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Lecture by Faith Walding and Paige Sarlin
   

Lecture by Faith Walding and Paige Sarlin

Faith Wilding is a multidisciplinary artist, writer, and educator who collaborates with groups and individuals both nationally and internationally. Currently she is a member of subRosa, a reproducible cyberfeminist cell of cultural researchers committed to combining tactical media, activism, and politics to explore and critique the intersections of information and biotechnologies in women’s bodies, lives, and work. Wilding is Associate Professor and Chair of Performance Art, School of the Art Institute of Chicago. subRosa  produces performances, workshops, publications, media interventions, and public forums. Recent Wilding/subRosa performances/exhibitions: “Yes Species” (Intersex 1-0-1, NGBK, Berlin); “International Markets of Flesh,”(Merida, Yucatan, and Mexico City); “Can You See us Now?”(MASSMoCA); “Cell Track”(Biodifference, BEAP, Perth, Au); “Epidermic DYI Cell Labote  (YOUGenics, Chicago); “ExpoEmmaGenics,”(Intermediale, Mainz); “Cloning Cultures,”(National University, Singapore); “Welcome to the Revolution” (Zurich); “Art of Maintenance” (Kunstakademie, Vienna).
Faith Wilding URL > www.art.cfa.cmu.edu/wilding/<
subRosa: >www.cyberfeminism.net<

Paige Sarlin is a writer, filmmaker and activist. She graduated from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago with an MFA in Film, Video and New Media. As a member of 16beaver group in New York since 2000, she has participated in the elaboration of a platform for discussion and activity that concern the intersection of politics and cultural production. 16beaver is the address of a physical space in the financial district of New York which has served as the host for many presentations by artist practitioners from Europe but is also the discursive locus around which international exchange happens as a result of the invitations and opportunities which the discussions encourage. Sarlin is finishing a documentary about the production of the last slide projector by Eastman Kodak and the economic, technological and cultural shifts which coincide with this ending. The film is called "The Last Slide Projector" and will be completed in December 2005. See www.16beavergroup.org