Past Residents
Past Resident2010: premio Terna 06 arte contemporanea
Stefano Cagol
Stefano Cagol studied in Bern, Milan and Toronto. He lives and works in Italy and Brussels. Recently, Cagol presented the solo project 11 settembre simultaneously at MART Museum in Rovereto, Italy, Kunstraum Innsbruck, Austria, and ZKM in Karlsruhe, Germany (2009), the public art installation Flu Power Flu at Beursschouwburg Art Center, Brussels (permanent exhibit since 2007) and a satellite event at Singapore Biennale (2006). Through videos, photographs, installations and actions Cagol touches upon socio-political themes, pointing to the contradiction between beliefs and influences.
Stefano Cagol was part of There Is No Flag Large Enough, a collaborative project with Alberto Borea and Maryam Najd.
Events & Exhibitions
Salon: Stefano Cagol (Italy) and Jonggeon Lee (South Korea)
August 24, 2010
Residents from Italy
Raffaela Naldi Rossano
The Italian Academy for Advanced Studies, Columbia University, Italian Cultural Institute of New York, Directorate-General for Public and Cultural Diplomacy of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Directorate-General for Contemporary Creativity of the Italian Ministry of Culture
2024
Past Resident2010: Gobierno de Navarra
Carlos Irijalba
Carlos Irijalba studied fine arts at the University of the Basque Country and UDK Berlin. His work analyzes the way in which Western culture constructs a circuit of the real that loses all outside references and becomes entirely self-contained. Major themes are the society of the spectacle, the insignificance, the noise and the general conformity on contemporary culture. In his recent works Twilight (2008-9) and Unwilling Spectator (2009-10), Irijalba plays out the gap between relative time and space and the subjective experienced reality.
Events & Exhibitions
Salon: Carlos Irijalba (Spain) and Gaël Peltier (France)
June 1, 2010
Past Resident2010: Anonymous
Claudia Ulisses
Claudia Ulisses’ work focuses on social and political issues. Her critical approach, sometimes nostalgic in tone, addresses the (in)flexibilities of the human condition. She develops her work through a minute process of critical analysis, creating multidisciplinary projects with a combination of media such as photography, installation, sculpture and video. The form as visual seductive device is evident, but it acts mainly as an element of subversion of reality. Representation is a way to place the viewer face to face with the disconcert and ambiguity of the iconographic discourse.