Past Resident
2014: Foundation for a Civil Society

Richard Loskot

Richard Loskot’s work reveals various physical, mental and symbolic attributes of the time-space reality. Loskot’s production includes sound installations, different simulations of natural phenomena – whether biological growth or sound and light conditions – and the reflection of the achievements of civilization. In spite of this technological orientation, Loskot’s installations may surprise the viewer with their aesthetic intuition. The impact on the senses is somewhere between science fiction and thoughtful metaphysics

Richard Loskot (born 1984 in Most), graduated in 2011 with a degree in Visual Communication from the Faculty of Art and Architecture, Liberec. He took an internship in Atelier of Magdaléna Jetelová at The Academy of Fine Arts, Munich. Loskot won the Exit 2007 Prize for his work System. He has exhibited in Germany, the UK, Romania, Italy, Czech Republic and Slovakia. His exhibitions include Asynchronisation, Jelení Gallery, Prague; The Point of Things, 4AM, Brno; Simple Thing, Galerie hlavního města Prahy, Prague and Logging the Present, G99, The Brno House of Art. He was a finalist for the 2012 Jindřich Chalupecký Award, where he presented the installation Another Place. Loskot lives and works in Ústí nad Labem, Czech Republic.

Past Resident
2014: Carclew Youth Arts

Madison Bycroft

Through video, performance and sculpture, Madison Bycroft explores an animist way of being in the world, rethinking what it means to be a person and how we might understand, relate, and communicate with others. How does language, representation or the archive limit our perspective? How can we know differently within these systems? Bycroft’s video and performance works often present as short experiments in unlearning the self or traditional modes of being, and explore the practice of empathy and processes of becoming other. Through sculpture, she immerses herself within the world of objects and how they resonate with us and how they might become animated. Bycroft often works with forms that are strange and unrecognisable, and border on weird or unusual. In lieu of categorical and colonizing thought, Bycroft is interested in relational understanding, something which requires compassion: in Latin, a feeling with that extends to difference—to the animal and other persons—creating a sense of communion with the world.

Madison Bycroft (born 1987, Adelaide, South Australia) completed a Bachelor of Visual Arts with first class honors at the University of South Australia in 2012. She has exhibited in group and solo shows throughout Australia and recently in Canada, in public, commercial and artist run galleries, as well experimenting with non-traditional sites. She has a multi-media practice, including video, sculpture and performance. Bycroft is the recipient of the 2014 Anne & Gordon Samstag International Visual Arts Scholarships, awarded for one year of study overseas in the visual arts. Bycroft has been selected for safARI in 2014 – the fringe festival to the Sydney Biennale.

Toulu Hassani

Toulu Hassani’s work moves along the boundaries of painting. To arrive at her images she uses various methods and materials such as oil paint, wood, epoxy resin and rawhide. Through the material the attention is focused on that which is to be seen. The reduction allows this to come to the foreground and convey its own (essential) contents. It is a question of challenging perception and the illusion behind structures and surfaces.

Toulu Hassani (born 1984 in Ahwaz, Iran) studied at Hochschule für Bildende Künste Braunschweig and Facultad de Bellas Artes Valencia. Her works have been featured in various exhibitions including: Vom Hier und Jetz, Kunstverein Hannover, 2013: Conditions Change, HBK, Braunschweig and La Bonne Horse, Städtische Galerie Delmenhorst, Bonner Kunstverein,. In 2012 Hassani received a fellowship from the Federal State of Niedersachsen and in 2013 a grant from the Kunstverein Hannover.