thumbnail image
broken image
  • Home
  • About
  • 2023
  • 2022
  • 2021
  • Contributors
  • …  
    • Home
    • About
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • 2021
    • Contributors
    broken image
    broken image
    • Home
    • About
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • 2021
    • Contributors
    • …  
      • Home
      • About
      • 2023
      • 2022
      • 2021
      • Contributors
      broken image
      broken image
      • broken image

        Brazil Footprint 00 3rd Edition March - July 2023

        Manchester, London and Canterbury

        Brazil Footprint 00 returned in 2023 with new collaborations with extraordinary artists, filmmakers and researchers from Brazil. The programme started in April with a workshop at the University of Manchester with Daiara Tukano and Marilene Ribeiro, continued with the Amazonian Film Festival curated by Vanessa Gabriel Robinson at the Gulbenkian Art Centre in Canterbury on June 24 and culminated with a new collaboration with Wapichana Artist Gustavo Caboco, The Santo Domingo Centre of Excellence for Latin American Research at the British Museum and Holmleigh Primary School.

        With support from The British Council Biennials Connect Grant

      • broken image
        broken image
        broken image
        broken image
        broken image
        broken image
        broken image
        broken image
        broken image
      •  

        Brazil Footprint 00 returned in 2023 with new collaborations with extraordinary artists, filmmakers and researchers from Brazil. The programme started in April with a workshop at the University of Manchester with Daiara Tukano and Marilene Ribeiro, continued with the Amazonian Film Festival curated by Vanessa Gabriel Robinson at the Gulbenkian Art Centre in Canterbury on June 24 and culminated with a new collaboration with Wapichana Artist Gustavo Caboco, The Santo Domingo Centre of Excellence for Latin American Research at the British Museum and Holmleigh Primary School.

        With support from The British Council Biennials Connect Grant, the University of Manchester, the University of Kent and the Gulbenkian Art Centre.

         

         

        scroll down for full programme
      •  

        broken image

        Strengthening Threads, Opening Paths for Museum-Community Healing?

        A Wapichana Residency

        26 June 2023

        The British Museum, Stevenson Lecture Theatre

        RSVP to sdcelar@britishmuseum.org

         

        What are European museums with ethnographic collections doing to weave and strengthen threads with communities in Latin America and the Caribbean? Thinking with histories and practices of the Wapichana - Indigenous peoples from northern Brazil and southern Guyana - and their objects held at the British Museum, this event will reflect on the conditions that have created dislocation and disconnection between museums and communities. Artist Gustavo Caboco Wapichana and historian Roseane Cadete Wapichana - currently in residence at the Santo Domingo Centre of Excellence for Latin American Research (SDCELAR) at the British Museum - will meet with Jamille Pinheiro Dias (Director, Centre for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, University of London), Francesca Laura Cavallo (Founder, Brazil Footprint, University of Kent), and curators Diego Atehortúa and Magdalena Araus Sieber (SDCELAR), to discuss how colonialism and coloniality have created and perpetuated these dynamics, and consider how this current residency at the British Museum may open paths for healing relations between ethnographic museums and Indigenous communities.

        Gustavo Caboco and Holmleigh Primary School

        28 June - 2nd of July

        Holmleigh Primary School and the British Musem

         

        Supported by the British Council, Brazil Footprint and Holmleigh Primary School are participating in the project Strengthening the Threads(Fortalecendo os Fios) by Gustavo Caboco, an artist from the Wapichana Indigenous communities of Amazonia, who is visiting the UK for a residency at the British Museum. Taking Wapichana traditional weaving objects at the Museum as its starting point, the collaboration project focuses on stitching and embroidery as an art form and a way to recover and strengthen our roots. It involves a public lecture at the British Museum (see above), a school assembly with Caboco and a special workshop at the Musem, and drop-in sessions at the school to create the pages of an embroidered book. See info above to join the public lecture, all other events with Holmleigh Primary School are by invite only. Anyone interested in participating for research or training can contact f.cavallo@kent.ac.uk

         

         

        broken image

         

        broken image
      • Amazonia Film Festival

        24 June 2023

        GULBENKIAN ART CENTRE CANTERBURY BOOK HERE  

        broken image
        Introduced by its founder Vanessa Gabriel Robinson, Amazonia Film Festival is back as a part of Brazil Footprint 2023 season. Amazonia Film Festival was created in 2014 and it aims to give an international platform to filmmakers born in the region, amplifying their voice to talk about the challenges faced by all communities living in the Amazonia, such as indigenous, black and riverside communities. The festival wants to show the diversity in the region and the many Amazonias and its daily challenges.
        It is a unique insight into the region through the eyes of some of its most exciting independent filmmakers. In a moment when the world is talking about climate change, climate justice and the future of the Amazon rainforest, it’s time to listen to those that can talk about their home and their local problems using arts to connect globally.
        Films:
        O Reflexo do Lago (Amazon Mirror)
        by Fernando Segtowick, 2020
        No Vazio do Ar (Into the void)
        by Priscilla Brasil, 2022

         

        broken image
      • broken image

        Guardians and Forests:

        risk, art and local knowledge

        A workshop exploring ideas of guardianship and stewardship of borders within forests.

        Thu, 27 Apr 2023 11:00 - 16:00 BST

        University of Manchester

        Stephen Joseph Studio (Room 1.) Manchester M15 6EX United Kingdom  

        Exploring ideas of guardianship and stewardship of borders within forests, this workshop will focus on risk, art, and the agency of local knowledge in defence of rainforests. We will discuss Indigenous art practices that work across these three realms in the Amazon with Artist and Activist Daiara Tukano (via Zoom); we will consider the political agency of photography with Brazilian artist and ecologist Marilene Ribeiro; and we will directly explore tools and strategies for guarding our safe spaces, wherever they might be. This workshop is organised by CLACS, the Centre for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, and is part of the Brazil Footprint 00 2023 public programme. The event is funded by CIDRAL, the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Arts and Languages, which facilitates cross-disciplinary activities and exchanges within the School of Arts, Languages and Cultures, University of Manchester.

        Speakers/Facilitators

        Daiara Tukano, Indigenous artist and activist (via Zoom)

        Francesca Laura Cavallo, Curator and Art Historian, Royal College of Art

        Marilene Ribeiro, Artist and Ecologist 

        An online-only option is available to listen only to the presentation by Daiara Tukano.

        Register HERE for the appropriate type of ticket. 

         

        Image: Above_ ©Daiara Tucano, The Redemption 2022. Below_ ©Marilene Ribeiro from the Open Fire Series 

        broken image

       

       

       

       

      Contact Us

      cavallofrancescalaura@gmail.com

      © 2020. Built with Strikingly.

        Cookie Use
        We use cookies to ensure a smooth browsing experience. By continuing we assume you accept the use of cookies.
        Learn More