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Renae Shadler

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Worlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #11.3 The interconnection between bodies and worlds | Worlding PodcastOn a -9° winters day in Rigor - Latvia, dance artist Agnese Bordjukova shared methods to develop awareness of processes within the human body that can then extend outwards to embrace our surroundings, making sensible the interconnection between bodies and worlds. Agnese often works with ‘non-motion’ such as sleeping or stillness, as a starting point for her choreographies. From this place, she focuses on the intensity of her internal activity which then inspires her to make dance works for video and stage. In this episode we discuss two of her short dance videos: ‘Hear me’ (2017) - a creation about sound gen...2023-03-1141 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #11.2 Plant blindness - Relocating the real in the digital world | Worlding PodcastHuman inability to value the role of plants on earth and see or notice plants in one's everyday life is a phenomenon known as ‘plant blindness’. Media artist Daniel Hengst addresses this phenomenon through his work, asking whether we are willing to empathize with plants and grant them an autonomous intrinsic value. Daniel’s projects often center non-human subjects and deal with the potential of digital technologies to encourage social change. In this episode we focus on Daniel’s works ‘Blooming love’ - a virtual reality artwork that explores the simulated Peatlands of Latvia and ‘Nastien & Tropismen’ - a virtual-installa...2023-03-1139 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #11.1 Art meets Science - The individuality of things | Worlding PodcastWhile scientists tend to categorize their objects of study in order to verify some pre-prepared hypotheses, visual artist Oliver Thie is focused on the individual within the species or class of things. In this episode we dive into two of Oliver’s solo exhibitions: ‘The truth about the origin of the world’ (2020) where he worked with an 18th century stone collection from the Siebengebirge in Germany and ‘Mapping the Invisible’ where Oliver explores a microscopic Hawaiian cave-dwelling cicada by enlarging it into a wall-sized drawing. In times of Anthropocentric landscapes and rapidly increasing insect extinction, his work is a persistent...2023-03-1143 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #10.3 My autism shapes everything that I do | Worlding PodcastFocused on access and inclusion with regards to neuro-difference and disability, Anna Farley shares how she navigates her life and artistic work with support and family, placing her autism front and center. In her work, Anna creates Visual Guides for exhibitions that offer visitors another way of accessing the display without relying only on text or speech. Filled with images and simple short sentences, the guides provide an alternative future for how we talk about art and, more broadly, how we could share important information within public institutions.  Learn more at: http://renaeshadler.com/worlding 2023-02-1454 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #10.2 When was the last time you changed your mind? | Worlding PodcastIn her practice of art mediation, Viviane Tabach - a Brazilian curator and mediator - seeks to be porous to the visitors and facilitate the creation of a ‘collective body’, where all participants and entities within the gallery become channels of knowledge. Inspired by Paulo Freire, a Brazilian educator and philosopher, Viviane sees Worlding through the lens of the learning process, as Freire states: “No one educates anyone - no one educates themselves. We educate one another with the mediation of the world”.  Seeking to expand mediation and foster a shared dialogue, Viviane reflects on her experiences working a...2023-02-1429 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #10.1 Crocodilian women from a world yet-to-come | Worlding PodcastTalking about mutant species and a speculative world yet-to-come, Kat Válastur - a Berlin-based choreographer and performer - shares her interest in film and how the editing process can be used as a tool within choreography and composition. In this episode we focus on her hybrid work ‘Stellar Fauna’: part performance and part film installation, the project merges reality and fiction in a minimal yet expressive way. Inspired by the cardiovascular system of a crocodile, Kat guides us through her processes of making the film, panning in and out on the details of a human body - biting nails...2023-02-1436 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #9.3 Indigenous Imaginaries | Worlding PodcastIn the Andean world the human body, nature and community are united. In colonisation this connection is broken. A good example of this is the Mallqui - a mummy combining two bodies: that of an old man and an indigenous child from the Lower Valley of the Chillon River, which is now on public display at the Humboldt Forum in Berlin. In the West the mummy is considered dead, in the Andean culture the mummy is still alive.  Daniela Zambrano Almidón is a Peruvian Quechua researcher and interdisciplinary artist with a focus on Andean-Amazonian popular culture. In...2023-01-1221 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #9.2 Decolonising colonial museums is a fallacy | Worlding PodcastThe whole debate on the decolonisation of colonial museums is a misconception. The collection of cultural treasures from other societies in order to modernise the West, demonstrates that modernity has always been influenced by European white racism and required ‘primitive’ societies in order to feel superior.  Dr. Christoph Balzar - a curator and art scholar with a focus on Postcolonial theory - argues that we cannot remove this cultural heritage from Ethnographic Museums and therefore they should be defunded, in particular the Humboldt Forum in Berlin. Christoph advocates for Decolonisation Councils that work independently from institutions and take...2023-01-1241 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #9.1 Amazonia - the lungs of planet earth | Worlding PodcastSpeaking from her BIPoC perspective, Martha Hincapié Charry - a Colombian artist based in Berlin, with Quimbaya ancestors - reflects on the present, past and future of the Amazon rainforest. Focusing on her recent solo performance/video installation “AMAZONIA 2040”, Martha shares her ideas of home and community during our times of climate chaos and the disappearance of biodiversity. In her artistic and curatorial practice, Martha creates spaces for dialogue between continents, generating a critical reflection on the relationship between humans and nature, the visible and often invisible world. Learn more at: http://renaeshadler.com/worlding 2023-01-1245 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #8.3 Unplanting the seeds of hatred | Worlding PodcastIn direct response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, ‘Unplanting the seeds of hatred’ is a project that approaches the body as soil, in which physical and mental seeds can grow. In this episode, Vera Shchelkina - a Russian somatic dance artist and founder of the project - chats to Renae about how the practice has the potential to slow us down and recognise that what is happening mentally is also a process within our bodies. Even by observing the process of seeding we can already begin to change and transform it, encouraging the ‘plants’ to grow in new ways.2022-12-2651 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #8.2 Peak experiences and a divergence from default reality | Worlding Podcast“Everyone is working through something on the dance floor” says Ivan March, a curator, artist and raver who is leading a community house in Greece, and the co-creator of the Waking Life festival in Portugal.  Waking Life is an annual Music Festival for artistic experimentation and collective imagineering of the type of society we could cultivate, if there was freedom to diverge from default reality. In this episode Ivan shares why festival gatherings are such fascinating spaces and how peak experiences can relate to the seasons and weather patterns within our own bodies.  Learn more at: ht...2022-10-0342 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #8.1 Co-living and structures of caretaking | Worlding PodcastBerlin born and raised shapeshifter, Jacob Hühn is currently dedicated to enabling a new project at Moos Berlin which encompasses an international residency, co-living community and event space. In this episode Jacob and Renae chat about what it means to facilitate spaces and how Moos is finding its own rituals and structures of caretaking.  Moos has a mission to become less abstract and find new languages through which to make concrete and practical invitations to the community, both young and old. Jacob also shares his ambition to root into a place and practice ‘listening firs...2022-09-2651 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #7.3 Detours and Slow Transitions | Worlding PodcastOften we know the efficient thing to do but what happens when this fills our body with anxiety? How can we revalue the ‘detour’ not as an inconvenience or procrastination but as an active choice to decelerate and sidestep the shortest, fastest and most productive path? For Natal Igor Dobkin a detour is a question within his/their research into slow transitions where he/they investigate the temporality of slowness as a method for change. Dobkin, a performance artist, facilitator and adjunct professor in the Department of Gender Studies at Ben Gurion University, explores ‘mythical’ linear movements and how...2022-05-0453 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #7.2 Facilitating radical spaces for and by sickos | Worlding PodcastZinzi Buchanan is a non-binary artist who in this episode shares their lived experience of being chronically ill and how that continues to shape their facilitation practice of enabling spaces that are by and for people who are sick, or that care for the sick. The focus is on Zinzi’s performance project ‘sick bed series’, an invitation to voice, dream and feel through a program of performances and talks. Zinzi tenderly unravels their search for aliveness in a world that makes us sick.  Learn more at: http://renaeshadler.com/worlding 2022-04-2045 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #7.1 It takes a village to be with grief | Worlding PodcastAfter her sister got diagnosed with an autoimmune illness and unexpectedly died within half a year Siegmar Zacharias, a Berlin-based performance artist and researcher, embarked on a life’s work to create collective and public places for grieving. In this episode, Siegmar shares her research into collective processes of death and dying as well as expanded notions of grief that arise due to climate change and the current mass sixth-extinction. Drawing on her performance practice and American neuroscientist Stephen Porges’ Polyvagal Theory, Siegmar aims to create spaces where the inter-linking of nervous systems can become sensible and wher...2022-04-0653 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #6.3 Rooting in the Arboreal | Worlding PodcastEnvironmental activist, artist and mindfulness practitioner Lucy Powell shares her process of creating 'Becoming Arboreal', a guided walk through Berlin’s Tiergarten that explores ideas and practices that enable us to dwell more easily in uncertainty, such as spending time with the park’s ancient trees which are rooted to the spot and not able to run away - trees that are literally staying with the trouble. ‘Becoming Arboreal’ draws on mindfulness, the Buddhist history of practicing meditation with and around trees as well as the Thai forest tradition. In times when the world feels increasingly unstable, Lucy looks to trees...2022-03-1035 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #6.2 Sleep as an agent in the constitutions of worlds | Worlding PodcastDuring a recent artist residency on the island of Örö in the Finnish Archipelago writer, artist and researcher Ally Bisshop was overcome by a wash of fatigue. Sensing a pull between the two opposing forces of sleep and desire, she asked how exhaustion could help her to read this ecology with more curiosity, generosity and sensitivity. Ally felt a tension between ambition and surrendering to her lethargy. She found it was useful to draw on the mythopoeia figures of Eros (desire) and Hypnos (sleep and death) as a device for getting out of the habits of thinking la...2022-02-2344 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #6.1 Colliding Timescales | Worlding PodcastWhile observing the extension of Berlin’s A100 City Highway that is being tunneled close to her home in Berlin-Neukölln, artist and writer Catherine Rose Evans collected rocks at the site which were glacial erratics deposited there during the ice age. In this episode Catherine shares her interest in geologic time and where this intersects with our own human timescales as found in our bodies, their materiality and our lived histories. Often we think of rocks as stationary, heavy things but this is only due to our perception of time. If one looks at a scale much larger tha...2022-02-0926 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #5.3 Enabling Dialogue | Worlding PodcastSynne Burnett is a dramaturg and writer working closely with last episode's guest dancer/choreographer Milla Koistinen. In this episode Synne shares her practice of creating spaces where ideas can co-exist, where we can be with our dilemmas and explore things that may at times be both comfortable and uncomfortable. We then discuss how different artists are working with the environment, exploring our relationship to our surroundings through the lens of dramaturgy. Learn more at: http://renaeshadler.com/worlding     2022-01-2625 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #5.2 Gradual shifts in Time | Worlding PodcastMilla Koistinen creates dance works that often evoke a feeling of spaciousness and calm in the spectator. She was born and raised in a small cabin in the Finnish forest where in winter the main sources of light outside were the moon, stars and Northern Lights and in summer there was so much light that it never got dark. What she noticed was a slow transformation that she applies to her choreographic works, where things shift gradually over time. In this episode we explore her recent collaborative work "Terrain” - an immersive installation for one visitor at a...2022-01-1226 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #5.1 Lighting Imaginary Spaces | Worlding Podcast“I invite you for an imaginary night walk in my neighbourhood. We could meet in front of the supermarket, here on my corner, next to the flickering street lamp. I would suggest around 11:00 PM, in the middle of the week - Wednesday. So dress warm and I bring some tea and blankets for us. I also kindly ask you to be silent and aware of your surroundings during the walk.” Sandra Blatterer is a Berlin based visual artist and lighting designer. In this episode we explore her research into ‘Imaginary Spaces’ created especially in the context of installa...2021-12-3126 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #4.3 Trans-forming Ways of Being | Worlding PodcastTsuki is a dancer and choreographer originally from Australia and now based in Berlin. She is working from a queer feminine perspective and in this episode we dive into her research around deconstructing conditioned ways of being and facilitating spaces of more-than human exchange.  Recorded from a hotel room in Ipatinga (Brazil), ​​Tsuki unravels her personal story of feeling alien in her body and how she changed her name and identity to come closer to her truth. This transition was made in relation to the moon cycle, with ’Tsuki’ in Japanese meaning ‘moon’. Tsuki now leads Full Mo...2021-12-2028 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #4.2 The Nuances between Words and Information | Worlding PodcastTzeshi Lei is a Berlin-based dance artist, born and raised in Taiwan, who in this episode shares her research into the complexity of language. Drawing on her personal experience of living and working between Mandarin - a dialect of Chinese, German and English, Tzeshi explores the dimensionality of language which she see’s as a ‘hyperobject’ that it is containing us, while at the same time we are containing the language. In dialogue with her movement practice which is rooted in Qigong, Tai Chi and Butoh dance, Tzeshi has come to describe language as ‘embodied anatomy’, approaching language a...2021-11-2826 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #4.1 Dilettantism and the Guiding Principle of Pleasure | Worlding PodcastDiego Agulló is an independent researcher and multifaceted artist, creating contexts that continue practicing and investigating the relation between body and the event. Inspired by the term ‘Dilettante’ which literally means to delight one's-self in doing an activity, Diego and Renae attempt to blur the perceived border between what is work and life. From this guiding principle of pleasure, Diego discusses different practices in which you can create a constant awareness of what you do on a daily basis. He begins by acknowledging that the brain has, in certain cultures, become the dominant organ and in response looks...2021-11-1332 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #3.3 Sewage Sludge as a Teacher of Interconnection | Worlding PodcastJulia Grillmayr is a cultural studies scholar, journalist and science communicator who spends most of her time in the muddy danubian wetlands. In this episode Julia shares her research into sewage sludge and experience visiting five waste-water treatment plants in Austria in the preparation for “Klärschlamm” (Sewage Sludge), an exhibition at WUK which she co-curated with Eva Seiler in 2020.  For Julia, sewage sludge is an interesting opaque substance that is never pure but instead made up of many different sediments. It is disgusting and unsettling, watering down the boundaries of alive or dead, active or passive, techni...2021-10-2537 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #3.2 Did dragon stories originate from sturgeon sightings? | Worlding PodcastChristina Gruber is an artist and freshwater ecologist, who works at the intersection of art and science. In this episode we focus on her work at the LIFE Sterlet project to repopulate sturgeon in the Danube. Christina shares how the sturgeon, a rare species of fish, got a bit lost in the muddy waters, or we got out of touch. Once an important figure, it’s no coincidence that especially in Austrian history (Christina’s homeland) and in the Folklore of communities nested along large rivers across the world the sturgeon often appears, and having once grown to around five...2021-10-1535 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #3.1 Complexity Theory and Caring-with | Worlding PodcastSamuel Hertz is a Berlin-based sound artist and researcher working at intersections of Earth-based sound, sonic sensualities, and climate change. This episode Samuel dives into complexity theory and shares listening practices that enable us to develop a more nuanced understanding of the sonic world. He proposes sound as a metaphor to reveal multiple layers of activity and bring us into a more nuanced understanding of what's happening around us. Through the lens of complexity we discuss 'care' which Samuel critiques as generally being understood as something similar to stewardship that actually is considered an antiquated concept when...2021-10-0633 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #2.3 Reparations and Response-ability | Worlding PodcastHow can you move, if you are separate pieces? What needs to happen to initiate and enact a response, a movement? What needs to be gathered? Julia Metzger-Traber is a mother, dance artist and community process facilitator who is based in Virginia (USA) where she works and lives as part of a community project and farm called The Rhizome. Julia reflects on the African American people who tended the lands that The Rhizome is built on, the people who were enslaved by the British and brought over against their will, the...2021-09-1544 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #2.2 Being in Relation - Identity and Land | Worlding PodcastDance artist Zwoisy Mears-Clarke shares how Worlding intersects with his artistic practice, from exploring our ancestral relation with plants to questioning our interconnection with technology and what that means for the communication of time, rest and activity. The episode then dips into Zwoisy’s current research with the Herero and Nama people that live in Namibia, and are part of the Diaspora. Zwoisy talks about how speaking intimately to Indigenous people has shifted his understanding of his personal journey of immigration from Jamaica, to the United States and from the United States to Germany.  Zwoisy and...2021-09-0844 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #2.1 Sensory Tools for us to be in Touch | Worlding PodcastDance artist Jule Flierl questions how voicing, listening and breathing can be used to bring us into a sensual relationship with our past, present and future surroundings. Jule shares, for example, how she worked with different temporalities in her solo dance piece “Störlaut” where she reinterpreted the sound dances of Valeska Gert, a German grotesque dancer of the 1920s, in order to create an articulation beyond today’s word capsules. She then proposes a breathing score for listeners to embody her desire to bring breath, and physical practices more broadly, back into a realm where t...2021-09-0139 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #1.3 Queer Mythology and/or Fantasy | Worlding PodcastErwan Roussel explores a queer mythology and/or fantasy that is speculative, that you can dream about, you can invent and can even expand to create your own Pantheon, your own history, your own myth.  Erwan left the binary view of the Christian religion because he felt that there was a huge diversity of expressions that could better represent his queerness. Influenced by the pagan rituals and legends of fairies, witches and goblins that he grew up with in Bretagne (France), Erwan set out to dream about what he wanted to be the heir of, what queer a...2021-08-1826 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #1.2 Queer Kinship | Worlding PodcastBenny Nemer has always been curious about relationships, especially love relationships, but not exclusively. Benny works as a multidisciplinary artist, diarist and researcher. He came to an interest in kinship through an interest in queerness. Queerness as a method, as an aesthetic and also an intrigue in the way that queers form relationships beyond the kind of reproductive family structures that are valorised and emphasised by dominant western culture. From there, Benny and Renae meander into more-than human realms by focusing on Benny’s audio guide “Trees Are Fags” (2018) which encourages the listener to find a park, or the...2021-08-1127 minWorlding PodcastWorlding PodcastEp #1.1 More-than Human Museums | Worlding PodcastSusanne Schmitt, who works across ethnographic and artistic practices often with a multi species lens and through works situated at Natural History Museums and Botanical Gardens, guides us through her research of more-than human museums and creatively explores what Worlding could be. Susanne shares her interest in the architecture of museums, their written and unwritten rules and how this choreographs the people that work in them. By playing with the genre of the audio walk, Susanne and her collaborators set out to turn museums into multi species sites by accounting for the very different kinds of species...2021-08-0432 minWombat RadioWombat RadioOmer Backley-Astrachan and Renae Shadler"connecting this human midlife crisis to the ecological crisis" - Renae Shadler "I'm trying to figure out what i'm doing, through this work." - Omer Backley-Astrachan The post Omer Backley-Astrachan and Renae Shadler first appeared on Wombat Radio.2019-02-2832 minWombat RadioWombat RadioOmer Backley-Astrachan and Renae Shadler"connecting this human midlife crisis to the ecological crisis" - Renae Shadler "I'm trying to figure out what i'm doing, through this work." - Omer Backley-Astrachan2019-02-2832 minDelving into DanceDelving into DanceMirjam Sögner & Renae Shadler2018-04-2635 minBath TimeBath Time43 - Shaking It In Vienna w/ Renae Shadler & Jack BeebyIt's Day 43 of Bath Time from Melbourne Fringe! Cabaret chameleon Jack Beeby and globetrotting dancer and performer Renae Shadler are today's guests in the tub. They talk the ups and downs of moving schools as a kid, the wonders of travel and the not so conversative Vienna dance scene.2014-09-2536 minBath TimeBath Time43 – Shaking It In Vienna w/ Renae Shadler & Jack BeebyIt’s Day 43 of Bath Time from Melbourne Fringe! Cabaret chameleon Jack Beeby and globetrotting dancer and performer Renae Shadler are today’s guests in the tub. They talk the ups and downs of moving schools as a kid, the wonders of travel and the not so conversative Vienna dance scene. The post 43 – Shaking It In Vienna w/ Renae Shadler & Jack Beeby appeared first on Mammoth Audio. 2014-09-2400 min