In Conversation with Anawana Haloba

8 September 2016
Magazine C&
2 min read
Anawana Haloba, an artist born in Zambia and based in Norway, talks about vanishing cultures in her project for the 32nd Bienal de São Paulo. . Her poetic sound installation titled Close-Up poses questions on the subject of globalization and the loss of cultural diversity. Recorded on Skype, this episode is the first in a new series that Fresh …
<p class="p1">Anawana Haloba, an artist born in Zambia and based in Norway, talks about vanishing cultures in her project for the 32nd Bienal de São Paulo.
</p>
<p class="p1">.
</p>
<p class="p1">Her poetic sound installation titled Close-Up poses questions on the subject of globalization and the loss of cultural diversity. Recorded on Skype, this episode is the first in a new series that Fresh Art International is producing forContemporary And.
</p>
<p class="p1">.
</p>
https://soundcloud.com/freshartinternational/anawana-haloba-on-vanishing-cultures
<p class="p2">From theBiennial website:
Anawana Haloba’s artistic practice is an ongoing investigation process into Zambian social, economic, ideological and cultural post-independence frameworks. Working with performance-based sound and video installations, Haloba creates situations where the material culture of any given place can be probed and reconsidered within the scheme of rapidly shifting contemporary subjectivities. For the 32nd Bienal, Haloba presents Close-Up (2016), an installation with sound elements revolving around salt blocks that, over a period of time, undergo a process of liquefaction. Close-Up makes reference to the bodily fluids of humans, minerals found in landscapes and the historical significance of salt as a means of exchange. The melting and trickling of the salt is a slow, timed, and amplified process that ultimately leads to relief on the one hand and extinction on the other.
</p>
<p class="p3">www.freshartinternational.com
</p>
from
In Conversation

On Ghosts and The Moving Image: Edward George’s Black Atlas

On Exile, Amulets and Circadian Rhythms: Practising Data Healing across Timezones

‘To Treat Process with Care and Intention’: Favour Ritaro Carries Forward Important Curatorial Legacies
from
Sound art

Caribbean Sounds: The Connective Possibilities of Radio

Steve McQueen: The Bassline As Sonic Intelligence
