu's figurative paintings skilfully rendered canvases capture the daily existence of contemporary Romanians at work and leisure. Savu's works were exhibited at Centre Pompidou, Paris; Fondazione Nicola Del Roscio, Rome; Galerie Rudolfinum, Prague; Museo Pietro Canonica a Villa Borghese, Rome; National Museum of Contemporary Art, Bucharest; Le Lait Centre D'art Contemporain, Albi; PLATEAU, Samsu.    Oto Hudec (Slovakia)   Oto Hudec is an artist and activist lives and works in Košice, Slovakia. His projects often use stories and utopian visions to explore climate change, globalization, migration, and the life of minority communities. SOLO SHOWS: 2019: "We Are All Carbon," Gandy Gallery, Bratislava, Slovakia, 2017; "House of Isabel," Gallery OFF Format, Brno, Czech Republic; "Archipelago," Kunsthalle Bratislava, Slovakia; "Prague Day after the Air Raid," Artwall Gallery Prague, Czech Republic; "The Man Who Travels with Bees," Gandy gallery, Bratislava, Slovakia; 2014: "Nor Tortoise Shell nor Blades of Grass," MMCA Chang Dong National Art Studio, Seoul, South Korea; 2013: "Nomadia," Mutuo Espaco de Arte, Barcelona, Spain; "Tales from the Other Seas," Espaço Gesto, Porto, Portugal; 2011: "Traffic Jam," Miscelanea space, Barcelona, Spain.

    29分
  8. 2024/07/12

    Left to Be Desired Episode 6: Zheng Bo on How Plants Practice Politics

    Episode 6 of the SAVA podcast Left to be Desired features a conversation with artist Zheng Bo on the politics of plants on the occasion of their work Bamboo as Method at Somerset House in London.  Left to be Desired is available to listen to on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music/Audible and Audacy. You can also access it via the podcast website:  https://lefttobedesired.libsyn.com/site  Left to be Desired podcast explores the distinctiveness of the socialist path through the Anthropocene by bringing together artistic and scholarly insights into the ecologies of global Socialism. Maja & Reuben Fowkes will invite artists and researchers to talk about their practice and exchange ideas at the intersection of ecology, climate change, art and the Socialist Anthropocene.  How Plants Practice Politics with Zheng Bo  In episode 6 of Left to be Desired, artist Zheng Bo talks to Maja and Reuben Fowkes about their ecological art practice, artistic perspectives on the histories of socialism and the installation Bamboo as Method at Somerset House. Meeting Bo again in London was an opportunity to find out about their distinctive approach to breaking down the barriers between humans and nature by reconnecting with plants. Of particular interest from a SAVA perspective are works that deal with the complex social and environmental histories of Chinese socialism, including the period of the Great Leap Forward in the late 1950s. The discussion also broached the issue of the particular forms of instrumentalization of nature under socialism and the extent to which plant resistance and agency was a factor in these entwined more-than-human histories. As the podcast suggests, the radicalization of their approach to botanical politics is driven by the urgency of the climate crisis of the Anthropocene.     About the Speaker  ZHENG Bo is an ecoqueer artist of ethnic Bai heritage. Through drawing, dance and film, they cultivate kinship with plants: ferns in Taiwan, moss in Scandinavia, beech trees in Germany, an umbrella thorn acacia in the Arabian Desert. For them, art does not arise from human creativity, but more-than-human intimacy. Their ecological practice contributes to an emergent planetary indigeneity. Recent projects include solo exhibitions at Gropius Bau and Göteborgs Konsthall, public commissions at Somerset House and Jameel Arts Centre, and participation in the 59th Venice Biennale. Their works are in the collections of Tate Modern, Power Station of Art, and Hammer Museum, among others. https://zhengbo.org/

    39分

番組について

A Socialist Anthropocene in the Visual Arts Podcast. Tune in to hear Maja & Reuben Fowkes talk to artists and researchers about their practice and exchange ideas at the intersection of ecology, climate change, art and the Socialist Anthropocene.