TBA21–Academy Radio

TBA21–Academy & Ocean Space
TBA21–Academy Radio

What can we ask the Ocean? In our sonic explorations, we dive deep into conversations about art, culture, the Ocean, equality, imagination and community, as well as music curated around the oceanic stories of our human and non-human collaborations. Created and curated by TBA21–Academy, a cultural organisation investigating environmental injustice through the lens of art, and its initiative Ocean Space, a new embassy for the Oceans situated in the Church of San Lorenzo, Venice.

  1. Magical Fresh & Salty Conversation: More-than-Human Underwater Filming

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    Magical Fresh & Salty Conversation: More-than-Human Underwater Filming

    This episode of Magical Fresh & Salty Conversations features the artist and STARTS resident Sonia Levy in conversation with Erika Balsom, a London-based scholar and critic working on cinema, art, and their intersection. During their STARTS residency, Sonia Levy and her collaborators, environmental anthropologist Heather Swanson, ecologist Meredith Root Bernstein, and landscape architect Alexandra Arènes, looked at the Venetian Lagoon through the lens of nature-based solutions to mitigate flood risks. What issues arise from Venice’s long history of taming its waterscape? With a shared commitment to noticing more-than-human worlds, the group strived to forge their own understanding of the controversies arising from the lagoon’s water management. In Sonia’s eyes, lagoons are fascinating places to think about the meeting of different bodies of water - fresh and saltwater. Filming underwater became a way to get to know the ephemeral world of the lagoon and its processes of transformation in the hope that this submerged perspective might also bring about speculative approaches to policy change. Magical Fresh & Salty Conversations is produced by TBA21–Academy with the support of STARTS, an initiative by the European Commission. Special thanks to our guests: Erika Balsom and Sonia Levy. Editor at large: María Montero Sierra Sound edited by: Elena Zieser Introduction and credits voice-over: Nathan Johnson Music by horizonsnd Underwater sound recordings of the Venetian Lagoon by Sonia Levy and Jez Riley French Produced by: Miriam Calabrese, María Montero Sierra, Katarina Rakušček, and the artists. Hear more episodes at ocean-archive.org or subscribe with your podcast provider.

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  2. Magical Fresh & Salty Conversation: Seascape Epistemology and the Venetian Cocoon

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    Magical Fresh & Salty Conversation: Seascape Epistemology and the Venetian Cocoon

    Every living being is an experiment made out of the flesh of the planet. In order to navigate it, the stars have to become a part of you. This episode of Magical Fresh & Salty Conversations features two discussions that touch upon the interests of the STARTS residents: Sonia Levy is joined by scholar, writer, and surfer Karin Amimoto Ingersoll, while her collaborator Meredith Root-Bernstein talks to philosopher Emanuele Coccia. Together, our guests look at the possibiliy of knowledge otherwise emerging from our interactions with watery spaces. How can immersed perspectives generate epistemologies that challenge imperial structures? How can thinking at the interplay of surface and subsurface processes help us understand both human and more-than-human agency in a changing world? Part I: Sonia Levy with Karin Amimoto Ingersoll A Kanaka master navigator enacts his oceanic literacy daily by embodying about 3,000 environmental pieces of information and making about 200 decisions based on the corporeally collected data. In her conversation with the artist Sonia Levy, Karin Amimoto Ingersoll, a Kanaka Maoli political scientist, writer, and surfer based in Honolulu, discusses her notion of "seascape epistemology”. How can embodied literacies like navigation (ho’okele) and fishing (lawai’a) offer cultural affirmations that open up alternatives to the neocolonial systems that continue to subjugate Hawai’ian identity? In their residency project, Sonia Levy and her collaborators think from within the depths of a very different space: the Venetian Lagoon. How can Ingersoll’s approach informs Levy’s submerged perspectives, initiating life-affirming passageways of knowing and being? Part II: Meredith Root-Bernstein with Emanuele Coccia In this conversation, the lagoon is a cocoon: a place of transformation where every single living being reciprocally transforms and is transformed by its environment. The interdisciplinary conservation scientist Meredith Root-Bernstein talks to the philosopher Emanuele Coccia, departing from his works Metamorphosis and The Life of Plants. Examining various approaches to agency and image-making, the residency project was interested in wetland flora as agentive beings instead of passive tools in lagoon restoration projects, echoing biological and ecological concepts such as developmental plasticity and ecosystem engineering. Our guests delve into this interest in moving beyond questions of observation, or gaze, toward a situated and embodied understanding of life on Earth. Magical Fresh & Salty Conversations is produced by TBA21–Academy with the support of STARTS, an initiative by the European Commission. Special thanks to our guests: Emanuele Coccia, Karin Amimoto Ingersoll, Sonia Levy, and Meredith Root-Bernstein. Editor at large: María Montero Sierra Sound edited by: Elena Zieser Introduction and credits voice-over: Nathan Johnson Music by horizonsnd. Underwater sound recordings of the Venetian Lagoon by Sonia Levy and Jez Riley French Produced by: Miriam Calabrese, María Montero Sierra, Katarina Rakušček, and the artists. Hear more episodes at ocean-archive.org or subscribe with your podcast provider.

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  3. Magical Fresh & Salty Conversation: Radio Amnion

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    Magical Fresh & Salty Conversation: Radio Amnion

    In this episode, we are joined by Jol Thoms, a London-based artist and researcher teaching the MA program Art & Ecology at Goldsmiths, University of London. Thoms is the founder of a multi-year sound project called Radio Amnion, commissioning artists and researchers to stream sonic composition from the depths of the Pacific Ocean. Radio Amnion explores the magical spaces of intersection between cultural and scientific cosmologies and also joined the STARTS artists-in-residency for their final showcase event at Ocean Space in Venice on the summer solstice in 2021. In a conversation with Elisa Resconi, an astrophysicist from the Technical University of Munich, and Dwight Owens from Ocean Networks Canada, an initiative of ocean observatories monitoring the Canadian coastline, this episode delves into the deep world of ocean science and compassionate ecological art, departing from the smallest and perhaps most elusive particles described by physics. What happens when science opens up its depths to the transformative potential of art? "Magical Fresh & Salty Conversations is produced by TBA21–Academy with the support of STARTS, an initiative by the European Commission." Special thanks to our guests: Dwight Owens, Elisa Resconi, and Jol Thoms Editor at large: María Montero Sierra Sound edited by: Elena Zieser Introduction and credits voice-over: Nathan Johnson Music by horizonsnd and underwater sound recordings of the Venetian Lagoon by Sonia Levy and Jez Riley French Produced by: Miriam Calabrese, María Montero Sierra, Katarina Rakušček, and the artists. Hear more episodes at ocean-archive.org or subscribe with your podcast provider.

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  4. Magical Fresh & Salty Conversation: Rhythmic Bodies

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    Magical Fresh & Salty Conversation: Rhythmic Bodies

    In this episode, "Rhythmic Bodies: A Walk Through the Performance-Expedition, Breathings of the moon,” we are joined by curator of performance and ecology Lucia Pietroiusti, who interviews the S+T+ARTS artists in residence Diego Delas and Leonor Serrano Rivas to discuss the performance-expedition they developed during their residency in Venice. In his work Mundus Subterraneus, published in 1665, the Jesuit scholar Athanasius Kircher devised a theory on the movement of water, claiming that water moves in an upward motion from the sea to the mountains. Although incorrect, this theory was the departing point for Diego Delas and Leonor Serrano Rivas to explore the notion of water moving upward, the Venetian acqua alta, and the magical rhythms of the lagoon from the perspective of the water itself. This episode focuses on the materiality of their artistic project and its various components: the tides of the Venice Lagoon and its acqua alta, the moon cycles, the rhythm of rowing and the audience’s heartbeat, all becoming magical strategies to help us become attuned to the voice of the water. Magical Fresh & Salty Conversations is produced by TBA21–Academy with the support of STARTS, an initiative by the European Commission. Special thanks to our host and guests: Diego Delas, Lucia Pietroiusti, and Leonor Serrano Rivas. Editor at large: María Montero Sierra Sound edited by: Elena Zieser Introduction and credits voice-over: Nathan Johnson Music by horizonsnd and underwater sound recordings of the Venetian Lagoon by Sonia Levy and Jez Riley French Produced by: Miriam Calabrese, María Montero Sierra, Katarina Rakušček, and the artists. Hear more episodes at ocean-archive.org or subscribe with your podcast provider.

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  5. Magical Fresh & Salty Conversation: The Problem of Imagination

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    Magical Fresh & Salty Conversation: The Problem of Imagination

    In this episode, “The Problem of Imagination: The Triangle of Magic-Imagination-Science,” our guests examine three concepts that have historically framed the notion of nature. The hosts, S+T+ARTS artists in residence Diego Delas and Leonor Serrano Rivas, engage in a conversation with philosopher and writer Federico Campagna and professor of history of art, science, and folk practices John Tresch. How do we imagine nature in the time of climate change? Can we redefine scientific knowledge through art? Do fiction and imagination have a reality-altering potential that could help us surpass the dichotomy of problem versus solution? In their conversation, guests Federico Campagna and John Tresch explore some of the key ideas that run through Diego Delas and Leonor Serrano Rivas’s residency in Venice, such as the role of imagination, magic, and technology in interpreting the universe around us, and the power of fiction from the pre-scientific period to today. Magical Fresh & Salty Conversations is produced by TBA21–Academy with the support of STARTS, an initiative by the European Commission. Special thanks to our hosts and guests: Diego Delas, Federico Campagna, Leonor Serrano Rivas, and John Tresch. Editor at large: María Montero Sierra Editing and sound design: Elena Zieser Voice over: Nathan Johnson Sounds: Sonia Levy Music: horizonsnd Produced by: Miriam Calabrese, María Montero Sierra, Katarina Rakušček, and the artists. Hear more episodes at ocean-archive.org or subscribe with your podcast provider.

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  6. 2.08.(De)constructing Venice. Reflections from the Outside

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    2.08.(De)constructing Venice. Reflections from the Outside

    ENG. 2.8 (De)constructing Venice. Reflection from the outside, with Abiba Coulibaly (geographer) e Ella Navot (visual anthropologist). Ocean Fellowship 2021, TBA21–Academy. How is Venice seen from the outside? Is it possible to deconstruct the multiple overlapping images associated with Venice? Have you ever imagined Venice as a place of alienation, and segregation? What symbols and images are conjured up for people that come from aboard? Can we reflect on how to deconstruct political and social images of cultural representation in Venice? In this episode, entitled “(De)constructing Venice. Reflection from the outside”, we’re going to present a very special collaboration with Abiba Coulibaly and Ella Navot, who designed and wrote the final episode of the second season of "Nowtilus", and who share their experiences in Venice as fellows of the 2021 Ocean Fellowship. Venice is a construct. If we take the definition in its most literal sense, a construction, according to the Oxford dictionary, is ‘a thing that has been built or made’. But if we expand our interpretation of the word construction to ‘an idea or an imaginary situation’, it also provides a means by which we can explore the non-material frameworks of the city, which frequently intersect and entangle themselves with the more obvious elements of the manmade environment, resulting in the Venice we experience and imagine today. So what does it mean to deconstruct Venice? How is it possible? Abiba Coulibaly, a geographer based in London, and Ella Navot from Tel Aviv, a visual anthropologist, will create a dialogue that will allow us to reflect upon imaginary borders, segregation, unexpected angles, the Jewish Ghetto, and a careful analysis of the Blackamoors, like the ones represented in the Monument for Giovanni Pesaro at Basilica dei Frari. These reflections aim to stimulate a necessary revision of the surfaces of Venice, to dive deeper into various multifaceted perspectives, and to ask who exactly is behind the construction of these images, given that such an act is often imbued with a great deal of power, bias, and political implications, even at the subtlest level. This episode presents an interview with Moulaye Nyang, a Senegalese-born glassmaker based in Venice, who tells us his rich life story, along with the challenges and perspectives involved in moving from Senegal to Murano, where he learned the art of Glassmaking, combining it with the traditions of his home country. Abiba Coulibaly and Ella Navot are two former fellows of the program of TBA21–Academy's Ocean Fellowship 2021. For the 2021 edition of the program, TBA21–Academy partnered with Artis, to support one fellow artist/researcher from Israel whose work addressed aesthetic, social, and political questions that inspired reflection and debate around oceans with an emphasis on the Mediterranean. The episode is available in English on Ocean-Archive.org and on TBA21–Academy Radio on SoundCloud, Spotify, Apple Podcasts and Google Podcasts. “Nowtilus. Stories from an urban lagoon in the 21st century” is a podcast produced by Ocean Space, Venice, for TBA21–Academy Radio. Music by Enrico Coniglio.

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What can we ask the Ocean? In our sonic explorations, we dive deep into conversations about art, culture, the Ocean, equality, imagination and community, as well as music curated around the oceanic stories of our human and non-human collaborations. Created and curated by TBA21–Academy, a cultural organisation investigating environmental injustice through the lens of art, and its initiative Ocean Space, a new embassy for the Oceans situated in the Church of San Lorenzo, Venice.

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