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OCA provides financial support on a quarterly basis for
international projects involving Norwegian artists and/or cultural
producers. Applications are accepted from Norwegian artists,
international artists living and working in Norway and non-profit
organisations. Priority is given to exhibitions taking place in key
international art institutions and project spaces. Support is also
extended to solo and group exhibitions organised by international
curators, as well as to Norwegian art professionals organising
exhibitions and projects abroad.
OCA has implemented an online application system for
applications for the International Support Programme. This system
should be used for the Fourth Quarter Application Review, with a
deadline of 1 November 2009. Applicants are
able to apply at www.stikk.no.
Click here for
information on International Support and the application
process.
For any questions regarding the application, please contact Anne
Charlotte Hauen at anne.charlotte.hauen@oca.no.
For international institutional applications, please address your
questions to Alexandra Cruz, at alexandra.cruz@oca.no.
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Platform China Residency - Application deadline: 1.
November 2009
In collaboration with the Norwegian Embassy in Beijing, China,
OCA offers two studio residencies for an artist or curator at the
Platform China Beijing Residency Programme, for two months each, in
spring (April/May) and autumn (September/October) 2010. Applicants
must be Norwegian citizens, or live and work in Norway. The
residency Platform China Residency Programme is covered by
03–funding*.
Click here for information on the
residency at Platform China Residency and the application process,
or please contact Alexandra Cruz at OCA at alexandra.cruz@oca.no.
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The Office for Contemporary Art Norway presents 'The Grammar of
Forms', a series public events, workshops and presentations that
will take place throughout autumn 2009 at OCA's premises at Nedre
gate 7, with the aim to look at language, writing, criticism and
publishing in relation to contemporary art, exploring its diverse
modes of operation and possibilities within historical and
contemporary practices. In these public events writers, artists,
critics, publishers and theorists will investigate different
experiences of and approaches to writing and language specifically
in relation to art. These events will have a pedagogical remit, and
be accompanied by a series of projects including presentation of
artworks such as the original manuscripts of Sol LeWitt's
'Sentences on Conceptual Art' and libraries of publications, made
available to the public for consultation and reading.
For full programme, please click here.
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Wednesday, 21 October/ 19:00
Speaker: Peter Osborne
Subject: Fragment and Project: From Schlegel's Athenaeum
Fragments to LeWitt's 'Sentences on Conceptual Art'
Many of the ideas central to the understanding of contemporary art
– genre, fragment, project, the new or, the concepts of art and
criticism themselves – derive from early German Romanticism. This
lecture revisits Friedrich Schlegel's Athenaeum
Fragmentsas the basis for a new interpretation of Sol LeWitt's
'Sentences on Conceptual Art', one of the defining documents of
this movement, focusing in particular on the art-status of
criticism and its philosophical function of 'completing' works of
art.
21 October to 19 December
Project: 'Sol LeWitt's 'Sentences on Conceptual Art':
Manuscript and Draft Materials 1968–69'
Courtesy of Collection Daled, Belgium
Sol LeWitt's 'Sentences on Conceptual Art' was first published in
May 1969 in the first issue of Art-Language,
including LeWitt's words: 'Ideas alone can be works of art; they
are in a chain of development that may eventually find some form.'
OCA will present the rarely exhibited handwritten notes by the
artist and illustrate the evolution of the 'Sentences', which are
an example of draftsmanship in their own right.
Wednesday, 28 October/ 19:00
Speaker: Ina Blom
Subject: On Lynda Benglis's Mumble (An
Instance of Videosociality)
What are the critical terms through which we approach the question
of 'sociality' in art? In 1972 Lynda Benglis and Robert Morris
started an artistic dialogue through a collaborative project that,
using video as a medium, seemed to turn, self-reflexively, around
their evolving relationship. The two resulting works,
Benglis's Mumble (1972) and
Morris's Exchange(1973) seem to suggest that this
relationship is the unique result of the productive framework of
televisual technologies, and open up fundamental questions about
the social art practices of the 1960s and 70s.
28 October to 19 December
Project: 'Lynda Benglis's Mumble (1972) and
Robert Morris's Exchange (1973)'
In 1972 Lynda Benglis and Robert Morris agreed to exchange videos
in order to develop a dialogue between each other's work. The
resulting artworks, key examples of early video, will be on show at
OCA's public space.
For full programme, please click here.
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Peter Osborne
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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 the International Artist in Residency
Programme at WIELS Contemporary Art Centre, Brussels,
Belgium; Capacete,
Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, Brazil; and at 18 Street Arts Center, Los
Angeles, CA, USA.
OCA accepts applications for these programmes.
Click here for more
information.
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Jesper Alvær
b. 1973 in Copenhagen, Denmark, lives and works in Prague, Czech
Republic and Oslo
Jesper Alvær received his formal training as an artist in
Prague, New York and Kitakyushu, Japan. For the past ten years, he
has been primarily working in the Czech Republic and Central
Europe. Many of his projects may be characterised as long-term
investigations that takes into account various life worlds and the
effects of cultural constructions. His projects often materialise
in the form of installations, videos or undocumented interpersonal
meetings. Recent exhibitions include: 'Sight of Times', CCA, Torun,
Poland; 'Representing The Nation', ITCA, NG Prague, the Czech
Republic; 'Lights On', Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo,
Norway; 'World-Ex-Position', Open Space, Vienna, Austria; 'Figure
and Ground', Bunkier Sztuki, Krakow, Poland; and 'Transkultura: Akt
1', Atrium, MG, Brno, the Czech Republic.
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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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Sheela Gowda
Artist, b.1957, Bhadravati, India. Lives and works in Bangalore,
India
Sheela Gowda trained as a painter at the
Royal College of Arts in London and the Cité International des Arts
in Paris. These European references, together with an awareness of
the Indian socio-cultural situation, influence a body of work that
approaches bodily and emotional immersion. In the 1990s, Gowda
worked with unconventional materials, through which she expressed
what she interpreted as both angst and melancholy induced by
socio-political tensions. Her installations attempt to preserve the
integrity of the original materials while at the same time
expressing peculiar resistances. In her own words, Gowda seeks a
'specificity within abstraction' that avoids strident statements
and instead reveals meaning through suggestion.
Sheela Gowda's work has been included in documenta 12 in Kassel,
2007; 'Fare Mondi//Making Worlds…', the 53rd Venice Biennale, 2009;
'Indian Highway' at The Serpentine Gallery, London and Astrup
Fearnley Museum, Oslo, Norway, 2009; the 2009 Sharjah Biennial,
United Arab Emirates; 'Santhal Family: Positions Around an Indian
Sculpture', MuHKA, Antwerp, Belgium, 2008; and 'HORN PLEASE:
Narratives in Contemporary Indian Art', Museum of Fine Arts Bern,
Switzerland, 2007-08 among others.
The artist's residency is made possible with the support of
O3–funds*
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Sheela Gowda Photograph: Christoph Storz Courtesy of the artist
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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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David Elliott
Artistic Director, 17th Biennale of Sydney
David Elliott is a curator, writer,
broadcaster and museum director primarily concerned with modern and
contemporary art. Elliott was Director of the Museum of Modern Art
in Oxford, England from 1976–96, Director of Moderna Museet in
Stockholm, Sweden from 1996–2001, the founding Director of the Mori
Art Museum in Tokyo, Japan from 2001–06 and, in 2007 the first
Director of Istanbul Modern, Turkey. From 1998–2004, he was
President of CIMAM (the International Committee of ICOM for Museums
and Collections of Modern Art) and in 2008, he was the Rudolf
Arnheim Guest Professor of Art History at Humboldt University,
Berlin. Elliott is Artistic Director for the 17th Biennale of
Sydney, 'THE BEAUTY OF DISTANCE: Songs of Survival in a Precarious
Age' which will take place 12 May to 1 August 2010
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Lene Berg to exhibit within
'Hidden in Remembrance is the Silent Memory of Our Future'
Contour 2009 – 4th Biennial of Moving Image
Mechelen, Belgium
15 August–18 October 2009
Lene Berg has been invited by
curator Katerina Gregos, a guest at OCA's
International Visitor Programme (IVP) in May 2008, to exhibit
within Contour 2009 – 4th
Biennial of Moving Image in Mechelen, Belgium. Within
Contour 2009 Lene Berg will exhibit the project Stalin by
Picasso (2008), which has as its point of departure an
old dispute about Picasso's portrait of Stalin with a moustache and
feminine features. Under the title 'Hidden in Remembrance is the
Silent Memory of Our Future', the biennial proposes a
reconsideration of recent history, as it takes place twenty years
after the fall of the Berlin Wall. According to the curator, the
project will revolve around questions of historical representation
and historiography, exploring how historical narratives are
constructed and engaging in a process of historical re-evaluation,
as to demonstrate the increased importance of historical context in
a large segment of contemporary art practice. Contour 2009 takes
place in various venues, emphasising the interaction between the
location and the works of art on display. Other artists exhibiting
within Contour 2009 are Eija-Liisa
Ahtila, Mira
Sanders and Yael Bartana.
Pushwagner and Kristina Kvalvik to exhibit within
'What a Wonderful World'
2009 Gothenburg International Biennial for Contemporary Art
Gothenburg, Sweden
5 September–15 November 2009
Norwegian
artists Pushwagner and Kristina
Kvalvik are currently exhibiting within 'What a
Wonderful World', this year's edition of the Gothenburg International Biennial
for Contemporary Art. According to curators Celia
Prado and Johan
Pousette 'What a Wonderful World' 'aims to present a
generous, poetic and sensual portrayal of human diversity and the
human capacity for wonders as well as failures through the gaze and
works of contemporary artists'. At Gothenburg City Library, one of
the biennial's venues, Pushwagner exhibits Soft City,
a pictorial novel drafted between 1969 and 1975 which narrates a
day in the live of a family living a mechanical life in a
dehumanised city. Within the biennial, Kvalvik exhibits a new video
work commissioned by the curators and titled Notes From a
Stranger, in which the artist works with moving images from a
narrative point of view. The 2009 Gothenburg International Biennial
for Contemporary Art is in view until 15 November
2009 in various venues throughout Gothenburg, Sweden
presenting works by Fiona
Tan, Amar Kanwar,Candice
Breitz, Tim
Etchells and Susan Hiller.
53rd International Art Exhibition
La Biennale di Venezia
From 7 June to 22 November 2009
Venice, Italy
Anawana Haloba participates in
'Fare Mondi // Making Worlds…',
The main exhibition of the
53rd International Art Exhibition
La Biennale di Venezia
Anawana Haloba is currently exhibiting the
large-scale spatial installation The Greater G8 (GG8) AD
MARKET withing 'Fare Mondi // Making Worlds…', the main
exhibition of the 2009 edition of the Biennale di Venezia, Italy.
The artwork follows the logic and desires of a political dreamscape
in which Haloba rewrites the rules of economic financial exchange
by offering Third World fair-trade goods imbued with a sense of
futility. Curated by Daniel Birnbaum, the
biennial articulates different themes woven into one, expressing 'a
wish to emphasise the process of creation' and presents works by
over 90 artists, including Thomas
Bayrle, Öyvind
Fahlström, Sheela
Gowda, Joan
Jonas and Wolfgang
Tillmans.
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Lene Berg How do you expect me to do a portrait of Stalin? Videostills from Stalin by Picasso, 2007
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The Nordic and Danish Pavilions
'The Collectors', Curated by Elmgreen & Dragset
On the occasion of the 53rd International Art Exhibition – La
Biennale di Venezia, the Nordic and Danish Pavilions collaborate
with a project curated by artists' duo Elmgreen &
Dragset. Titled 'The Collectors', the project approaches
the topic of collecting, and the psychology behind the practice of
expressing oneself through physical objects. For 'The Collectors'
more than, twenty artists and designers have contributed to
creating a different kind of exhibition format, one that will
appear closer to a film set than a conventional art display.
Exhibiting artists are Thora Dolven Balke, Massimo
Bartolini, Hernan Bas, Guillaume Bijl, Maurizio Cattelan, Elmgreen
& Dragset, Pepe Espaliú Tom of Finland, Simon Fujiwara, Han
& Him, Laura Horelli, Martin Jacobson, William E. Jones,
Terence Koh, Jani Leinonen, Klara Lidén, Jonathan Monk, Nico Muhly,
Norway Says (Torbjørn Anderssen, Andreas Engesvik and Espen Voll),
Henrik Olesen, Nina Saunders, Vibeke Slyngstad,
Sturtevantand Wolfgang Tillmans.
For press enquiries related to the project, and for interviews
with the artists, please contact the following:
For Norwegian press: Marthe Tveitan at marthe.tveitan@oca.no
For international press: Brian Phillips/Black Frame
at bphillips@framenoir.com.
Samba Fall participates in
'PRAXIS: Art in Times of Uncertainty'
2nd Thessaloniki Biennale of Contemporary Art
Thessaloniki, Greece
24 May 24 to 27 September 2009
Samba Fall has been invited to exhibit
within the 2nd
Thessaloniki Biennale of Contemporary Art, Thessaloniki,
Greece. Curated by Olabisi
Silva, Gabriela
Salgado and Syrago
Tsiara and title 'PRAXIS: Art in Times of
Uncertainty', the biennial aims to investigate artistic practises
as a privileged space for free expression of ideas and for an
alternative view of the world and social environment. Within the
biennial, Samba Fall exhibits Africa Map, an
installation built by local people of Thessaloniki which presents
the ideas that non-Africans have about the continent. Among other
exhibiting artists are Sheela
Gowda, Amilcar
Packer and Alexandre
Arrechea.
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Kunst Halle Sankt
Gallen in St. Gallen, Switzerland is currently exhibiting
'Matias Faldbakken Extreme Siesta', a solo exhibition of Norwegian
artist Matias Faldbakken.
From 19 September to 22
November 2009, the artist exhibits a series of new works
that mirrors a 'non-productive production' and that engages in a
DIY-aesthetics. 'Matias Faldbakken Extreme Siesta' is curated
by Giovanni Carmine, Director Kunst Halle
Sankt Gallen and a guest at OCA's International Visitor Programme
(IVP) in January 2008.
From 25 November
2009 to 24 January
2010, Ikon
Gallery in Birmingham, UK, will present a survey of
Faldbakken's works from the last five years. Curated
by Helen Legg, Ikon curator, the exhibition
will be accompanied by a catalogue produced in collaboration with
The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design in Oslo, Norway
which presents documentation of works since 2003 and includes newly
commissioned texts from theorist Peter
Osborne, critic Jennifer
Allen and curators Øysten
Ustvedt and Dr. Andreas
Kroksnes.
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Ane Graff has been invited
by Sara Arrhenius, Director of the Bonniers
Konsthall in Stockholm, Sweden to exhibit within 'Life Forms', a
project consisting of an exhibition, a publication and a series of
seminars that displays works of artists who depict nature, the
universe and the broader ecological contexts. Within the
exhibition, Graff will present drawings from the
series Silver Structure I-III, Leaky
Abstractions, Structural Analysis (Dragonfly)
I-III, the work Diffuse Nebula, together with
new works. 'Life Form' is on view until 10 January
2010 and also presents works by Micol
Assaël, Charles
Avery, Rosa
Barba, Andreas
Eriksson, Tue
Greenfort, Henrik
Håkansson, Helen
Mirra, Katie
Paterson, Jani
Ruscica and Tomas Saraceno.
Artist duo Elmgreen & Dragset is
exhbiting within 'Anabasis. Rituals of Homecoming', taking place at
the 19th century villa of German industrialist, Ludwik Grohman in
Lodz, Poland, until 10 October. Part of the
'Festival the Dialogue of Four Cultures' and curated
by Adam Budak, a guest at OCA'S International
Visitor Programme in October 2007, 'Anabasis. Rituals of
Homecoming' considers various dimensions of homecoming – between
intimacy and public exposure, interiority and a monument, personal
and collective mythologies.
From 19 November
2009 to 20 January
2010, Anne Szefer
Karlsen and Heidi
Nikolaisen participate in 'On Articulating Works
& Places', an exhibition, conference and publication as part
of Art in Marrakech
Festival, taking place in various venues in Marrakech, Morocco.
'On Articulating Works & Places' is constructed on ideas
relating to 'works as artistic projects' and to 'spaces of
appearances'. Anne Szefer Karlsen has been invited to contribute
with the production of the exhibition, as well as partake in the
conference and publication. Heidi Nikolaisen will contribute to the
exhibition with Sofia, a project with video,
photography, text and objects that looks into personal stories as
an opposition to the construction of History.
Sissel Tolaas has been invited to exhibit
within 'sk-interfaces', at Casino Luxembourg,
Luxembourg from 25
September to10 January 2010. Curated
by Jens Hauser, 'sk-interfaces' features works by artists
reflecting on the way current technologies are changing our lives
by progressively replacing natural interface in the skin. Within
the exhibition, Sissel Tolaas will present the
project Fear, in which she collects and displays the
smell of different men who have nothing in common but the fear of
body contact. Other exhibiting artists
are ORLAN, Critical Art
Ensemble and Yann
Marussich.
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Ane Graff, Leaky Abstractions, 2008 Courtesy of the artist and STANDARD (Oslo)
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From 25 September
2009 to 10 January
2010, Marit Følstad exhibits
within 'The 21st Century, The Feminine Century, and the Century of
Diversity and Hope', one of three curatorial projects that
constitute the 2009
International Incheon Women Artists Biennale, Incheon, Korea.
Curated by Heng-Gil Han, Curator, Visual Arts
Jamaica Center for Arts & Learning, the exhibition aims to
provide visitors with an opportunity to discuss various subjects
related to questions of society seen from a feminine perspective.
Within 'The 21st Century, The feminine Century, and the Century of
Diversity and Hope', Følstad will exhibit a three-channel video
work entitled Its All in My Head.
Peter Zorn, EMAN Coordinator and Chairman of
Werkleitz – Centre for Media Art in Halle (Saale), Germany has
invited Helene Sommer to exhibit within
'.move', taking place at the European Media Art Network in
Halle (Saale), Germany
from 9 to 25
October. Within '.move', the artist will exhibit the video
installation A Tale of Stone and Wood, in which the
artist explores cinema with regard to its constructions of history,
national identity and collective memory. Among other participating
artists are Shu Lea
Cheang, Paolo
Cirio and Kurt D'Haeseleer.
Gisle Frøysland, in the contexts
of Piksel Festival in
Bergen, Norway, has been invited to develop two collaborations, in
Canada and Europe. The curator has been invited for a ten-days
workshop residency and a three-days conference at Banff Centre for the Arts, Banff,
Canada. The projects bring together artists to share practices and
further the understanding of open source hardware as an artist
endeavour. In Eindholven, the Netherlands, Gisle Frøysland has been
invited to participate in 'Piksel@Baltan', a part of the Baltan
Laboratories' Blueprint research programme. The collaboration
between the festival and Piksel festival will promote artist
research and creation through interdisciplinariey exchange between
artists and developers.
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Marit Følstad The Last Day of Magic, 2009 Courtesy of the artist
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Flaggfabrikken – Center for
photography and contemporary art – an artist collective
based in Bergen working to promote camera based art – is offering
an opportunity to undertake a two months residency in Bergen,
Norway. The residency is open for artists, curators and art critics
working within contemporary art and will take place either in March
to April, May to June or September to October 2009. The residency
offer the artist in residence: studio, accommodation, travel
expenses paid and give a small grant towards covering other living
expenses during the artist's stay. Deadline for application
is 10 October. Please visit www.flaggfabrikken.net for
more info.
Until 15 October Screen Festival is
accepting entries to the festival's second edition in March 2010.
Oslo Screen Festival is an international festival which began in
2008 with the aim of bringing together established and emerging
artists working with video art to present their work to Oslo
audiences. The purpose of the festival is to focus on experimental
video works and to emphasise emerging poetics of the medium. An
award of €1000 will be given to the best video. Please find
regulation and entry form on the website www.screenfestival.no.
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The Massachusetts Institute of Technology seeks applications for
a full-time Assistant Professor of Visual Arts, tenure track
position. Applicants should be an artist who has strong skills and
experience in teaching at the college, university or art school
academic level and who has experience, knowledge and
accomplishments in the fields of techno-aesthetic and/or
techno-cultural art practice, especially in the areas of New Media
and/or Media Performance. Minimum qualifications are Master of Fine
Arts degree or equivalent, Emerging international recognition as a
practicing artist, Experience teaching at the college, university
or art school level, Skills, knowledge and accomplishments in
technocultural, technoaesthetic and performative art practice and a
strong interest in transdisciplinary collaboration, high knowledge
in contemporary art practice, art history, art and media theory.
More information can be found here.
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School of Visual Arts, in New York, NY is accepting applications
for the MFA Social Documentary Film. The programme provides a solid
foundation in the fundamentals of non-fiction filmmaking, as well
as an immersion into the critical and analytical processes
necessary to conceptualize and develop significant, socially
relevant film projects. For more information please
visit http://www.mfasocdoc.sva.edu.
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OCA has been invited to participate in the New York Art Book
Fair, Printed Matter's annual fair of contemporary art books,
catalogues, artists' books, art periodicals and fanzines, which
will take place from 2 to 4 October at P.S.1 Contemporary Art
Center, Long Island City, Queens. The Fair hosts over 200
international organisations, presenting a diverse range of
contemporary art publications, as well as a special exhibition of
books, posters and ephemera by Richard Prince. For the Fair, OCA
will present our publication Verksted, including Ü,
by Olav Westphalen (no.10), Populism and
Genre (no.9, with contributions from, among others,
Victor Burgin and John Karniauskas), Constructing the
Political in Contemporary Art (no.8, with contributions
from Hito Steyerl and Éric Alliez) and Art of
Welfare (no.7, with contributions from Claire Bishop and
Victor D. Norman).
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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
organisations 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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