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'Whatever
Happened to Sex in Scandinavia?' is a research project
that consists of three platforms – an exhibition, a programme of
public events and a publication – examining the juncture of the
political and the erotic through the work of artists produced
predominantly in the context of the countercultural movements of
the 1960s and 70s. Part of OCA's Verksted series, the exhibition
and public programme are the result of an extensive research
project about the international perception of Scandinavia from the
1950s onwards as a utopic region of socialism and sexual freedom.
This project introduces OCA's new premises at Nedre gate 7 in
Oslo.
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OCA provides financial support on a quarterly basis for
international projects including Norwegian artists and/or cultural
producers. All applications must be sent by post and must be
postmarked by 15 February. Applications sent after 15 February will
be returned to the respective applicants.
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Recipients from the November 2008 grants for International
Support are listed here.
Click here for
information on International Support and the application
process.
For any questions regarding the application, please contact Jørn
Mortensen, at jorn.mortensen@oca.no.
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The Office for Contemporary Art Norway is responsible for
the Norwegian participation in the Platform China Residency,
Beijing, People's Republic of China; the International Studio Program
Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, Germany; the Residency Berlin Mitte,
Berlin, Germany; the International Studio and Curatorial
Program (ISCP), New York, NY, USA; the Platform
Garanti Istanbul Residency Program, Istanbul, Turkey.
OCA introduces a Studio Residency for a Norwegian artist
at the International
Artist in Residency Programme at WIELS Contemporary Art
Centre, in Brussels, Belgium.
For more information on International Residencies and the
application process, please contact Alexandra Cruz at alexandra.cruz@oca.no
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In 2009, OCA introduces a Studio Residency for a Norwegian
artist at the International Artist in Residency Programme
at WIELS
Contemporary Art Centre, for a period of nine months (April to
December 2009). The applicant must be a Norwegian citizen, an
international artist residing in Norway or a Norwegian artist
living and/or working abroad who has already elaborated a specific
and promising aesthetic language but seeks artistic, theoretical
and professional support in order to develop his or her
practice.
The residency is accompanied by a programme of weekly meetings
with other professional artists and local academics, along with
field trips and as monthly studio visits by guest curators and
critics. The resident will also have the opportunity to present his
or her work to the public on organised open-studio days and will
take part in a collective exhibition organised by WIELS
Contemporary Art Centre. By the end of the residency an online
archive of the artist's work will be included in the residency
blog.
! Application Deadline – 15 February
2009
! ISCP New York City – Application deadline: 15 February
2009
In 2009-10, OCA offers two studio grants – one for a Norwegian
artist and one for a Norwegian curator – at the International
Studio and Curatorial Program (ISCP) in New York City, USA. The
American Scandinavian Foundation provides support of the
participation in the programmes in the ISCP and only citizens of
Norway are eligible for these residency grants.
! Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, Germany – Application
deadline: 15 February 2009
In 2009-10, Office for Contemporary Art
Norway offers a studio grant at the International Studio Program
Künstlerhaus Bethanien. The studio is granted for a period of 12
months (1 December 2009–15 November 2010). The artist must be a
Norwegian citizen, or live and work in Norway.
! Platform Garanti Istanbul Residency Programme –
Application deadline: 15 February 2009
In 2009, OCA makes a three-month residency available at Platform
Garanti for artists and curators, as well as artists/writers and
cultural producers. The applicants must be a Norwegian citizen, or
live and work in Norway. The residency made available atPlatform
Garanti, in Istanbul, Turkey is an eminent one at the renown
non-profit arts centre directed by Vasif Kortun.
OCA initiates a Research Residency in collaboration with
the Mondriaan Foundation and the Price Claus Fund in the
Netherlands
OCA announces the first in a series of orientation programmes
that OCA is organising in cooperation with the Mondriaan
Foundation and Prince Claus Fund
for Culture and Development with the aim to intensify the
exchange of knowledge by providing information about the
contemporary arts scene in visited countries; fostering the
interaction between professionals from the visited cities and the
group of invited participants; and creating a multi-disciplinary
network for future collaborations between all parties involved.
For its first cooperation, OCA supports the participation of
Bergen Kunsthall Director Solveig
Øvstebø and artist and curator Per
Gunnar Eeg-Tverbakk in the 2009 curatorial research
trip to South-America. The trip will visit the cities of São Paulo,
Brazil, Buenos Aires, Argentina and Lima, Peru, and the Norwegian
participants will be joined by others selected by the respective
institutions, including representatives from the Center for Contemporary Art of Lagos
(CCA), Lagos, Nigeria; Today Art
Museum, Beijing, People's Republic of China; Kedai Kebun Forum,
Yogyakarta, Indonesia; Ewolé (Rencontres et
Résidences Internationales d'Arts Visuels), Lomé, Togo
and MuHKA, (Museum van
Hedendaagse Kunst Antwerpen), Antwerpen, Belgium, among
others.
This programme is supported with 03-funding*.
A new collaboration between OCA and Colab Art &
Architecture in Bangalore, India
The Office for Contemporary Art Norway and Colab Art &
Architecture initiate a long-term collaboration that establishes a
residency programme in Southern India. The residency aims to
intensify the exchange of knowledge between the Norwegian and the
Indian artistic communities, and to provide the opportunity for a
deeper contact with the local reality both in terms of the cultural
and art contexts.
As the first step in this collaboration, artist Lene
Berg participated, by invitation of curators Suman
Gopinath and Grant Watson, in a
roundtable conference entitled 'Re-presenting Histories' on 24
January 2009 at the School of Art & Aesthetics, Jawaharlal
Nehru University, New Delhi, India. Gathering together leading
Indian artists and art historians, as well as renowned
international art professionals such as Geeta Kapur, Ruth Noack,
Sheela Gowda, Anita Dube, Nancy Adajania and Parul Dave Mukherjee,
the conference examined the way in which art histories undergo
reappraisals in the light of new thinking on particular artists,
movements, regions and historical periods. The conference focused
on the reception of the work and practice of artist Nasreen
Mohamedi at both national and international levels, and examined
the critical tools and the cultural and historical insights needed
to undertake this work. This project is supported with
03-funding*.
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Upcoming Resident January-February
2009:Maya Økland
Maya Økland is an artist and curator based in
Bergen, Norway. In collaboration with Hilde Jørgensen, she recently
curated the programme 'Fatal Nordic Attractions' for Flaggfabrikken
Presenterer in Bergen, where local artists could meet and network
with artists from other Nordic countries. During her stay in
Berlin, Økland intends to research artist-run galleries to further
develop strategies for promoting other artists' works.
Upcoming Resident March-April 2009: Marte
Eknæs
Marte Eknæs is an artist based in London, UK
and educated at Central Saint Martins College of Art & Design,
London, the California Institute of Arts, Valencia, USA and Glasgow
School of Art, Glasgow, UK. During her residency in Berlin, Eknæs
will study the city's recent corporate architecture and the
features of urban planning that direct pedestrians and traffic. As
a material and formal response to this, Eknæs will make new work
that resists the aspirations of this development and instead
performs visions for alternative
structures.
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Upcoming Resident April-May 2009: Unni
Gjertsen
Unni Gjertsen is a visual artist based in Oslo working with
subjects relating to history and memory. She studied at Trondheim
Academy of Fine Arts and University of Oslo, and her most recent
solo exhibitions took place at Baltic Sea Cultural Centre, Gdansk,
Poland (2007) and Konsthall C Stockholm, Sweden (2005). Group shows
include Kasteel van Gaasbeek, Gaasbeek, Belgium, Henie-Onstad Art
Centre, Norway and Rauma Biennale, Finland (all 2008), MuHKA,
Antwerp and IASPIS, Stockholm (all 2007), and Göteborgs Konsthall,
Sweden (2006). During her stay in China, Gjertsen will further
develop her ongoing project, which loosely relates to Robert
Byron's book The Road to Oxiana, and compares
preconceptions of a specific place with the actual experience of
being there.
Upcoming Resident September-October: Inger Lise
Hansen
Inger Lise Hansen is an artist and film-maker based in Oslo,
Norway. She studied at University of East London, Central Saint
Martins College of Art and Design, London and San Francisco Art
Institute, San Francisco, USA. Hansen's films have been screened
and exhibited in institutions such as the National Gallery in
London, Académie Libanese des Beaux-arts, Sin el Fil, Lebanon,
Galerie National du Jeu de Paume, Paris, France and Gasworks,
London. During her stay in Beijing, Hansen will further develop
concerns in her current film work – a particular phenomena
occurring through inverted perspectives and a travelling
camera.
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OCA's International Studio Programme Oslo (ISP) is available for
international artists and curators by invitation, independently or
in connection with research in Norway.
Click here for information on the
International Studio Programme Oslo.
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Philip Tinari Writer and curator (b.1979, Philadelphia,
USA)
Philip Tinari is a writer and curator based in
Beijing, People's Republic of China. He is a contributing editor to
Artforum, and founding editor of artforum.com.cn, the magazine's
Chinese-language website. In 2007, he opened Office for Discourse
Engineering, an editorial studio focused on publishing, research
and translation related to contemporary art in China. He has
written for publications including The New York Times Magazine,
Parkett, Art AsiaPacific, McSweeney's, The Wall Street Journal and
the Chinese journal Dushu, as well as exhibition catalogues for
museums including the Guggenheim, New York City and the Serpentine
Gallery, London. He is Asia advisor to Art Basel and editor of
U-TURN, a serialised history of Chinese art from 1978 to 2008. Last
year he curated 'Delirious Beijing' (PKM Gallery, Beijing) and
'CYLWXZ' (Esther Schipper, Berlin). He holds a masters in East
Asian studies from Harvard University and was formerly a Fulbright
fellow at Peking University, Peking, People's Republic of China.
This residency is supported with 03-funding*.
Luluc Huang Writer and curator (1980, Nanjing, People's
Republic of China)
Luluc Huang's writings on international art,
film and fashion are widely syndicated across the Chinese cultural
media, and her blog is well known throughout the Chinese art and
literary world for its characteristic mix of cultural commentary,
criticism and gossip. She has worked as Asia representative for
Artforum International (2006-08), curator at the non-profit art
space UniversalStudios-Beijing (now Boersli Gallery, 2005-06) and
editor of Rear Window (2003-05), at that time China's leading
online film discussion forum. She holds a masters in Comparative
Literature from Nanjing University, Nanjing, People's Republic of
China. This residency is supported with
03-funding*.
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The Office for Contemporary Art Norway runs an International
Visitor Programme to support international curators and cultural
producers in their research in Norway for upcoming exhibitions and
projects.
Click here for information on the
International Visitor Programme.
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Maria Lind Curator (b.1966 in Stockholm,
Sweden)
Since January 2008, Maria Lind is the director of the Graduate
Program, Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College,
Annandale-on-Hudson, USA. From 2005 to 2007 she was the Director of
IASPIS (International Artist Studio Program in Sweden) in
Stockholm. Previously, since 2002, Lind was the Director of
Kunstverein München, Munich, Germany, where she, together with a
curatorial team consisting at different times of Sören Grammel,
Katharina Schlieben, Tessa Praun, Ana Paula Cohen and Judith
Schwarzbart, ran a programme which involved artists such as
Deimantas Narkevicius, Oda Projesi, Bojan Sarcevic, Philippe
Parreno and Marion von Osten. The format of a retrospective or
survey exhibition was explored in a one-year long retrospective
with Christine Borland in 2002–03, only ever showing one piece at
a time, and a retrospective project in the form of a seven-day-long
workshop with Rirkrit Tiravanija. The group project 'Totally
Motivated: A Socio-cultural Manoeuvre' was a collaboration between
five curators and ten artists looking at the relationship between
'amateur' and 'professional' art and culture. From 1997 to 2001 she
was curator at Moderna Museet in Stockholm and, in 1998, co-curator
of Manifesta 2, Europe's biennale of contemporary art. Responsible
for Moderna Museet Projekt, Lind worked with artists on a series of
29 commissions that took place in a temporary project space, within
or beyond the museum. There she also curated 'What If: Art on the
Verge of Architecture and Design', filtered by Liam Gillick. Lind
was one of ten contributing curators to Phaidon's Fresh
Cream book, and she has contributed widely to magazines
including Index (where she was on the editorial
board) and to numerous catalogues and other publications. She is
the co-editor of the recent books Curating with Light
Luggage and Collected Newsletter (Revolver Archiv für
aktuelle Kunst), Taking the Matter into Common Hands:
Collaborative Practices in Contemporary Art (Blackdog
Publishing), as well as the report European Cultural
Policies 2015 andThe Greenroom: Reconsidering the
Documentary and Contemporary Art. She has been teaching and
lecturing at different art schools since the early 1990s, including
at the University Colleges of Fine Art in Umeå and Stockholm, the
Royal College of Art and Goldsmiths College in London, Bard Center
for Curatorial Studies in Annandale-on-Hudson, USA the Emily Carr
Institute of Art in Vancouver, Canada and the Academy of Fine Arts
in Oslo.
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Rubén del Valle Lantarán, Director of
the 10th
Havana Biennial, has invited Victor
Mutelekesha to exhibit within the biennial, which
takes place in Havana, Cuba from 27 March to 30 April
2009 and is titled 'Integration and Resistance in the
Global Age'. According to Lantarán, the biennial will focus 'on the
complexity of a real and active integration to a global order, on
one side, and on the capacity of resistance in the face of the
homogenising farce that it presupposes, on the other'. Within
'Integration and Resistance in the Global Age', Mutelekesha will
exhibit the installation Pangea, which nostalgically
refers to the hypothetical landmass that existed when all
continents were joined.
This project is supported by 03–funding*.
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Victor Mutelekesha,The Human Condition, 2006 Courtesy of the artist
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Agustin Pérez Rubio, Chief Curator
at MUSAC (Museo de Arte
Contemporaneo de Castilla y León, León, Spain) has invited the
artists' duo Elmgreen & Dragset for
a solo exhibition entitled 'Trying to Remember What We Want to
Forget' at MUSAC from31 January to 3 May 2009. The
exhibition will focus in the gap between the personal and the
collective, the unbalanced of 'the private' versus the drama of
'the public' in the immediate world. The exhibition will be
composed of ten installation art works in in a display created
specifically for MUSAC – six of them will be new productions and
the previous works will be displayed in a new arrangement,
according to the curatorial concept.
From 28 January to 22 March
2009, Rachel Dagnall, as part of the
artist group Henry VIII's Wives, will the holding a solo
at The
Pumphouse Gallery in London, UK. Within the exhibition,
organised by Sandra Ross curator of The
Pumphouse Gallery and titled 'Henry VIII's Wives', the group will
present the works The Returning Officerand a
two-screen work titled Mr. Hysteria.
Renske Janssen, curator at Witte de With Center for Contemporary
Art, Rotterdam, the Netherlands has invited Ina
Blom to present a lecture on Lynda Benglis titled 'An
Instance of Videosociality' at Witte de With. In the lecture, Blom
considers Lynda Benglis's 1972 video Mumble, focusing
on an artistic dialogue between Benglis and Robert Morris, and
raises fundamental questions concerning the artistic medium of
video as a social machine. The lecture takes
place Thursday 29 January at 19:00.
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Elmgreen & Dragset, Boy Scout, 2008 Courtesy Galleri Nicolai Wallner, Copenhagen, Denmark
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From 26 March to 03 May
2009, Dag Alveng will hold a
solo exhibition at Centro Cutural da
Caixa in São Paulo, Brazil. The exhibition will present a
retrospective of Alveng's works, including the
projects The Farm, Summer
Light, This is MOST Importantand I love
This Time of Year. This project is supported by
03–funding*.
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Dag Alveng, Light Tubes, 2005 From the series 'I love this Time of Year' Courtesy of the artist
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Chus Martínez, Chief Curator of
the Museu d'Art
Contemporani de Barcelona in Barcelona, Spain and a guest
at OCA's ISP Programme in August 2006 has invitedMatias
Faldbakken to participate in the project 'The Malady
of Writing. A Project on Text and Speculative Imagination'. The
project consists of an exhibition and an active space for reading,
discussion and production of writing, and will include, among
others,Seth Price, Falke
Pisano and Will Holder. 'The
Malady of Writing' takes place at the Museu d'Art Contemporani de
Barcelona from 13 March to 31 May 2009.
Matias Faldbakken and Leif
Tangen have been invited by Ruba
Katrib, Assistant Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art, North
Miami, USA, to exhibit within 'The Possibility of an Island' at
MOCA from 4 December
2008 to 15 March 2009.
According to the curator, the exhibition takes as a starting point
the recent novel The Possibility of an Island, by
Michel Houellebecq to pose existential questions in the face of a
never-arriving future. For 'The Possibility of an Island', MOCA
commissioned new works from Matias Faldbakken and invited Leif
Tangen to take part in the public programme of the exhibition with
a talk about the process of writing the novelPhillip. 'The
Possibility of an Island' takes place at Goldman
Warehouse in Miami. Among other participating artists
areClaire Fontaine, Peter
Coffin and Cao Fei.
Raimundas Malasauskas, curator at Artists Space in New York,
USA has invited Morten Norbye
Halvorsen to exhibit within 'Paper Exhibition',
taking place at the Artists Space from 14
January to 7 March 2009.
According to he curator, the exhibition will 'explore a number of
modes of artistic and curatorial production dedicated to potential,
speculative, imaginary virtual, etc'. Within 'Paper Exhibition',
Morten Norbye Halvorsen presents a sound installation that draws
from various sources amongst them Francis Ford
Coppola's The Conversation and the new
autobiography of Clifford Irving Phantom Rosebuds.
Among the artists exhibiting are Mario García
Torres, Mariana Castilo
Deball and Loris Greaud.
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Kjell Bjørgeengen has been
invited Paul Lagring, Artistic Director,
Netwerk vzw, in Aalst, Belgium to exhibit within 'Fuzzy
Electronics', taking place at Netwerk vzw from14
February to 4 April 2009. The exhibition focuses on the
importance of accidental change within the filed of 'new media'.
For 'Fuzzy Electronics' the artist will produce a new series of
video and audio works that incorporate a method of instability.
Other artists exhibiting are Frederik De
Wilde, Jerry
Galle and Doris Kuwert.
Karl Ingar Røys has been invited
by Mika Hannula to exhibit within 'Happy
Together', taking place at Tallinn Art Hall, Tallinn, Estonia
from 28 January to 1 March 2009. The
exhibition proposes an investigation on the concepts of collective
identity and contemporary nationalism. Within 'Happy Together' Karl
Ingar Røys exhibits the video installation Radio
Yerevan, which challenges and juxtaposes different
perspectives on of a political demonstration in Armenia.
Hanneline Røgeberg is currently exhibiting
within 'Form and Story: Narration in Recent Painting',
at University of
Richmond Museums, Richmond, USA. According to the
curator Elisabeth Schlatter the
exhibition 'includes approximately forty paintings by four artists
who convey narrative content in their work through a synthesis of
representational subject matter and the materiality and application
of their medium'. 'Form and Story: Narration in Recent Painting' is
on view until 15 May 2009.
At the invitation of Suzan Rosseler,
Conservator of Exhibitions, Audax Textile Museum Tiburg, the
Netherlands, Heidi Kennedy Skjerve will
exhibit within 'Knitted Worlds'. The exhibition, which takes place
at Audax Textile Museum Tiburg from14 March to 4 June
2009, will present artworks where knitting is used to
express social, political and formal artistic questions. Within
'Knitted Worlds', the artist will exhibit the
works Grunn/Ground and Sommer/Summer
II.
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Kjell Bjørgeengen, still image 2007, 2007 Courtesy of the artist
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Ståle Stenslie is currently exhibiting the
works Artgasm and World
Ripple within the festival 'Touch Me – Feel Better'. The
project Artgast 'is a public performance where
two males are having an orgasm induced by a medical team, using a
special medical vibrator' and World Ripple 'is a
sensual, invisible and immaterial sculpture maze sensually
senseable by a tactile, wireless and mobile bodysuit'. Curated
by Suncica Ostoic, the festival presents
contemporary art production at the intersection of science and
technology, and its thematic framework refers to the imperative of
happiness, pleasure and hedonism in contemporary society. The
festival is on view until 23 February
2009 at Old Factory Badel,
Zagreb, Croatia.
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Ståle Stenslie, World Ripple, 2008 Courtesy of the artist
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The Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, USA seeks
applicants specialising in modern and contemporary art for a
post-doctoral fellowship offered from the beginning of June 2009.
This two-year fellowship, with a possible third-year renewal, will
provide curatorial training while also supporting scholarly
research related to the renowned collections of modern and
contemporary art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Applicants must
have completed a PhD within the last five years or have a proven
record of equivalent accomplishment. Candidates must demonstrate
scholarly excellence and promise as well as a strong interest in a
museum career. Please visit philamuseum.org/jobs for
more information.
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As part of 'Unsolicited Proposal Program', apexart in New York,
is currently accepting 600-word idea-based proposals for evaluation
by an international panel. Submissions are reviewed independently,
anonymously and without visual support material. Previous
curatorial experience is not required, and will not factor in the
selection process. The two proposals with the highest ratings will
be presented at apexart in the 2009/10 season (September 2009 to
August 2010). Please click here for more
info, guidelines, past winners, and to apply.
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Alexandra Cruz is an architect, and
through her professional experience she has been involved in the
production and organisation of a number of exhibitions and events
with a multidisciplinary scope, related mainly with architecture
and contemporary arts both for private and public institutions. She
has also lectured as Assistant Professor at IADE – Institute of
Visual Arts, Design and Marketing in Portugal. As assistant
coordinator of the Architecture and Design Department of the
Portuguese Ministry of Culture (Instituto das Artes), Cruz was
co-responsible for the production and organization of different
projects, including the Official Portuguese Representation on the
9th International Architecture Biennale in Venice, the 6th
International Architecture Biennial in São Paulo and a number of
other projects and initiatives both in Portugal and abroad. She
moved to Oslo in August 2006 to be Assistant Curator of the Oslo
Triennale 2007, the third in a series of international architecture
triennials arranged by the National Association of Norwegian
Architects (NAL) in collaboration with the Oslo School of
Architecture and Design, Norsk Form, OAF (Oslo Association of
Architects) and Oslo Teknopol.
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*03–funding: The purpose of the 03-funds, as allocated by the
Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs to OCA, is to further develop
cooperation and professional networking between OCA and the
constituency of artists, independent cultural producers and
organizations that are located in designated countries or
associated with 03-countries. This includes but is not limited to
professional research visits by cultural producers, artists and
curators, short-term residencies for cultural producers and
artists, and the development of seminars, conferences, art
projects, workshops, etc. that focus on the further development of
professional exchange and networking between and among countries,
project development and pilot projects on an international
scale.
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