Monday, March 23, 2009

Beijing City International School Workshop


Saturday 21st March 21 students from BCIS came to Imagine Gallery for workshops with Megumi Shimizu and Denise Keele-bedford.
The Year Seven students were introduced to the exhibition, a short history of International Women's Day, and the five artists' installations. They were then divided into two groups for a performance workshop and installation workshop. These images are from Denise's workshop.










Monday, March 9, 2009

Radio Interview with Bruce Connolly from 'Touch beijing' on am 774

10 March (Tues) - Laetitia Gauden
11 March ( Wed) - Denise Keele-bedford
12 March (Thu) - Lucille Yuk Lin Lo
13 March (Fri) - Evelyna Liang Kan
Times
Daily at 8.30am and 6.00pm
Radio - AM 774 and live on the web at www.netfm.com.cn



Monday, February 23, 2009

Song Ruyi - Catalogue Introduction

In Celebration of Nv Art, series 4: women’s handiwork

As a Chinese woman, I am very delighted to see an art exhibition by women artists making its debut in Beijing on March 8, 2009, bringing with it five witty, intelligent and unique women artists from Australia, China and Japan, along with their works, in so sprightly a fashion.

On many occasions have records of cultural exchanges been made between Japan, Australia and China, attesting to the cultural tolerance of these countries and peoples. Today, five women artist have stepped over the boundary of nationality and geography and, with their perceptive eyes, indulgent bosoms and benevolent hearts, have created works of art that are overwhelmingly appealing and thought provoking. They have contributed to a world that is being increasingly depleted both in natural resources and in soul. Their deeds and works are to be recorded, heeded and advocated.

Born in the turbulent 1970s, I grew up in the thriving 1980s. In the past 20 *** (which I still can not accurately define) years, I had my feet firmly planted on the solid Chinese soil and I spared no pains in perceiving the world and in making friends. I am indebted to Denise for her sincere invitation to participate in the exhibition. This has given me an opportunity to take part in an event that unites numerous excellent women artists the world over. Please allow me to join you in initiating a “red” whirlwind that will cross both geography and history and come to households beyond count.

Text by Song Ruyi
Date: Feb. 20, 2009





贺:女艺术——系列4:女红

作为一个中国女性,我很欣幸地看到这样一个女性艺术家的系列展览,在2009年的3月8日,来到中国北京,伴随着春的脚步,带来了来自澳大利亚、中国和日本的五位敏锐、聪慧、独到的女性艺术家和她们的作品。
日本、澳大利亚、中国,三国在历史上就出现过多次文化交流的记录,也都彰显了各个国家和民族的文化包容力。今天,五位女艺术家,跨越了民族与地域的界限,以女性独特的、大地一样包容万物、生发万物的胸怀,透过女性体察细微的双眼和仁爱众生的心灵,创作出极具感染力的,耐人寻味的艺术作品,奉献于当今无论资源乃至心灵都越发瘠薄的世界,她们的作为与作品,都应该被记录、被关注、被弘扬。
我个人,出生于波涛初复的70年代,成长于欣欣向荣的80年代,作为于****(我尚无法用一个词汇准确定义)的近20年,我的脚一直踏在中国这坚实的大地上,我用心去感受世界、结识朋友,非常感谢德尼斯女士诚挚的邀请,让我有机会参与这一联结着世界各地无数优秀女艺术家的盛会,请让我与你们链接,刮起一道“红”的旋风,飞越千山万水,飞扬万古千秋,飞入万户千家!
宋如意
2009-2-20



Ruyi Song Resume

RuYi Song , female , birth in 1972 , census register Beijing
Mailbox: sryruyi@126.com
Mobile phone: 131 266 85718
Blog: http://blog.sina.com.cn/ruyisong


Education experience

At least five years Landscape architectural experience; Bachelor's degree of Chinese language study and education specialty , Graduate student degree in Landscape Architecture and Urban Design field.

Capital Normal University, Chinese department, Obtains the literature bachelor's degree.

Beijing Forestry University /Botanical garden institute、Graduate School,Urban planning and design specialty, Obtains the engineering course master's degree.


Once obtained the reward

in January, 2007 Obtains the Beijing Plan Committee third session of youths to plan the teacher architect oratorical contest second prize

in November, 2008 Obtains Beijing Science and technology Association to sponsor, eighth session of youth academic oratorical contest second prize


Publishes the paper

"Beijing's Old city Transformation Should Slowing down Step",Beijing Forestry University journal (society branch version) in March, 2004

"the poetic sentiment mind's East explains------Luis Barragan construction and botanical garden",

"designer note------Discusses designer's social function and the information transmission",The 13th session of capital urban planning architectural design report plan elects up to the Beijing third session of youths to plan the architect oratorical contest to discuss the literary selections (Tianjin University Publishing house) in January, 2008


Work Experience
2006-2007 Executive Director of Architecture Environment Design Institute Landscape &Garden Studio in Academy of Arts & Design,Tsinghua University

2008- Suppport Director of Honest Fame International Art Investment Consultant Co.,LTD


宋 如 意 简 历

个人资料
宋如意,女,1972年出生,户籍北京
移动:131 266 85718
邮箱:sryruyi@126.com
博客:http://blog.sina.com.cn/ruyisong

教育经历:
1990-1994 首都师范大学中文系 获文学学士学位
1998-2003 北京林业大学园林学院、北京林业大学研究生院 城市规划与设计专业 获工科硕士学位


曾获奖励
2007年1月 获得北京市规划委员会第三届青年规划师建筑师演讲比赛二等奖
2008年11月 获得北京市科技协会主办,第八届青年学术演讲比赛 二等奖


发表论文
《北京的旧城改造应放慢步伐》,北京林业大学学报(社科版)2004年3月

《诗意心灵的东方解读------Luis Barragan的建筑与园林》

《设计者笔记------谈设计者的社会职能与信息传达》,第十三届首都城市规划建筑设计汇报方案选暨北京第三届青年规划建筑师演讲比赛论文选(天津大学出版社)2008年1月

Flying:confessions of a free woman

On the occasion of “Nu Yishu – Series IV: Nu Red” Group Exhibition at Imagine Gallery from March 8th to May 12th, 2009 and in continuation of International Women Day (March 8th, 2009) celebration the six part film 'Flying:confessions of a free woman will be screened at venues in Beijing from March 12th - April 16th.

Proposed in Beijing by Ellen Pearlman, Denise Keele-bedford and Imagine Gallery, in collaboration with all the different screening venues. For information on dates and venues go to: http://flyingconfessionsofafreewoman.blogspot.com/

本片在北京的放映由艾伦 皮尔曼,德妮丝和想象画廊企划,并与共同合作的放映地点及www.flyingconfessions.com and http://www.zohefilms.com 协作而成。
这次活动在2009年3月8日至5月12日想象画廊举办的“女艺术 系列展览之四:女红”群展期间,也适逢3月8日国际妇女节的庆典之时。

http://flyingconfessionsofafreewoman.blogspot.com/
www.flyingconfessions.com
http://www.zohefilms.com



Jennifer Fox is Flying
by Ellen Pearlman
Pakistani women cover Jen properly with a scarf while they walk in public down a small street on their way to a grassroots meeting of rural Pakistani women. Photo provided by Zohe Films.
“I had to keep filming to figure out this modern crazy life,” Jennifer Fox says at the beginning of Flying: Confessions of a Free Woman. In 2002, she was at a crossroads and needed to make a different life for herself. The result is this eerily convoluted but totally engrossing six-hour epic. It starts with grainy childhood clips of Fox as a little girl in a two-seater airplane with her father. As she states in her adult voice, “I wanted to be like my father, I wanted to be free,” because that was where all the power lay. Power certainly did not reside with her mother, who may have ruled the roost along with the director’s maiden aunt and grandmother, but underneath she frothily seethed. Born into the first generation of women who could make not just money but also the rules, Fox explores over a period of almost four years and 1,600 hours of film her own relationship woes: exotic married lover vs. dependable boyfriend, motherhood vs. childlessness, and what it means to be a privileged white, middle-class, first-world female filmmaker who goes jetting off to 17 countries. She contrasts her position with the larger woes of the world, including cancer, female genital mutilation (FGM), male dominance through purdah and the big one, death.
Fox walks with us and her camera into the drugstore, buys a home pregnancy test, shows the instructions, reveals the results (pregnant!) and breaks down weeping. She is scared and elated and doesn’t know what to do. If you use a camera for four years to figure out your own and your girlfriends’ lives you must either touch something new and unique, or give in to platitudes. The true relevance of this film is that it shows there are no longer any real platitudes. What is true and unique is that Fox has to go it alone and learn what any real explorer knows: the way is deeply uncharted.
Fox takes us into areas I personally have never seen a filmmaker go, such as her own ob/gyn exam, where she films her doctor pointing to the sonogram of her non-viable, weakened fetus, soon to be D&C’ed and ripped from her body. Fox is so gutsy with her camera that if she hadn’t been anesthetized she probably would have filmed her doctor performing the ghastly procedure.
In Flying, Fox traverses through a large cast of characters, a veritable “we are the world” of women, while she figures out her own life. She speaks to and with the women by passing the camera back and forth. A Shoshone Indian endures a horrific custody battle, and a South African sexually abused divorcée wonders if she can ever manage a relationship again. There is a Soweto single mother who survives economically only by living inside a village matriarchy, an Egyptian journalist co-parenting within a happy marriage and a German cancer patient whose doctor unexpectedly falls deeply in love with her. We meet an East Indian grassroots organizer, a Russian adulteress, a Cambodian survivor of Pol Pot running a shelter for kidnapped sex workers, a Pakistani woman who refuses to marry and must face the consequences, a Somali exile who lives in London and fights the practice of female genital mutilation; and a Bosnian war refugee. Sound dizzying? It is, and all these confessions and revelations are as cloying as a lavender sachet, or as riveting as an unexpected secret eavesdropped conversation.
“Someday I will meet the one and get married and then my life will begin,” one of the women muses. This is the subtext of Fox’s film as it explores the sad truth that women muddle though life defining themselves by their relationships. The question raised again and again but not answered is: why don’t men feel this way? Never before have women had so many options, or been so free, but as one woman puts it, “The older we get, the more confusing it gets.”
CPU Meeting: Sichan, left, an advocate at the Cambodian Prostitutes Union meets with a prostitute who is trying to get advice and protection from a violent gang of men who target her at the brothel where she works. The police think she is crazy. Sichan warns her about going to the police because they are swayed by bribery. Photo provided by Zohe Films.
Having previously been warned by one of her friends, “Do you think no one would get hurt?” Fox breaks up with her married lover when his wife finds out about their affair and immediately turns the camera on herself miserably wallowing in a steaming bubble bath, weeping. When her grandmother is dying, her every breath a death rattle, Fox films it. When she tries to get pregnant using fertility treatments, she films the injections going right through the center of her belly. She films her lovers in bed; she films them as they wake up and get dressed. She films herself while she inevitably boards yet another airplane to fly halfway around the world to ask Indian women if they know how to masturbate. Giggling hysterically, they ask if she knows how it’s really done.
What saves this work from becoming a mere reality TV show is the powerful humanity behind each woman’s (and by inference, each man’s) plight, and the skillful editorial decisions of how to present that plight. No one emerges unscathed from the battle of the sexes. Fox also turns the camera on her own family, backing down at each critical impasse until her mother reveals something Jennifer never knew: the woman is deaf in one ear. How could Fox know so much about women globally, and so little about what went on in her own backyard?
Flying is post feminist, in that the freedom that women fought so valiantly to achieve was granted, and then, like a Pandora’s Box, whipped up a whole new set of woes. Now that at least some Western women can choose how to live their lives, where does this put them in relation to women who are not so uniquely blessed? Or in relation to their own aging and mortality? This is where the film moves from indulgence to profundity. Most of the world’s women can’t even imagine the choices Jennifer has, and they go out of the way to let her know it, providing a sobering and convincing reality check. The film delves into those 17 lives by examining abuse, abortion, activism, adoption, AIDS, aging, career, creativity, death, divorce, disabilities, family, feminism, freedom, FGM, homosexuality, illness, identity, love, marriage, motherhood, pregnancy, sexuality, spirituality and war. That’s a huge undertaking for anyone, much less one lone woman with a hand-held camera.


介绍:
珍尼佛 福克斯是一个享誉国际的获奖导演、制作人、女摄像师、教育家。在过去的25年中她参与了不计其数的纪录片的拍摄。她的第一部影片《贝鲁特 — 最后的家庭电影》曾在9个城市的影院上映,在20个国家的荧幕上播放。并拿到了7项国际奖,包括1988年Cinema Du Reel电影节的最佳纪录片及最佳电影摄像奖。由她导演的十小时电视系列片《一个美国人的爱情故事》在PBS/BBC/ARTE频道的播出,开拓了电视产业的新视点,在当年风度入席由纽约时报及另五家美国主流报纸提名的“1999年十大电视系列片之一”,被评为当年最好的电视系列片。她近期的作品,受好评的,尖锐的,6部分影片《飞行 — 一个自由女人的自白》由丹麦电影学院发起,与一个独立的“丹麦、美国”影业制作公司合作完成。在丹麦TV2、美国公共广播公司、艺术频道、ARTE, YLE-1, SBS, SVT, ICON和荷兰人文频道的播出,并获得了威望创新资本基金会的金费资助。“飞行”的首映是在2006年阿姆斯特丹的国际纪录片节和圣丹斯电影节2007年的特别活动及其它的活动,并于最近完成了北美20个城市的影院巡回播放,之后美国的公共频道、TV-2、SVT、YLE在2008的夏天相继播出了本片。Fox目前正准备剪辑一部新的专题纪录片,拍摄20多年,名为《学习游泳》,与荷兰佛教徒电视网络共同制作并获得了哈特利电影基金会赠款,Fox制作的多部影片都曾获奖,《爱情与黛安娜》,《如履薄冰》,《双重曝光》,《项目十》,《一个自由的南非的真实故事》、《牧童》,《印第安人》,和《律师们》,及最近发布的《绝对安全》,她曾是多部纪录片的顾问,包括《南方的抚慰》和《石材读者》。Fox也曾作为参照人参与过主题纪录片《挫折感与好莱坞》和电影《真实瞬间的定义》。制作之余,她是世界各地的大学、电视台、政府文化部门电影专业讲师。


飞行:电影“一个自由女人的自白”介绍

“现代女性想要的是什么?当今世界哪里适合她?”
以前在我们人类集体里从未有这么多妇女有这样的自主权,建立与创造一个自己的生活。然而,艰难的“抉择”独立和允许自由后,依然不一定带来幸福。而且,守旧的女性特征,仍然困扰着世界各地的妇女。
“飞行:一个自由女人的自白”是一个由6部分组成的电影,一个根据实际考察、贴近21世界女性生活的电影。这部系列故事和视觉的混合,记录了制片人Jennifer Fox’s从42岁至45岁自己三年的生活与来自全球各地,不同生活的勇敢妇女。以既幽默又深刻的方式,通过电影搜索新模式中的女性,审查两性的角色变化,努力理解各地妇女的角色,从而确定她们自己在那个时期是怎样一个定义。在这个两性和经济自由的新时代,奋斗中的女人是怎样?性别关系是怎样?一个正统派的基督教徒、还是艾滋病者?哪些行程可以自我定义和自我表达吗?她们在自己的眼前是得或失?男人和女人之间的事情真的可以改变吗?我们现在可以开始确定一个新时代的女性吗?
“飞行”采用真实的叙事方式,创新的拍摄技术,表现了一个独特、互动的妇女。探索了一种新的表达方式,是在“通过摄像头”之间,与所谓导演和所谓拍摄主题之间的交谈。这种处理的方法使很多纪录片竞争力出现不平衡,著名的Susan Sontag对摄像的定义:“摄影就是为事宜的物体的照片拍照,它意味着,让自己与世界发生关系,感觉这些知识——因此,这就是力量。”通过摄像机,传统的采访形式已被抛弃。作为角色,在任何时候都有轮流镜像的关系,通过妇女彼此之间,她们独特的,循环的方式,可以分析出她们在生活中怎样共享和对话。
这部摄像机深入地促进了导演和主题的密切联系与交谈。而不是一个客观的、权力的工具,使纽带断裂。它让参与者成为主题的创造者。

Denise keele-bedford 德妮丝) (澳大利亚)




24/7 take a look

I look around and everywhere there is advertising in some form or another. Massive billboards advertising the latest in shoe fashion, cars, techno gadgets, everything for the consumer to spend their money.
In suburban Beijing a ubiquitous advertising board is made from printed vinyl stretched over a framework and illuminated from the inside. I see these along the many narrow streets attached to the sides of buildings and standing on footpaths, their bright red colours prominent during daylight hours and the advertising text lit at night.
They advertise the business, its attributes and products, promoting the positive aspects and inviting closer investigation.

I am intrigued with the 24/7 concept showing that the advertised is available 24 hours per day 7 days per week, is there no time for rest.
When I think of women we are much the same, 24/7 feminine, female with all the attributes of ‘the other’ human species participating on this earth.

These female advertising boards are not intended to separate you from your hard earned money or to shower you with the latest and best of design and technology. BUT
‘24/7 – take a look’ is celebrating women, advertising their attributes, promoting the positive aspects and inviting closer investigation 24hours per day 7 days per week.


24/7 看一看

我环顾四周,到处都是形式不拘一格的广告。巨大的广告牌上展示着最新潮的鞋、汽车、电子设备。各种商品无所不有,吸引消费者购买。

在北京郊区,以乙烯基为材料的广告牌无处不在:乙烯基绕着广告架展开,其内镶有彩灯。我在许多狭窄的巷子边看到这类的广告牌:或者固定在建筑物之上,或者站在人行道上。在白天,这些艳丽的红色牌子很显眼;在晚上,在灯光的衬托下,牌子上的文字异常醒目。这些广告牌在进行商业宣传,将商行与商品的特点展示出来,推销产品优点的一面,并邀请过路人对其特别留神。

我对这种24/7(全天候服务)的概念饶有兴趣。24/7指得是一天24小时,一周7天内,不管任何时候都营业,而没有休息时间。这令我想起妇女:她们也是全天候服务,与24/7无二。她们具备“另外”人类的全部特征,参与这个地球上的活动。

这些女性的广告牌并非想把来之不易的金钱从你手中夺走,也不是想把你置于最新和最好的设计和技术的枪林弹雨之中。然而,“24/7 – 看一看”颂扬女性、展示她们的特点、崇尚积极的方面并邀请人们每周二十四小时对其近距离的审视。

Evelyna Liang Kan 梁以瑚 (香港)





Evelyna has exhibited extensively around Hong Kong and Asia, in her own personal work she addresses mostly on women’s issues. Her interest has extended into the area of ‘Healing through Art’ using ordinary daily objects to raise concern on relationships between countries and between men.
Recently, her work has shifted back to her own cultural background, and questions the meaning of communication through words and the age old concept of Chinese Painting.

Concept and Statement:
For many years, this is what I believe: Art is Life and it should be for everybody to enjoy. Art should be for the Common people in Common Places. Art should be easily accessible and understood by all regardless of age, gender or race! I also believe in the good nature of mankind, and that all men and women are created equal.


女 x 工 Nu x Gong ( Woman x Work)
女「紅」原作女工,是傳統中國閨秀婦女所作各樣與絲線有關的工。女「工」,女性勝任的工作?只適合婦女作的工?女工人?
「x」是一個代号、是乘數、是末知之數、是love and kisses、是簡寫。如果以「x」代替了「糹」,「女x工」可以說是女性充滿熱誠的工,女性無限量的工作、女性末知之工作,是所有女性或與女性有關工作之縮寫?
在這三八婦女藝術展中,我與两批不同社群的婦女及藝術家們一同為這一個展覽作工。河南周山村的大姐們及深圳大芬村的畫家



河南的大姐們、在當今一方面強謫婦女能撑半邊天的口號下、仍備受輕看。她們的巧手卻把自己幻化成漂亮撲實的仙女,把糹宅紅富貴的牡丹、豐盈綻金的魚、被彩虹飄帶環繞保護着、蓋頭布乘載着她們的愿望、她們手作的產品越過高山走出農村。女紅、為人作嫁衣服時也為自己媒幸福、手工藝產品為人欣賞及肯定,補貼家用之餘也賺來友情、兒女能快樂無憂上學去,她們無畏地站起來、同雙手創建末來!
在當代藝術,當個人被推祟至高位時,我們又会否重新察視在身邊支援着各種藝術情境的人及事、工人、工匠式的手藝我們又是如何看待?
我們生活在一個充滿茅盾的新社會主義市場經濟論下的政治社會文明中,在過多複雜的觀念下,如何能從中抽取一個真正的藝術圖像而不被沉溺淹沒。
工、無數的工、流水作業的工、在一体化集權主義下、個體又能否出現?
在婦女們的繡作中我們看到「紅」「婦女」「牡丹花」等共同体的出現、那樣在大芬村中我們了解的又是那一類的認同?同樣的圖型、不同的手作。
請來三十多位在大芬村為別人作臨摹畫的畫家們、共同塗繪同一張以女性為主題的電腦拼貼畫。臨摹畫家並不是在抄襲、每一張都有着自有的顏色、筆觸及感覺,她/他們在當代市場經濟推動下成就了這一個行業、同樣為自己、家人及社群媒幸福、她/他們的手藝也同樣被肯定。
女x工
女‧藝術‧工