Annotations

Nicodemus

As multiple crises converge into a singular metacrisis -- fundamentally destabilising our systems and challenging our sense of purpose -- Annotations creates a discursive space for practitioners across disciplines to share their struggles, insights, and evolving practices. Artists, writers, activists, and thinkers reflect on how these complex realities both constrain and catalyse their work in this precarious moment. An Unruhe Media publication, and conceived as a multimedia format, Annotations combines a newsletter with a podcast and a YouTube channel and is presented by Nico Heller (aka Nicodemus). unruhe.substack.com

الحلقات

  1. Body Count

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    Body Count

    Nico Heller in Conversation with the artist André Stitt. This episode of Annotations features André Stitt, an artist whose life and work have been profoundly shaped by the Northern Ireland Troubles. The dialogue explores the intersection of materiality, social dynamics, and identity in contemporary human experience - central themes in André's work. We examine how physical structures and the built environment shape personal and communal narratives, reflecting on André's investigation of trauma, sectarianism, and the body. Through his deeply personal insights, we consider art as a transformative and redemptive force in the face of political and social upheaval. Born in Belfast in 1958, André's practice initially evolved from painting to performance art as a direct response to civil conflict, before returning to painting as an expanded proposition in 2013. Now Professor of Performance & Interdisciplinary Art at Cardiff School of Art & Design, André has also curated numerous international projects, solidifying his position as one of Northern Ireland's most influential artists. Further information about André and his work is available via Cardiff Metropolitan University. To ensure you never miss an Annotations Dialogue, do subscribe to our YouTube channel and our newsletter at annotations.art. If you are already a free subscriber and like what we do, please consider upgrading to a paid subscription. Get full access to Unruhe Media at unruhe.substack.com/subscribe

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  2. The Bbeyond Effect: The Transformative Power of Performance Art

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    The Bbeyond Effect: The Transformative Power of Performance Art

    Nico Heller in Conversation with Performance Artist Brian Patterson. In the crucible of Northern Ireland's complex cultural landscape, live art has, over the past 50 years, emerged as a powerful medium of engagement, critique, and healing. This dialogue examines the growth of artist-led initiatives that have shaped the landscape of contemporary performance art in Northern Ireland and beyond. We talk about the challenges and transformative impact of sustaining a live art practice over time, the importance of cross-border and international collaborations, and the strategies employed to engage wider audiences. Joining us for this dialogue is Brian Patterson, who is currently researching the history of performance art in Ireland at the Belfast School of Art. He is also a veteran performance artist and co-founder of Bbeyond, which for the past 20 years has played a key role in promoting and evolving live art both in Northern Ireland and internationally. His dual perspective as artist and promoter offers unique insights into the practicalities of nurturing ephemeral forms of art outside of the cultural mainstream. Through our conversation, we'll explore Bbeyond's impact - from its monthly performance meetings to global projects - and consider how such initiatives have the power to shape not only the future of performance art but also the broader cultural landscape in an ever-changing world. Further information about Brian Patterson and his work is available via Bbeyond. To ensure you never miss an Annotations Dialogue, do subscribe to our YouTube channel and our newsletter at annotations.art. If you are already a free subscriber and like what we do, please consider upgrading to a paid subscription. Get full access to Unruhe Media at unruhe.substack.com/subscribe

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  3. Resistance and Rebellion in Contemporary Asian Art

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    Resistance and Rebellion in Contemporary Asian Art

    Nico Heller in Conversation with the Taiwanese Curator Erica Yu-Wen Huang. This episode tackles the pressing challenges facing politically engaged artists and curators in an era of eroding artistic freedoms. We explore how the global rise of illiberalism reshapes creative expression, resistance, and critical practice. And we dissect the evolving relationships between art, politics, and audience engagement, offering insights into navigating these turbulent waters. The dialogue confronts the big questions: How can critical voices persist and adapt? What role do curators play in supporting provocative art? And what strategies emerge as artists and institutions grapple with new forms of censorship and control? Joining us to explore these critical issues is Erica Yu-Wen Huang, an independent curator based in Taipei. With a Master's in Museum Studies from the University of Leicester, Erica brings valuable experience as former Curator at Hong Kong's Centre for Heritage, Arts & Textile. Her curatorial research on hybrid cultures, migration, and geopolitics uniquely positions her to dissect the complex interplay between art, politics, and societal change in our current global climate. Further information about Erica Yu-Wen Huang is available via LinkedIn. Her blog can be found at ericayuwenhuang.tumblr.com. To ensure you never miss an Annotations Dialogue, do subscribe to our YouTube channel and our newsletter. If you are already a free subscriber and like what we do, please consider upgrading to a paid subscription. Get full access to Unruhe Media at unruhe.substack.com/subscribe

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  4. Practicing Decoloniality: A Curator's Perspective

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    Practicing Decoloniality: A Curator's Perspective

    Nico Heller in Conversation with Lou Mo. Lou Mo is a leading Taipei-based artist and curator, specialising in her curatorial practice in contemporary Asian and African art. She read Art History at McGill University (2009-2013), graduating with a BA, and later studied Chinese Art in the Asian Studies division of the École des hautes études en sciences sociales in Paris (2014-2017). In 2022 Lou was selected as one of four guest curators of the 14th Dakar Bienniale in Senegal (2022) and in 2023-24 she curated Hot Flux: Modern and Contemporary Photography in Taiwan and Africa at the Tainan Art Museum. As a member of the School of Mutants collective, her works have been exhibited in venues such as the Taipei Fine Arts Museum, the Centre Pompidou Metz, the 12th Berlin Bienniale, the autostrada biennale, and the Glasgow International. Her other research-based works have recently been exhibited at the Hong-Gah Museum and The Cube Space in Taipei, and the Kochi Bienniale in India. In this dialogue, we explore how Lou, as a Chinese-Canadian female curator and artist, engages with, frames, and presents the practices and work of different African and Asian artists through a decolonial lens, centring non-European artistic approaches rather than relating them primarily to Western conventions. Further information about Lou Mo is available via LinkedIn. Her blog can be found on WordPress. To ensure you never miss an Annotations Dialogue, do subscribe to our YouTube channel and our newsletter at www.annotations.art. If you are already a free subscriber and like what we do, please consider upgrading to a paid subscription. Get full access to Unruhe Media at unruhe.substack.com/subscribe

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  5. Staging Resilience: Theatre as Resistance Under Occupation

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    Staging Resilience: Theatre as Resistance Under Occupation

    Nico Andreas Heller in Conversation with Iman Aoun. In a region where narratives often clash, Iman Aoun's artistic voice resonates as a beacon of creative resilience. The award-winning Palestinian actress, director, and co-founder of Ashtar Theatre in Ramallah since 1991, Iman has harnessed the techniques of Augusto Boal's Theatre of the Oppressed. Her pioneering work sheds light on the suffering and plight of Palestinians under occupation and in exile through critically acclaimed projects such as The Gaza Monologues, the One Billion Rising Palestine campaign, and her current production, Oranges and Stones. Iman joins us from Portugal to discuss her artistic journey, Oranges and Stones, and the role her art plays in fostering resistance and rebellion. First staged in 2017 and now revived, Oranges and Stones is currently showing at the Almada Municipal Theatre in Almada, Portugal. This powerful play poignantly depicts Palestinian displacement through a wordless story of a refugee gradually expelling a local woman from her home and orange orchards after WWI, following the Balfour Declaration of 1917. About this production, Peter Brook wrote: It's an amazing, magnificent piece of work. In fact, it is all of a piece, as there is no way of separating conception, visualisation, staging, performing – and meaning. If there is any very positive and hopeful message, as some of the audience in the discussion were looking for – it is there in the fact that your work is an affirmation that unity – even for 48 minutes and encompassing the spectators – is real. More information about Iman Aoun is available linkedin.com/in/iman-aoun-6779ab17. Ashtar Theatre's website can be found at ashtar-theatre.org. To never miss an Annotations Dialogue, subscribe to our Substack newsletter at annotations.art and our YouTube channel at youtube.com/@nnotationz. If you already are a free subscriber and like what we do, please consider upgrading. Get full access to Unruhe Media at unruhe.substack.com/subscribe

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  6. #ArtForTheHumans

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    #ArtForTheHumans

    Nico Andreas Heller in Conversation with Yvon Ngassam. Yvon Ngassam, based in Douala, Cameroon, combines traditional and contemporary media to explore urban transformation and to confront the enduring legacies of slavery, colonial history, displacement and migration. Employing a wide range of techniques, from photography, video and sound, to conceptual, live and digital art, he examines these themes from the perspective of resilience and through the prism of dreams, envisioning alternative narratives of empowerment. Central to his work is his profound engagement with Cameroon's socio-political landscape and the wider African context. By combining traditional methods like etching and embroidery with technologies such as NFTs, Yvon challenges conventional notions of medium-specificity and critically examines cultural heritage, identity and power dynamics in post-colonial societies. In this podcast, we explore his notion of the artist as a custodian of collective memory, talk about who the ‘humans’ are in his #ArtForTheHumans, and discuss why resilience is such a central concern for him. His recent solo exhibitions include: ‘Crypto Genèse: Opus 1’, Institut français du Cameroun – Yaoundé (2024); ‘Seeds and Souls’, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen (2023-24); ‘Portrait of a Community – Features of a Land’, Municipal Foyer, Lolodorf (2022); ‘Traces’, Doual’Art, Douala (2021). He has participated in international group exhibitions and biennales including: ‘The Nudity of the Soul’, Kunsthal Aarhus (2021); ‘Streams of Consciousness’, 12th Bamako Encounters – African Biennale of Photography, Bamako (2019); ‘L’Heure Rouge’, 13th Dak’Art – Biennale of Contemporary African Art, Dakar (2018); ‘Rip It Up’, 2nd Changjiang International Photography and Video Biennale, Changjiang Museum of Contemporary Art, Changjiang (2017). For more information about Yvon Ngassam, visit his website. Get full access to Unruhe Media at unruhe.substack.com/subscribe

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  7. Of Natural Flows and Architectural Currents

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    Of Natural Flows and Architectural Currents

    Nico Andreas Heller in Conversation with Lenka Petrakova. Lenka’s futuristic designs are inspired by her study and love of nature. Improvements in technology, digital design, AI integration and material developments enable her to design organic structures, often on an epic scale, that promote community, are sustainable and operationally highly efficient. Beauty in architecture, as in nature, she maintains, is not a goal in itself, but the manifestation of a well-functioning organism. Is this where the architecture of the early 21st century is headed? In this dialogue, we reflect on some of the dominant currents in architecture today (beyond sustainability) and how these currents impact Lenka’s practice, before taking a closer look at The 8th Continent, a private project she has been working on (see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Nr_R3sNSvQ ). Lenka Petrakova is an international architect who has worked in New York, Los Angeles, London, Vienna and Bratislava. Since May 2017, she has worked at Zaha Hadid Architects (ZHA) in London, where she is the Lead Architect. She has worked on over 40 projects in 10 countries and spent most of her time working in high-rise building design. Her personal and academic work has been exhibited internationally in Venice (Venice Biennale), Vienna, Zlín, Bratislava and Beijing. She has received numerous awards, including the 2020 Grand Prix Award for Architecture and Innovation of the Sea from Foundation Jacques Rougerie Génération Espace Mer - Institut de France and the Zlín Design Week Award for Innovation in 2017. For more information about Lenka Petrakova, please visit lenkapetrakova.com. Get full access to Unruhe Media at unruhe.substack.com/subscribe

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  8. On Humiliation

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    On Humiliation

    Nico Andreas Heller in Conversation with Keith McVeigh. Hugo Ball, co-founder of the Dada movement, once remarked that “every word that was spoken and sung [at Cabaret Voltaire, their club in Zurich] represented at least this one thing: that this humiliating age had not succeeded in winning [their] respect”. That was back in 1916, at the height of the first world war. For Ball art was not an end in itself, but an opportunity for the true perception and criticism of the times we live in. The Dada movement, to him, was a direct revolt against the prevailing bourgeois aesthetic and social values of the West and against society's glorification of war and violence. Belfast-based philosopher Keith McVeigh, who joins Nico Andreas Heller for this edition of Annotations, has developed his practice as a composer and pianist against the backdrop of the ‘troubles’, the violence and bigotry that, since the late 1960s, have served as a constant reminder of the frailty of our human condition. Starting from Hugo Ball’s conception of a humiliating age, we will be exploring the role art in general and music in particular can play in today’s polarised world in reminding us of who we are – or rather ought to be. Keith McVeigh left school at 16 and, after spending ten years in engineering, enrolled as a mature undergraduate student at Queens University Belfast, where, in 1996, he was awarded a PhD in philosophy. In 2003, Keith returned part-time to Queens for an MA in composition. He started performing in the late 1970s, heyday of the Belfast punk scene, and went on to play and record everything from folk, blues and metal, to serial, concrete and experimental music. For more information about Keith McVeigh, his music and writing, please visit keithmcveigh.substack.com and subscribe to his newsletter. You can subscribe to the Annotations newsletter and podcast at annotations.art. Get full access to Unruhe Media at unruhe.substack.com/subscribe

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  9. The Eye of the Other

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    The Eye of the Other

    Nico Andreas Heller in Conversation with Sean McAllister. Sean McAllister is one of the most distinctive British film makers working today. His multi-award-winning films for the BBC and Channel 4 TV have played all over the world. His successes include the Sundance Film Festival winning films, The Liberace Of Baghdad (2004), Japan: A Story Of Love And Hate (2008) and The Reluctant Revolutionary, and the Sheffield Jury Prize winning A Syrian Love Story (2015), which was screened in both the UK and European parliaments, was named The Guardian's #3 film of 2015 and McAllister a BAFTA nomination for outstanding debut. He is currently working on a sequel to his 2008 film Japan: A Tale of Love and Hate. "One of the most brave and powerful film makers around" – Michael Moore "The great thing about Sean's films is that he champions the characters in his documentaries, he always takes a loser and makes them a winner." - D A Pennebaker What sets Sean’s practice as a documentary filmmaker apart is the intimacy and connectedness of the relationship he manages to establish with his protagonists during the course of a film, which in turn allows him to enter and see their world through their eyes. What emerges are intricate portraits of ordinary people caught up in extraordinary struggles of various kinds. In this dialogue, we will be discussing his choice of subjects and explore his approach within the context of his own development as a documentary filmmaker. More information about Sean McAllister is available at https://seanmcallister.com, and you can subscribe to our newsletter and podcast at https://www.annotations.art. Get full access to Unruhe Media at unruhe.substack.com/subscribe

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  10. The Flawed Humanity of Our Selves

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    The Flawed Humanity of Our Selves

    Nico Andreas Heller in Conversation with Dougald Hine. Without a conscious commitment to a different, a more sustainable, ideally regenerative way of living – I would call it a ‘cultural revolution’, if the term didn’t carry such negative connotations – the transformation of our economies and the renewal of our democracies and societies won’t happen. Annotations, my new dialogue series addresses this issue and hence focuses, not on what people do, but on how they do it, and why. Since I deeply believe that the arts have a critically important role to play in helping us understand what a just and sustainable life and future might look like, I am focusing for this series on cultural practitioners, their strategies and practices. My first guest is Dougald Hine, the author of At Work in the Ruins: Finding Our Place in the Time of Science, Climate Change, Pandemics & All the Other Emergencies (February 2023), who together with his partner created a school called HOME in 2018. We will be discussing his practice as a writer and how all the work he does is part of a weave of activity that feeds into and grows out of writing that he wants to be doing – and look at how this ‘integrated practice’ of his informs and shapes his life. More information about Dougald Hine is available at dougald.nu, and you can subscribe to our newsletter and podcast at annotations.art. Get full access to Unruhe Media at unruhe.substack.com/subscribe

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حول

As multiple crises converge into a singular metacrisis -- fundamentally destabilising our systems and challenging our sense of purpose -- Annotations creates a discursive space for practitioners across disciplines to share their struggles, insights, and evolving practices. Artists, writers, activists, and thinkers reflect on how these complex realities both constrain and catalyse their work in this precarious moment. An Unruhe Media publication, and conceived as a multimedia format, Annotations combines a newsletter with a podcast and a YouTube channel and is presented by Nico Heller (aka Nicodemus). unruhe.substack.com