The second day of the symposium we follow up on queer perspectives on how to move, inhabit, and challenge — to ‘hack’ — various architectures and public spaces. With us today: Louis Schou-Hansen, Maike Statz, Exutoire (Paul-Antoine Lucas and Bùi Quý Son), Harald Beharie, Tominga O’Donnell, Koyote Millar, Jan Trinh, Mabell Holand, Cathrine Hasselberg / Memoar, and beautiful guests.
Louis. Backdrop from the performance ↗︎ Afterlife (2023), photo by ↗︎ Chai Saeidi.
Louis/↗︎ Clementine (2023). Backdrop photo by ↗︎ Federica Nicastro.
The whole thing: (Enjoy!)
Album by Paulina Tamara for Karmaklubb*.
Family portrait. Photo by Paulina Tamara for Karmaklubb*.
Further reading (being updated)
- ↗︎ Clementine / Louis Schou-Hansen
- ↗︎ Louis XIV / Louis the Great (1643–1715)
- ↗︎ Regina George, Mean Girls
- Louis Schou-Hansen show at ↗︎ Podium, Oslo (TBA, 2024)
- ↗︎ Paul B. Preciado, When statues fall (2020)
- Statz and ↗︎ Hosting Space, Hordaland Kunstsenter, Bergen
- Jos Boys, ↗︎ Invisibility work? (2017)
- ↗︎ NOGOODS and bias: bodies in architecture +↗︎ Pleasure
- Harald Beharie’s ↗︎ video on Batty Bwoy (2022)
- Harald Beharie on ↗︎ collective public work, example
- ↗︎ New work by Harald Beharie, Dansens Hus, Oslo (2024)
- ↗︎ Judith Butler, Gender Trouble (1990), on gender as performative
- ↗︎ Munchmuseet on the Move (2016–19)
- ↗︎ José Esteban Muñoz: ↗︎ Cruising Utopia: The Then and There of Queer Futurity (2009)
- José Esteban Muñoz, ↗︎ Disidentifications: Queers of Color and the Performance of Politics (1999)
- ↗︎ McKenzie Wark, Wild Gone Girls
- José Esteban Muñoz on ↗︎ Vaginal Davis’ Terrorist Drag
- More on ↗︎ VD Terrorist Drag …
- ↗︎ Slur/slang
- ↗︎ The Whore, ref. McKenzie Wark
- ↗︎ The Whore, ref. Kathy Acker
- Recommended reading, by Jan Trinh: Marc Augé (1995 [1992]), ↗︎ Non-Places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity; Hans Ibelings (1998), ↗︎ Supermodernism: Architecture in The Age of Globalization; Anna Klingmann (2007), ↗︎ Brandscapes: Architecture in the Experience Economy; Aaron Betsky (1997), ↗︎ Queer Space: Architecture and Same-Sex Desire; Bernard Tschumi (1994), ↗︎ Architecture and Disjunction; Guy Debord (1970 [1967]), ↗︎ The Society of the Spectacle; Henri Lefebvre (1991 [1974]), ↗︎ The Production of Space
The programme
12:00
Doors open, host Mabell Holand
Part 1: Louis Schou-Hansen: ‘Dangerous fictions’
- Artist talk by dancer and choreographer Louis Schou-Hansen. Louis’ work lands somewhere between dance and visual arts. Its trans-disciplined practice encompasses formats such as performances, making dances, performing, writing, and sometimes curating. Louis’ work dives into speculative fiction as a tool to investigate, dissect, and denaturalize how bodies have been sculpted through violent Western fairytales. Here, utilizing counterfactual history in addition to queer and trans-feminist epistemologies to produce counter-narratives. Yes, please.
From the performance ↗︎ Afterlife by Louis Schou-Hansen. Performers, from the left: Amie Mbye, Elise Nohr Nystad, and Georgiana Dobre.
Photo by ↗︎ Chai Saeidi.
12:45
Part 2: Speculative thinking on queering architecture
- Maike Statz: ‘In/visibility in Space’
There is a tension between being seen and unseen in space: a brightly lit street at night can create both feelings of safety and exposure. Merging personal experience, examples from architecture, queer and feminist thinking and her own artistic work, Maike will present her thoughts around notions of visibility and invisibility in space and space making practices. From dining tables to dance floors, how are we both shaped by and shaping our environments? What are the visible and invisible power dynamics at play?Maike Statz is an Australian Bergen-based interior architect and artist interested in the relationship between bodies and space.
↗︎ Exutoire (↗︎ Paul-Antoine Lucas and ↗︎ Bùi Quý Sơn) & ↗︎ NOGOODS (↗︎ Danja Burchard and ↗︎ Maike Statz) with ↗︎ Léa Brami, ↗︎ Mahé Cordier-Jouanne, ↗︎ Lexie Owen, ↗︎ Liene Pavlovska, and ↗︎ Jan Trinh: ‘Dissident Publics: Future Artefacts of Queer Methodologies’ at ↗︎ ROM for kunst og arkitektur, Oslo, 12 May–11 June 2023
Photo by Bùi Quý Sơn. Courtesy of the Artists. Further reading ↗︎ here.
- The duo Exutoire (Paul-Antoine Lucas and Bùi Quý Sơn): ‘From Oslo to Hanoi: Contextualising Queerness’
This presentation follows the journey of a queer critical spatial practice in the making. It narrates the story of two queer architects attempting to define a queer approach to research and practice. In this quest, encounters, discussions, collaborations, collective imagining and making are at the core of (re)constructing pathways for emancipation from normative ideals of spacemaking. This is a testimony to unfolding queer love stories and work partnerships, from Hanoi to Oslo — a virtual contribution.
13:30
Part 3: Meet dancer and choreographer Harald Beharie
- Harald is a Norwegian-Jamaican performer and choreographer based in Oslo, Norway.
While applying various formats and contexts his practice looks into alternative modes of being, dancing, and existing together while questioning notions of normativity. Harald holds an interest for the unpolished, the DIY, and vulnerability of being in the unknowing.
Some of the leading interests in his work at the moment are dissecting known physical narratives and opening for a conscious naivety and playfulness while indulging into practice of the pathetic, collapsing, joyful, failing, and persistent body. In 2023, Harald’s solo work Batty Bwoy (2022) won the Hedda Award (Heddaprisen) for the Best Dance Show.
Harald Beharie, Batty Bwoy (2022). From ‘Les Urbaines’, Lausanne Musées, Switzerland. Photo by ↗︎ Margot Sparkes.
Part 4: Dr Tominga O’Donnell: ‘Queer representation in the museum’
- Tominga O’Donnell is Senior Curator of Contemporary Art at MUNCH, where they curated the programme Munchmuseet on the Move (2016–19), adopting a queer curatorial approach and commissioning a range of off-site art projects. At the new museum on Oslo’s waterfront, O’Donnell is the curator of solo exhibitions with Camille Henrot, Sandra Mujinga, Piya Wanthiang, Admir Batlak, and Constance Tenvik (2024); the inaugural MUNCH Triennale — ‘The machine is us’ — together with Stefano Collicelli Cagol; and a series of performance commissions in collaboration with Ingrid Moe, which include new works by Bendik Giske, Manuel Pelmuş, Camille Norment, and Brendan Fernandes. — Based on years of collaboration, we promise this is not to be missed.
From Sam Hultin’s project I’m Every Lesbian — Oslo (2016),
part of Munchmuseet on the Move, curated by Tominga O’Donnell.
In front: Lara Okafor. Photo by Eirik Arff Gulseth Bøhn. Courtesy of Munchmuseet.
14:15
Part 5: Panel: ‘Queer architectures; the rooms in which we maneuver’, with Louis Schou-Hansen, Mabell Holand, Maike Statz, Harald Beharie, Tominga O'Donnell (moderator) and special guests Koyote Millar and Jan Trinh
- Before we go for a glass, get to know one of the largest projects Karmaklubb* is involved in during 2024; Memoar and OSLOOVE, writing an alternative history of the City of Oslo. Presentation by Memoar’s Cathrine Hasselberg.
The symposium is in English and will be open for questions from everyone in the room. Times are approximate, we will keep it fluid and take breaks when needed. Changes and nice surprises may occur, please stay tuned for updates. For the 1st chapter, 10 January 2024, go ↗︎ here. Go ↗︎ here for the Kunstnernes Hus event profile. Facebook link ↗︎ here. ID: No. *** 🎟️ FREE / First come, first served <3 Please show up early. HOT TIP: Nice to see the Boudry/Lorenz show, too.*** Produced in collaboration with Kunstnernes Hus, Oslo. Realised with generous support from the Fritt Ord Foundation.
Soundtrack while you wait, ↗︎ click.
Confident (2023), by Bùi Quý Sơn. Performance with Maike Statz and Danja Burchard. Photo by ↗︎ Paul-Antoine Lucas.
From Trollkrem’s TROLLKREM IMPORT at Oslo Pride 2018.
Part of Munchmuseet on the Move, curated by Tominga O’Donnell.
Photo by ↗︎ Maria Pasenau. Courtesy of Munchmuseet.
From Trollkrem’s TROLLKREM IMPORT (2018) at Ivars Kro, Oslo. From the left: Seth Bogart, Dynasty Handbag, Tor Erik Bøe (Trollkrem), and Vaginal Davis.
Part of Munchmuseet on the Move, curated by Tominga O’Donnell.
Photo by ↗︎ Maria Pasenau. Courtesy of Munchmuseet.
From Sam Hultin’s project I’m Every Lesbian — Oslo (2016),
part of Munchmuseet on the Move, curated by Tominga O’Donnell.
From the left: Fethawit Hakin, Sam Hultin, Lara Okafor, and Mathilde Decaen Fossheim.
Photo by Eirik Arff Gulseth Bøhn. Courtesy of Munchmuseet.
Confident, by Bùi Quý Sơn. Performance with Maike Statz and Danja Burchard. Photo by Bùi Quý Sơn.