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From the Archives at The Mosaic Rooms

Lectures, readings and conversations from The Mosaic Rooms’ archive, monthly on Radio AlHara.

Over the next few months, we’re digging through our recorded archives and sharing some of the voices that have echoed inside our rooms. As we step into a short pause and a moment of transformation, we want to celebrate all that has come before this next chapter. We stay connected on the airwaves.

Streaming on Spotify and Apple Podcast

Mixing by Justin Tam
Graphic design by Rand Raid
Hosted on Acast

Reading List

Samia Henni shares a reading list for her exhibition Performing Colonial Toxicity, currently on at The Mosaic Rooms.

Books

A Desert Named Peace: The Violence of France’s Empire in the Algerian Sahara, 1844-1902 by Benjamin Claude Brower
. Architecture of Counterrevolution: The French Army in Northern Algeria by Samia Henni
Colonial Toxicity: Rehearsing French Radioactive Architecture and Landscape in the Sahara by Samia Henni Order
. Decolonizing Memory: Algeria and the Politics of Testimony by Jill Jarvis
Deserts Are Not Empty, edited by Samia Henni Order
. Entangled Geographies: Empire and Technopolitics in the Global Cold War, edited by Gabrielle Hecht
. Essais nucléaires français: L’héritage empoisonné  by Bruno Barrillot
. Histoire secrète de la bombe atomique française by André Bendjebbar
. Les irradiés de Béryl : L’essai nucléaire français non contrôlé by Louis Bulidon
. Les irradiés de la république: Les victimes des essais nucléaires français prennent la parole by Bruno Barrillot
. Les vétérans des essais nucléaires français au Sahara, 1960-1966 by Christine Chanton
Manual for a Future Desert, Edited by Ida Soulard, Abinadi Meza & Bassam El Baroni
. Sahara: a Thousand Paths into the Future, edited by Kateryna Botanova, Yarri Kamara, and Quinn Latimer
The Arid Lands: History, Power, Knowledge by Diana K. Davis
The Radiance of France: Nuclear Power and National Identity after World War II by Gabrielle Hecht
. The Scramble for African Oil: Oppression, Corruption and War for Control of Africa’s Natural Resources by Douglas A. Yates
. Untapped: The Scramble for Africa’s Oil by John Ghazvinian
. Ware Zones, edited by Samia Henni

Films

. At(h)ome directed by Élisabeth Leuvrey, Les Ecrans du large, 2013
. Vent de Sable; Le Sahara des essais nucleaire (Sandstorm: The Sahara of the Nuclear Tests), directed by Larbi Benchiha, 2008

Bookshop Recommendations for Holidays

In the shade of the sun

The Mosaic Rooms presents a reading list for the group exhibition In the shade of the sun, contemplating the relationship between politics and aesthetics by an exciting new generation of Palestinian artists. The exhibition comprises new multimedia installations by artists Mona BenyaminXaytun Ennasr and Dina Mimi as well as a new sonic performance commission by Makimakkuk.

Reading List:

. “Afro, Indigenous, and Palestinian Futurisms: Writing Across Space and Time” by Marya Hannun, in ArabLit & ArabLit Quarterly
. “A Tale of Two Pills” by Rouzbeh Shadpey, in Decolonial Hacker
. “Being in the Negative: An Interview with Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme”, by Amal Issa
. Between the Material and the Possible: Infrastructural Re-examination and Speculation in Art by Bassam El BaroniOrder
. The Book of Disappearance  by Ibtisam Azem
. The Crime of Nationalism: Britain, Palestine, and Nation-Building on the Fringe of Empire by Matthew Kraig Kelly Order
. “Decolonizing [in the] future: scenes of Palestinian temporality” by Nayrouz Abu Hartoum, in Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography
. Investigative Aesthetics: Conflicts and Commons in the Politics of Truth by Matthew Fuller & Eyal Weizman Order
Minor Detail by Adania Shibli Order
Palestine +100: Stories from a Century After the Nakba, edited by Basma Ghalayini Order
. Palestine Underground (short documentary) by Boiler Room
Palestinian Music and Song: Expression and Resistance since 1990, edited by Moslih Kanaaneh, Stig-Magnus Thorsèn, Heather Bursheh, and David A. McDonald Order
Psychopolitics: Neoliberalism and New Technologies of Power by Byung-Chul Han Order
. Queer Palestine and the Empire of Critique by Sa’ed Atshan Order
. Reworlding Ramallah, edited by Callum Copley Order
. “Smiling as an act of resistance in Occupied Palestine” by Mahmoud Soliman, in ROAR Magazine
The Secret Life of Saeed: The Pessoptimist by Emile Habiby
These Olive Trees by Aya Ganameh Order
. “Women Reflected in their Own History”, by L, in e-flux

Makimakkuk UK Tour

The Mosaic Rooms is happy to welcome independent singer-songwriter, MC, DJ and electronic music maker Makimakkuk, for the group exhibition, In the shade of the sun, contemplating the relationship between politics and aesthetics by an exciting new generation of Palestinian artists. As part of the exhibition, Makimakkuk will perform a newly commissioned sound work at the opening of the exhibition. This multi-layered work will sonically reflect on identity, colonisation, war, love and relationships which will be in the form of electronic music, sound design, spoken word, rapping and singing. Following the exhibition opening, Makimakkuk will embark on a UK tour, with performances at De La Warr Pavilion and as part of Another Sky Festival, at Cafe Oto.

Full Programme:

. Tuesday 5 September, 6pm
The Mosaic Rooms, London

. Friday 8 September, 7pm
De La Warr Pavillion, Bexhill-on-Sea
Book tickets and more details here

. Saturday 30 September, 9pm
Cafe Oto, London

 

Image: Makimakkuk at AL Festival 2022. Photo by Montacruz Foto.

Activities for Children over the Summer Holidays

During the summer holidays, The Mosaic Rooms is open and offers multiple family friendly events!

Here is this summer’s program for you and your young ones to enjoy :
Every week Tuesday–Sunday, 11am–6pm

Outdoor Play Commission: Come and play with RESOLVE Collective’s Tools for Solidarity in the gallery’s garden. Open Tuesday to Sunday from 11am-6pm with play worker Zareen who’s around to play on Saturdays!

Lesson Plan Activities (Lesson Plans are self-led play guides for Tools for Solidarity by RESOLVE Collective, with contributions by a wider artist ecology. Pick up your Lesson Plan in our garden, or download, fold and print your zines with links below.)
‘You Draw My Hum’:
British-Iranian artist Nia Fekri shares how to compose and visualise sounds. Get ready for an exciting Sound-hunting adventure and explore the world of sounds. Use this lesson plan with a friend, and make music with drawings using pens, paper and everyday materials. DOWNLOAD

Yalla Seeding‘:
Create your own seed balls using clay, compost, and wildflower seeds! In July, the ‘NURTURE?’ tool of Tools for Solidarity has been activated by Palestinian artist Mohammad Saleh, whose work incorporates seed bombs. In this lesson plan, Saleh invites you to learn about his work in Palestine and the practice of seed bombing. Use this lesson plan to create your own seed balls using clay, compost, and wildflower seeds. DOWNLOAD

Sensory Play: Discover the gallery through senses during Sensory Play, every Wednesday from 11am to 2pm. Let your children explore our wonderful collection of sensory objects. Find soft, colourful objects scattered around the gallery which are inspired by The Mosaic Rooms’ spaces and surroundings.

Squish Station: Every Sunday, you can find Squish Station; an interactive clay-play area in our bookshop. Sit down, squish, and create with clay!

Upcoming family events

  • Saturday 16 September, 2–4pm: Lesson Plan Workshop by STUART (Details to be announced soon)
  • Saturday 14 October, 2–4pm: Lesson Plan Workshop by Collective Space Black (Details to be announced soon)

Screening: Life on the CAPS trilogy by Meriem Bennani

Coinciding with Refugee Week, The Mosaic Rooms have selected to screen Meriem Bennani’s science fiction trilogy Life on the CAPS (2018-2022) (Party on the CAPS, Guided Tour of a Spill and Life on the CAPS) as part of Brixton Community Cinema’s summer programme. In the context of the growing anti-migrant rhetoric and the ever-expanding hostile environment in the UK, we felt that Meriem’s films offer timely reflections on immigration, surveillance, border and state control, but above all these films also carve out space for humour, resistance, resilience and joy. We hope Meriem’s work inspires the Brixton Community Cinema audience with its abundance of joy, humorous approach to the world and its capacity to take us out with a visionary, multidisciplinary aesthetic into spaces of future thinking and collective liberation.

Tuesday, June 20, 2023 7:30pm BST
Atlantic Road Cinema

Book tickets and details about the films and screenings here

Presse Books Fair

Book tickets below for this off-site event.

The Mosaic Rooms Bookshop will be participating in this year’s Presse Books Fair organised by Forma, on Saturday 17 June, from 11am.

Presse Books Fair is a free one-day festival at FormaHQ bringing together over 30 independent publishers and artists, workshops, a live zine assemblage, talks, performances, readings and more. One day to celebrate independent publishing in all its configurations, make new connections and give a platform to new practitioners in art publishing.

With publishing from Anamot Press, Art Monthly, AQNB, Banner Repeater, Belmacz, Bricks from the Kiln, Book Works, Bronze Age, Capricious Publishing, Canal, Chan Magazine, Common Threads Press, Cool Moist Books, Decadence Comics, Dominic Murray, Drawing Room, Fieldnotes, Flatness, Forma, Good Press, InOtherWords, Lolli Editions, Marzipan, Matt’s Gallery, Monitor Books, Montez Press, The Mosaic Rooms, Nieves, Onomatopee, Pagemasters, Pilot Press, Prototype Publishing, Rat Zine, Shanzhai Lyric, South London Gallery Bookshop, Southwark Park Galleries, Sticky Fingers Publishing, Strange Attractor Press, Supporting Material, Think Big Read Library, TLTRPreß, Tom Pope, Worms Magazine.

The full programme includes:
Garden Cyanotype workshop with Tom Pope
Q&A with AQNB’s Steph Kretowicz and Jared Davis Performance by Fer Boyd & Madeleine Stack
A Perfect Sentence excerpts read by Oliver Frank Chanarin Q&A with Think Big, Read Library
STRIKE live zine assemblage with Forma & contributors
& more to be announced soon

Forma will launch a new collaborative publication, ‘STRIKE’, inspired by DIY publishing and deconstructed book making, that will activate the garden through a live ‘assemblage’.
Instead of a commission or stall fee, tables are offered for free to invite both emerging and established practitioners in art publishing. Publishers who were unable to join in person were invited to send books to be sold at the Forma stall, with 40% of proceeds going towards the programming.
When booking your ticket, please consider making a donation to support the programming and overall fair costs.
Access information

The fair will be situated on the ground floor with a wheelchair accessible toilet. Peveril Gardens is located on the rooftop with a lift available on request.

Book tickets
Free entry with no booking required
A suggested donation of £5 will support the programming and artist fees

Tools for Solidarity

RESOLVE collective present a selection of readings, accompanying their outdoor play installation, Tools for Solidarity, at The Mosaic Rooms, that inform their practice and research interests.

Reading List:

Informative Readings:

General

. Radical Help: How we can remake the relationships between us and revolutionise the welfare state by Hilary Cottam
. Maintenance & Care by Shannon Mattern
. Scale as Problem, Architecture as Trap by Adrian Lahoud
. Why Materials Matter: Responsible Design for a Better World by Septal Solanki
. My Soul Has Grown Deep: Black Art from the American South, edited by Cheryl Finley, Randall R. Griffey, Amelia Peck, and Darryl Pinckney
. Architecture of Appropriation: Squatting as Spacial Practice, edited by René Boer, Marina Otero Verzier, Katía Truijen
. Make Some Space: Tuning Into Total Refreshment Centre by Emma Warren
. EN MAS’: Carnival and Performance Art of the Caribbean, edited by Clarie Tancons and Krista Thompson
. “We are in a time of new suns” by adrienne maree brown

Tools / Environment

. Tools: Making Things Around the World by Hubert Comte
. Gesture and Speech: André Leroi-Gourhan’s theory of the co-evolution of manual and intellectual activities by Mary Copple
. Thinking Like A Mall: Environmental Philosophy After The End of Nature by Steven Vogel
. “A Future Named ‘Ayiti’: Thinking Decolonial Ecologies from the Caribbean World” by Malcom Ferdinand, in The Funambulist Magazine, Issue 35: Decolonial Ecologies
. “Novel and History, Plot and Plantation” by Sylvia Wynter

Institution

. Institutional Ethnography as Practice, edited by Dorothy E. Smith
. The Black Skyscraper: Architecture and the Perception of Race by Adrienne Brown
. “The Institution as an Ideology” by Yazan Khalili
. “Plantation Futures” by Katherine McKitterick
. “Complete and Austere Institutions”, in Discipline & Punish: The Birth of the Prison by Michel Foucault

Some of our selected publications:

. In The Margins: The Spatial Influence of the Caribbean Diaspora
. The Institute, in BREAK // LINE
. Going Banana, Becoming Plantain, in The Funambulist, Issue 31: Politics of Food
. Deconstructing Architectures of Separation, in Archifutures Vol.5: Apocalypse
. RESOLVE Het Nieuwe Instituut Interview: Infrastructural Institutions
. What If We Turned On Terms?
. The Fold: Reading Artefacts of Institutional Topology, in Ardeth, Issue #8
. A Collective Resolve, in Stuart Papers, Issue 0

The Ecology:

. Skin Deep – Is This The End?
. Stuart Archives – Floating Margins
. Sound x Advice – Now You Kno w
. OOMK Issue 6
. The Funambulist Issue 46: Questioning Our Solidarities
. Emma Warren – Steam Down: or how things began
. ACV Magazine – Growth
. AFTERPARTI – Issue 1: For The Love of Power
. EYESORE Magazine Issue 5
. Khidr Collective Issue 4: Water

Job Opportunity

We are looking to welcome a Creative Learning Coordinator to our team at The Mosaic Rooms.

Type: Part-Time (1 year fixed term, with possibility for review after this period)
Hours: 10am-6pm, 4 days a week (some flexible hours and weekend work may be required)
Salary: £25,000 per year
Location: London
Deadline: Midnight Wednesday 26 April 2023

About the role:

As Creative Learning Coordinator, you will be responsible for contributing to the successful delivery of The Mosaic Rooms’ creative learning programme. Working closely with the Creative Learning Curator, you will help realise our ambitious and exciting projects through your excellent administrative, organisational, and communication skills.

This is an excellent opportunity for a dedicated and proactive candidate who is passionate about connecting a wide range of audiences to our cultural offer. The role offers the chance to get involved in this growing and innovative creative programme, and help develop and drive it forward. Though initially a one year fixed term contract, there is possibility for review after this period.

You should have experience of working with a wide range of audiences, helping to deliver high quality arts activities that connect and engage them. Our main activities are currently aimed at children and young people through our work with secondary schools, our youth collective and family programming. You should be passionate about creating and sharing our gallery programme and vision with a diverse public.

To apply please send a CV and covering letter to contact@mosaicrooms.org with the Subject: Application Learning Coordinator 2023

Job Description

Younger Reading List

The Mosaic Rooms presents a reading list for younger readers:

  • One Home: Eighteen Stories of Hope by Young Activists by Hiba Noor Khan and Rachael Dean Order
  • Eco Girl by Ken Wilson-Marx Order
  • The Wall by William Sutcliffe Order
  • Feelings | المشاعر, illustrated by Bahaa Eldeen El Zayat Order
  • The Weather | الجو, illustrated by Omar Hossein Order
  • The Touch & Feel Book | الملمس, illustrated by Aya Marzouk Order
  • The Habitat | الطبيعة, illustrated by Aliaa Aly Order
  • Toothbrush and other plays: A collection of 30 five-minute plays created and performed by Palestinian children, edited by Nick Bilbrough Order
  • We Have a Dream: Meet 30 Young Indigenous People and People of Colour protecting the Planet by Dr Mya-Rose Craig Order
  • The Queendom of Colours: A story by Seenaryo children Order
  • Chicken in the Kitchen by Nnedi Okorafor Order
  • Code Name: Butterfly by Ahlam Bsharat Order
  • The Jasmine Sneeze by Nadine Kaadan Order
  • A is for Activist by Innosanto Nagara Order
  • Counting on Community by Innosanto Nagara Order
  • Together by Mona Damluji and Innosanto Nagara Order
  • The Activism Issue! A zine by Seed Magazeen Order
  • The Tree Issue! A zine by Seed Magazeen Order
  • The Cities Issue! A zine by Seed Magazeen Order
  • The Baobab’s Return by DAAR
  • The Green Rebel activity book by Frances Evans Order
  • You are the Color, written by Rifk Ebeid and illustrated by Noor Alshalabi
  • Baba, What Does My Name Mean?, written by Rifk Ebeid and illustrated by Lamaa Jawhari

The Mosaic Rooms Young Collective: Shall We Sit Together?

This year, we continue to support young people aged 15-20 to encounter the visual arts and learn new ways to consider, discuss and produce work as a collective through The Mosaic Rooms Young Collective project.

Artist collective Febrik deliver monthly sessions throughout 2023 (between 14 March12 November 2023) with a group of young people from local charity New Citizens’ Gateway. Collaboration between the young people and artists has been the starting point for discussion, thinking and making. The collaborative sessions introduce a series of methods and themes such as ‘collaboration’, ‘co-production’, ‘solidarity’ and ‘resistance’. The group considers questions including Why and how do we collaborate, for what purposes? How do we operate collectively, and who do we invite to work with us?

This project runs in tandem with a sister project by De La Warr Pavilion in East Sussex. The two groups from De La Warr Pavillion and The Mosaic Rooms will meet one another online, and in person if possible. The final public event will be designed by the group and will invite a wide audience.

Febrik is a not-for-profit collaborative platform for participatory art and design research projects with practicing architects, designers and artists active in the Middle East and the UK. Febrik’s main area of concern lies in the dynamics and practices of public spaces in relation to social and urban change; in specific in relation to negotiations of right of space within spaces of refuge of previously unrepresented groups such as children and women. They focus on the use of art-and-design-based research methodologies and processes (architecture/art/film/photography/text) to enhance community participation and action and to develop propositional thinking with regards to the immediate social and physical environment. Through a series of project (primarily in Palestinian Refugee Camps in the Middle East and more recently in marginal housing estates in London) Febrik has developed a series of research and design projects exploring ideas of the social playground, as public multi-functional and intergenerational spaces enabling spatial and temporal negotiations and overlaps in appropriation of previously unrepresented groups. 

New Citizen’s Gateway works to promote the wellbeing of young asylum seekers and refugees in London.


Young Collective 2022 with artist Nia Fekri

In 2022 the group worked with artist Nia Fekri to take on a multidisciplinary approach in collaborative storytelling. Through speculative exercises, the participants were invited to create interweaving narratives, intersecting worlds and hybrid characters. The collective also received guidance and support on routes to further knowledge and education from IntoUniversity. The project included a paid opportunity to organise the public launch of the project at The Mosaic Rooms. This is a partnership project with New Citizen’s Gateway.

Watch the video below featuring interviews with artist Nia Fekri and the incredible young people of the collective:

 

Creative Learning

This Spring, we continue to take long standing partnerships and build projects and sessions which offer inspiration, creative language development, skills and knowledge. We are led by the children and families we collaborate with, we learn through sensory exploration, and we nurture solidarity with others around the UK and internationally. Across this year’s projects we continue our aim to challenge dominant narratives and invite reflection and participation. Read on for what we have planned for children and families this Spring. 

You can find Squish Station; a new interactive clay-play area in our bookshop every Sunday. Researcher and gallery-based educator, Dena Bagi, has created prompts to help guide an interaction with clay. Dena is interested in how clay can connect us with our bodies, strengthening our innate relationship with the earth. She believes touching clay can help us become mindful, or connected, to feel better in a fast-paced — and sometimes scary — world. Sit down, squish, and create with clay. Leave your creations behind so that they can sit alongside those made by others and inspire the next people that come along. Designed for children aged 4-11, but suitable for all.

RESOLVE Collectivewill create a new outdoor commission, as part of our annual family play commission. Collaborating with young people from Earl’s Court Youth Club, local families through public workshops, and school children in Palestine, the collective will present Tools for Solidarity, a play installation in our garden which will change through experimental and radical constructive play. RESOLVE Collective will explore what it means to make solidarity “tangible,” providing a platform to produce new knowledge and ideas, whilst collaborating to help build resilience in communities. Look out for their Spring workshop on 31 May – tickets released soon!

Sarah Marsh joins us to collaborate with children and families to build a picture of the gallery’s own “sensory language”. As a collective, we will select a colour palette that we feel matches the gallery spaces, and we will enjoy different textures and smells that enhance our experience of being with one another at The Mosaic Rooms. Together we will create our own collection of multi-sensory objects; inspired by children, for all to enjoy! This project launches on 25th March and is currently sold out but keep an eye out for updates and you can visit the gallery and play with the objects every day.

Our Play Area is free every day and open to all. We have curated a range of materials to suit children of all ages, including bright, stimulating, and thought-provoking objects, as well as plenty of materials for drawing and colouring. By using simple prompts and fun, open-ended materials in the Play Area, we invite children to creatively engage with ideas and themes from our current exhibition. 

If you have any questions about your visit to The Mosaic Rooms, please email learning@mosaicrooms.org 

Constellations of Multiple Wishes

Reading List:

. freedom is invidisible by KURS (Miloš Miletic and Mirjana Radovanovic) Order
. Algiers, Third World Capital by Elaine Mokhtefi Order
. The Common Wind: Afro-American Currents in the Age of the Haitian Revolution by Julius S. Scott Order
. Concrete Utopianism: The Politics of Temporality and Solidarity by Gary Wilder Order
. The Darker Nations: A People’s History of the Third World by Vijay Prashad Order
. Feminism Without Borders: Decolonizing Theory, Practicing Solidarity by Chandra Talpade Mohanty Order
. Filmmakers of the World, Unite!, edited by Tereza Stejskalová
. Final Frontiers: Science Fiction & Techno-Science in Non-Aligned India by Upamanyu Pablo Mukherjee
. Friendship of Nations: Polish Shi’ite Showbiz by Slavs and Tatars Order
. From Scratch: Albanian Summer Picaresque, edited by Pykë-Presje Order
. From the Tricontinental to the Global South: Race, Radicalism, and Transnational Solidarity by Anne Garland Mahler Order
. Free Jazz Communism, edited by Sezgin Boynik and Taneli Viitahuhta Order
. Orientalism by Edward W. Said Order
. Parapolitics: Cultural Freedom and the Cold War, edited by Anselm Franke, Nida Ghouse, Paz Guevara, and Antonia Majaca Order
. Partisan Ruptures: Self-Management, Market Reform and the Spectre of Socialist Yugoslavia by Gal Kirn Order
. Past Disquiet: Artists, International Solidarity and Museums in Exile, edited by Kristine Khouri & Rasha Salti Order
. Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Paulo Freire Order
. The Poorer Nations: A Possible History of the Global South by Vijay Prashad Order
. Potential History: Unlearning Imperialism by Ariella Aïsha Azoulay Order
. The Railway: An Adventure in Construction, edited by E. P. Thompson
. Red Africa: Affective Communities and the Cold War, edited by Mark Nash Order
. Revolution in the Air: Sixties Radicals Turn to Lenin, Mao and Che by Max Elbaum Order
. Self-Defense: A Philosophy of Violence by Elsa Dorlin Order
. Sisters! Making Films, Doing Politics by Petra Bauer Order
. Southern Constellations: The Poetics of the Non-Aligned PDF
. The Wretched of the Earth by Frantz Fanon Order
. Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe Order

Books for Earthquake Disaster Relief

In light of the devastating earthquake in Afghanistan, its thousands of victims and still unfolding implications on the lives of our friends and everyone in the affected regions, we are organising a small fundraiser.

We will donate all the proceeds of our online and in gallery sales of Flowers of Palestine books and prints as well as the Advice for Writers poster to disaster relief charities.

If you can, please consider supporting the fundraiser; running from 14 October to 14 November 2023. Sending solidarity!

The bookshop is open Tue-Sun 11-6. You can also browse online on www.mosaicrooms.org/shop.

Click here to directly purchase Flowers of Palestine (Book)
Click here to directly purchase Flowers of Palestine (Prints)
Click here to directly purchase Advice for Writers (Poster)

Reading Groups

Please RSVP to individual reading groups by email. Note spaces are limited, so only book if you are sure to participate.

As part of the exhibition Reverse Shot by Marwa Arsanios we have designed a reading room as a space for thinking collectively. Visitors are invited to self-organise gatherings and readings activating the space as a site of connection and organising. Arsanios has curated a selection of books ranging from political to philosophical that seek to initiate discussion around questions of radical ecology. Taking an intersectional approach, the reading room offers a site for alternative visions to mainstream ideologies relating to ecology, politics, anarchism, and feminism.

If you would like to organise a participatory gathering in the reading room in January, please write to contact@mosaicroonms.org

This page is regularly updated, please stay tuned for more reading groups. 

 

. Decolonising Botany: Reading Group
Sunday 22 January, 2-4pm

Join members of Decolonising Botany working group for this reading room session, to explore how expanded modes of reading can be acts of destabilising knowledge production, opening multiple ways of listening and witnessing collectively. This session proposes listening as reading, asking how bodies can be witness to multiple forms of knowledge and events arising through the encounter with these lands and legacies of extraction, collective decolonial struggle and cultural practices.

Ayesha Keshani, Youngsook Choi and Laura Burns will guide a collective listening of a text from Taey Iaho and three recordings: Vietnamese folk sounds from Tuan Mami’s living installation project Immigrating Garden, Ayesha Keshani’s field recording of an oil palm plantation in Malaysia, Cian Dayrit’s summoning of key vocabulary of the bungkalan collective farming movement in the Philippines. We will bring our communal practice into form through a simple collective embroidery, tracing sound as material, and bodies and texture-as-text as we go.

Decolonising Botany explores alternative methodologies, counter-perspectives and experimental collaboration with the other-than-human, defining decolonising works not as subject matters but as methodological matters, with a focus on challenging and complicating the colonial system of knowledge production around nature, science, ecology and migration. The working group members are Laura Burns, Youngsook Choi, Cian Dayrit, Ayesha Keshani, Taey Iohe, Tuan Mami and Helen Pritchard.

Please RSVP to contact@mosaicrooms.org to book your place.

 

. Law & Theory Pop-up Reading+Viewing Group
Wednesday 23 November, 4-6pm

Join us for a reading+viewing group meeting, the first in a series of events led by Helene Kazan as Artist in Residence at The Westminster Law and Theory Lab, Westminster Law School, University of Westminster, during 2022-23.

During her residency at the Law and Theory Lab, Kazan will continue to work on her interdisciplinary film installation series Frame of Accountability, a multimedia project that engages feminist, decolonial, critical-legal and artistic practice and theory to explore the possibilities of dismantling the effects of law as a form of structural violence.

Kazan’s film, (Un)Touching Ground (2022), which is part of the Frame of Accountability series, is being screened at The Mosaic Rooms on 29 November, 7pm, followed by a conversation between Helene Kazan and Marwa Arsanios. More details here.

The pop-up reading+viewing group organised by the Westminster Law and Theory Lab on 23 November will explore the themes of law, land, and colonial appropriation that Kazan and Arsanios share.

Reading: ‘Introduction’ of Brenna Bhandar, Colonial Lives of Property: Law, Land, and Racial Regimes of Ownership. Durham: Duke University Press Books, 2018. (link to text is in the Eventbrite invite)

Booking: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/law-theory-pop-up-readingviewing-group-with-helene-kazan-mosaic-rooms-tickets-457013087447

 

. B|TW|N THE L|AV|S: A Critical De/Compost Reading Group #4 Anna Tsing, “The Forest of Collaborations”
Wednesday 16 November, 4-6pm

Join artist Becky Lyon/ ELASTIC FICTION and researcher Georgia Perkins for the fourth B|T|W||N THE L|AV|S reading group, which turns to Anna Tsing’s essay on ‘The Forest of Collaborations,’ on the model of community-managed forests in Indonesia. Tsing offers us “friction” as a tool to assess the sticky complexities of “community-based” collaboration; different agendas across common projects; “productive confusion” and “awkward coalescence”. The reading traces some of her key ideas on the politics of difference to survival in her well known chapter ‘Contamination as Collaboration,’ in The Mushroom at the End of the World (2015).

B|TW|N THE L|AV|S: A Critical De/Compost Reading Group is a series compiled by artist Becky Lyon/ ELASTIC FICTION and researcher Georgia Perkins engaging with processes of decay, decomposition, fermentation and rot to explore what might be possible, and what might emerge in states and times of “ruin”. We navigate these ideas from a range of texts spanning queer feminist materialisms, indigenous cosmologies, more-than-human phenomenology and science fiction. In each session, we will collectively activate methodological tools proposed by the authors in order to sensorially engage with their texts. This group is compiled as a form of research and insight for the forthcoming book chapter, ‘Erasing Decomposition, composting as counter-craft: the rotten log as a site of co-flourishing, a recalcitrant ecology and site of counter-capitalist reproduction.’

Please RSVP to beckyl.lyon@googlemail.com to book your place and receive the reading.

 

. Battle Cry:  A Poetry Reading
Sunday 13 November, 4-6pm

Join artist and publisher Shahrzad Kamel in reading selections of Forugh Farrokhzad’s first poetry collection, Captive, published in 1955 in Tehran; revealing that her work, written sixty years ago, remains relevant and inspirational even today.

Farrokhzad’s poems will be read in Farsi and English and participants are also encouraged to share their own poems.

Please RSVP to contact@mosaicrooms.org to book your place.

 

 

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