Intimacies & Tyrannies: The Colonial Topographies of the Internet

Intimacies & Tyrannies: The Colonial Topographies of the Internet

By John Hansard Gallery and University of Southampton

Overview

Presented by John Hansard Gallery & The Box, this symposium is a collaboration between two coastal cities. Supported by Paul Mellon Centre.

To accompany our current exhibition, With the certainty of tides, still I rise, we present a half-day symposium. A gathering of thinkers, academics for conversation, food, essays and presentations, serving as a catalyst and a launching pad around the ideas inherent in artist Osman Yousefzada’s work and his wider practice. Supported by Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art

"A solidarity" curated by artist and writer Osman Yousefzada, co-convened with Prof Tom Trevor (University of Exeter).

The symposium brings together two central threads in Yousefzada’s practice: Intimacy, reflected in the deeply personal dimensions of his work and Tyranny, which engages with global narratives shaped by colonial histories. His recent exhibitions at John Hansard Gallery and The Box move between these contrasting yet interrelated themes. Drawing on those exhibitions, the symposium will examine intimacy and tyranny through the broader perspectives of contemporary academic thought and artistic practice.

Speakers include:
Dr Syed Mustafa Ali (Open University); Prof Louise Siddons (University of Southampton); Prof Wolfgang Suetzl (Ohio University); Dr Yaiza Hernández Velázquez (University of Southampton); Dr Jaya Brekke (NYMtech); Prof Alexandra Anikina (University of Southampton); Osman Yousefzada; Prof Stephanie Jones (University of Southampton) Prof Tom Trevor (University of Exeter); Dr Omar Kholeif (Glasgow School of Art); Prof Dina Lupin (University of Southampton).

Category: Arts, Theatre

Good to know

Highlights

  • 4 hours 30 minutes
  • In person

Location

John Hansard Gallery

142-144 Above Bar Street

Southampton SO14 7DU United Kingdom

How do you want to get there?

Organized by

Free
Jan 9 · 2:00 PM GMT