Past Residents
Past Resident2012: Bunka-cho - Agency for Cultural Affairs, Government of Japan
Kaeko Mizukoshi
Kaeko Mizukoshi investigates the function of image, representation, and the structure of historiography. Her works unchain images from conventional or existing roles, emphasizing the indefiniteness and perpetual metamorphosis of the meaning of image. In her recent works, the idea of “documentary” is interrogated and transformed to push its boundary in new directions. Currently Mizukoshi practices on the idea of what she calls “images in the process of being documented,” resulting in the collapse of pre-existing historical imagery and imprinted forms into an altered perceptive space.
Kaeko Mizukoshi (born 1976, Tokyo) studied at The State Academy of Fine Arts – Städelschule, Frankfurt am Main and graduated from Tama Art University, Tokyo. Recent shows include The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) Shanghai, 2012; The Metropolitan Museum of Photography, Tokyo; The Korea Foundation Art Gallery, Seoul, 2011; Doosan Gallery and Gallery LOOP, Seoul, 2009. She received a fellowship from Asian Cultural Council and participated in the Location One Residency Program in New York in 2009. She also been awarded grants from the Agency for Cultural Affairs (Bunkacho) and Yoshino Gypsum Art Foundation, Tokyo.
Past Resident2012: Canada Council for the Arts
Samina Mansuri
In her recent work, Samina Mansuri uses as a starting point media depictions of war-torn places such as Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iraq as well as the twin towers or places like New Orleans that have been ravaged by natural disasters. Frequently the architecture of these locations, captured from an aerial view, is reduced to ash or rubble. These views tend to provide a detached sense of actual place. Through a transformed language of aerial cartography Mansuri creates subjective mappings of an ambiguous location of trauma. Through this she aims to bring attention to viewers about mediated representations of misery and its impact on individual and public memory.
Samina Mansuri (born Karachi) is a multidisciplinary artist based in Toronto, Canada. She received her BFA from Pratt Institute, New York and MFA from Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh. Mansuri has exhibited her work internationally for over two decades. Recent exhibitions include Qualia or the pulse of Steel, Hamilton, Canada 2012; Out of Rubble, Space Gallery, Pittsburgh, 2011; Leaning Towards Collapse, A Space Gallery, Toronto, Canada, 2011; Empire of Dreams Phenomenology of the Built Environment, Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art, Toronto, Canada; Double Consciousness, Mattress Factory Museum, USA, 2007 and Post-Object, Doris McCarthy Gallery, Scarborough, Canada, 2007. Her works are represented in public and private collections and have been extensively featured and reviewed in catalogs, books, newspapers and journals.
Residents from Canada
Past Resident2013: Teorema
Andrés Ramírez Gaviria
Informed by processes of translation and transference, and building on the forms, figures, and discourses of art, design, and technology, Andrés Ramírez Gaviria’s work addresses such disparate, even contradictory, notions as autonomy and communication. Through the interaction of forms and connections, Gaviria’s work emphasizes moments of discord and dialogue between the constantly changing perspective of historical references and an experiential notion of the contemporary.
Andrés Ramírez Gaviria (born 1975 Bogotá) lives and works in Vienna, Austria. His work has been exhibited in BA – CA Kunstforum, Vienna; Kunsthaus Graz; Kunsthaus Dresden; Caribbean Biennial, Santo Domingo; Galeria Vermelho, Sao Paulo; Arte Camara – ArtBo, Bogotá; the ARCO International Contemporary Art Fair, Madrid; La Casa Encendida, Madrid; Sonambiente, Berlin and Transmediale, Berlin.
Residents from Dominican Republic
Joiri Minaya
Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, Alice and Lawrence Weiner, New York City Council District 34, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council, New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, Hartfield Foundation, Danna and Ed Ruscha, Jerome Foundation, The Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation
2021