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Comienza esta tarde con el de Huelva, los congresos provinciales del PSOE andaluz que entre este fin de semana y el que viene van a renovar a cuatro de los ocho secretarios generales. Entre las que se mantienen, María Eugenia Limón, en Huelva. Este fin de semana se celebran también los de Jaén, Granada y Málaga, tres de los que cambian de líder. Además, también este fin de semana, en este caso en Sevilla, el PP reúne a todos sus líderes a nivel nacional para marcar la hoja de ruta de los populares para los próximos años con su reunión Interparlamentaria. Según el PP andaluz, que este encuentro se celebre aquí es un espaldarazo a las políticas de Juanma Moreno al frente de la Junta y de los populares de nuestra comunidad. Adelante Andalucía presenta una ley al parlamento para hacer que los comedores escolares sean públicos y de calidad con cocinas in situ. Dicen que han recibido quejas en esta materia de casi 200 ampas y asociaciones y esperan que sea aprobada por el resto de grupos parlamentarios.En Sevilla se ponen manos a la obra para combatir el virus del Nilo que el año pasado se cobró la vida de 11 personas en Andalucía. Cada año se detecta antes: a las temperaturas suaves del invierno se le une las intensas lluvias. Por eso hoy ya se ha activado el plan de fumigación.Y en nuestra entrevista descubrimos el proyecto HemosVivido 2025.Escuchar audio
Origin of You by Mindy Meng Wang 王萌 and Sui Zhen is a highly personal musical exploration of lived experiences of migration, motherhood, grief and reconnecting with identity. The album uses three central motifs: 空 (Kōng), or Emptiness; 疼 (Téng), or Pain; 气 (Chi), sometimes known as ‘Energy' to explore these stories. Live at The Wheeler Centre, Wang and Zhen came together with host Eugenia Lim to talk about their craft, the origins of their collaboration and the importance of storytelling. This event was recorded on Tuesday 26 March 2024 at The Wheeler Centre.Origin of You is out now via Music in Exile: https://musicinexile.bandcamp.com/ Featured music is ‘Watch My Mum Dance' by Mindy Meng Wang 王萌 and Sui Zhen (Recorded live at The Wheeler Centre)Support the Wheeler Centre: https://www.wheelercentre.com/support-us/donateSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
En esta ocasión te ofrecemos una nueva edición de los Desayunos Informativos de Europa Press Andalucía en colaboración con la Fundación Cajasol y con el patrocinio de Cepsa y Atlantic Copper. Esta cita, enmarcada dentro de un ciclo con todos los presidentes de las diputaciones provinciales de la comunidad, tiene como protagonista a la presidenta de la Diputación de Huelva, María Eugenia Limón, quien ha sido presentada por la alcaldesa de San Juan del Puerto, Rocío Cárdenas. Tras la exposición inicial de la presidenta de la Diputación de Huelva, podremos disfrutar de un coloquio con el delegado de Europa Press en Andalucía, Francisco Morón.
Nos acompañan María Eugenia Limón, presidenta de la Diputación y Concepción Rodríguez, archivera de la misma institución bicentenaria para contarnos la importancia histórica de este aniversario
Viajamos a la Rábida en Huelva con motivo del segundo centenario del nacimiento de la diputación de Huelva. Comenzamos nuestro programa con el cronovisor de Jesús Callejo hablando de Alonso Sánchez, el célebre prenauta que supuestamente ayudó a Colón a descubrir América. Lo hacemos junto a Elías Pérez, cineasta, autor del corto “El prenauta. ¿Qué pasaría si Colón no hubiera llegado el primero?”. Continuamos con el centenario de la diputación. Nos acompañan María Eugenia Limón, presidenta de la diputación y Concepción Rodríguez, archivera de la misma institución bicentenaria. David González Cruz, catedrático de historia de la Universidad de Huelva nos adentra en el momento de la partida de la expedición colombina desde La Rábida. Acabamos con Joan Jordi Escrivá, antiguo guardián del convento franciscano quien nos hablará de esta comunidad religiosa y su papel en América
María Eugenia Limón habla en el programa especial de Julia en la onda desde Huelva sobre los 200 años que celebra la Diputación, así como los retos que tienen por delante y las palabras de la diputada de Vox contra Irene Montero.
Programa completo de Julia en la onda, con Julia Otero. Desde la Diputación Provincial de Huelva con motivo de que el 25 de noviembre de celebra el día de la eliminación de la violencia contra la mujer. Tenemos Mesa de redacción y el catedrático de Geología, Juan Antonio Morales, habla sobre las posibilidades de que ocurra un tsunami en Huelva. Además hablamos con la alcaldesa de Valverde del Camino, Syra Senra y con María Eugenia Limón, presidenta de la Diputación de Huelva. También el orden mundial con Blas Moreno y Eduardo Saldaña y El Gabinete con Carolina Bescansa, Javier Gállego, Arantxa Tirado y Asun Salvador.
“Then we'll get real systemic change,” says Eugenia Lim when talking about making structural changes in the art world that reflect genuine diversity, “but I think we're still just the tip of the iceberg. It's still quite surface, but it's good to be even pushing and talking about these things I think.” At a moment where politics and individuals feel increasingly divided, Lim creates videos, film and installations that look beyond divisiveness, capitalism and exploitation, to forefront the power of collectivity—something she speaks to in our latest podcast series Conflated.This series centres on the ideas of inflation and conflation, linking with a touring exhibition also titled, Conflated. In ways both metaphorical and material, the show looks at ideas of inflation and deflation through creative, environmental, and political ways. And one of the artists in the show is Lim. Lim is an Australian artist of Chinese-Singaporean descent and her work partly explores this by subverting cultural stereotypes in ways both intelligent and very witty. In past works she's taken on invented personas, inhabiting them across multiple videos, performances and sites. Lim is also one of the previous co-directors of the experimental art organisation Aphids, and we talk about one of Aphids's latest performance works EASY RIDERS, which looks at the gig economy and capitalism—and we discuss how worker exploitation is an ongoing concern in Eugenia's work. In addition to her thought-provoking practice, Lim also has co-directed the inaugural Channels Festival, and she was founding editor of the journal Assemble Papers. In our conversation she talks through her latest work with Kyneton locals, an area in regional Victoria, and how her work speaks to collective acts and what this means in a divisive political time like the one we're living. You can also listen back to the first episode of this series with artist Zoë Bastin on conflation, bodies and transformative politics, and the second episode with David Cross on inflatables, experimentation and precarity.With a current showing at ANU School of Art and Design Gallery, NETS Victoria are touring Conflated nationally throughout 2022 and 2023:ANU School of Art and Design Gallery(Canberra ACT)29 September—4 NovemberLogan Art Gallery(Logan QLD)29 July 2023—3 September 2023Swan Hill Regional Art Gallery(Swan Hill VIC)1 October 2023—3 December 2023This series is kindly sponsored by NETS Victoria who are nationally touring Conflated, assisted by the Australian Government's Visions of Australia program and the Victorian Government through Creative Victoria.Produced and presented by Tiarney Miekus, engineering by Patrick Telfer, and music by Mino Peric.
La presidenta de la Diputación de Huelva y alcaldesa de San Bartolomé de la Torre, María Eugenia Limón Bayo, explica en Por fin no es lunes qué ha supuesto para la provincia celebrar nuevamente El Rocío después de dos años parado por la pandemia.
Programa completo de Por fin no es lunes con Jaime Cantizano desde El Rocío en Huelva. Entrevistamos al presidente de la Junta de Andalucía, Juanma Moreno, dos semanas antes de la cita electoral del 19J; conocemos los misterios de Doñana gracias al guardián de El Rocío, Juan Villa; y hablamos de deporte de élite y maternidad con Eva Moral. Además, charlamos con Miguel Poveda y la presidenta de la Diputación de Huelva, María Eugenia Limón Bayo, nos cuenta cómo se ha organizado este año la romería más famosa del mundo.
Listen to ACCA's Artist Educator and Curator of the Education Space Andrew Atchison with artists Ross Coulter, Eugenia Lim and James Nguyen for a discussion about art and working in public space. This program is associated with the Education Space: Creating Art in Public, a hybrid studio, classroom and gallery designed to promote active participation with, and careful consideration of, public art practices and the diverse and inventive approaches artists adopt when creating artwork for public space.
Listen to a panel discussion on Melbourne-based collective APHIDS' new moving-image work 'DESTINY' with artist Eugenia Lim, and worker-performers Cher Tan and Wasay, moderated by Amelia Wallin. 'DESTINY' 2021 is a moving-image work made in collaboration with on-demand or ‘gig economy' workers – rideshare drivers, food delivery riders and cleaners – exploring personal and global experiences of the platform economy.
Programa completo de Julia en la Onda con Carmen Juan. En el Día Internacional de la Eliminación de la Violencia contra la Mujer, nos desplazamos hasta huelga para hablar con la psicóloga de la Asociación Acción Social por la Igualdad, Rocío Romero, y con la informadora del Centro Municipal de Información a la Mujer de la Mancomunidad del Condado de Huelva, Herminia Lobato. También con la presidenta de la Diputación de Huelva, María Eugenia Limón. En "El Gabinete" debatimos sobre la percepción social de la violencia de género. Además, analizamos la "gran renuncia" al trabajo en EE.UU en "El Orden Mundial" y repasamos la actualidad política en clave de humor con Raquel Martos y Pedro Vera
Simon's live report for CNA with Eugenia Lim anchoring.
Since his Tony Award-winning performance as The Emcee in the musical Cabaret, Scottish performer Alan Cumming has been increasingly enamoured of the form, opening his own cabaret bar in New York and now taking charge of the Adelaide Cabaret Festival.Also, we learn about the unifying power of roller derby in the play Ugly Virgins at the Blue Room Theatre in Perth and meet the gig economy workers involved in the new APHIDS theatre work about the hidden cost of convenience, Easy Riders.
Since his Tony Award-winning performance as The Emcee in the musical Cabaret, Scottish performer Alan Cumming has been increasingly enamoured of the form, opening his own cabaret bar in New York and now taking charge of the Adelaide Cabaret Festival. Also, we learn about the unifying power of roller derby in the play Ugly Virgins at the Blue Room Theatre in Perth and meet the gig economy workers involved in the new APHIDS theatre work about the hidden cost of convenience, Easy Riders.
Since his Tony Award-winning performance as The Emcee in the musical Cabaret, Scottish performer Alan Cumming has been increasingly enamoured of the form, opening his own cabaret bar in New York and now taking charge of the Adelaide Cabaret Festival. Also, we learn about the unifying power of roller derby in the play Ugly Virgins at the Blue Room Theatre in Perth and meet the gig economy workers involved in the new APHIDS theatre work about the hidden cost of convenience, Easy Riders.
Simon's live report for CNA with Eugenia Lim anchoring.
Simon's live report from Washington for CNA with Eugenia Lim.
Simon's live report for CNA with anchor Eugenia Lim.
Simon's live report for CNA with anchor Eugenia Lim.
Eugenia Lim chats with us about sitting with time, working on a new project for APHIDS, the prominence of the divisions of labour within the home and across society during lockdown, and observing the community reassessing priorities. Eugenia shares her worries about about hard right politicians using this time to utilise xenophobia and racism to solidify inequity; and her hopes for increasing social justice and curbing the disastrous outcomes of climate change. How Are You Today? is generously supported by the City of Melbourne Arts Grants Program.
Simon's live report for pan-Asian news channel CNA. The presenter is Eugenia Lim.
Simon's live update for pan-Asian TV network CNA. The presenter is Eugenia Lim.
Dive into this thought provoking podcast hosted by artist Eugenia Lim with leading thinkers and advocates from across the fields of labour and industrial relations, gig workers’ rights and the arts. This panel explores working in the digital age, and the impact of the gig economy on our relationships, rights, creativity and bodies. Speakers include Sarah Kaine, Associate Professor, School of Business, UTS; artist and performance maker Roshelle Fong; and former Foodora worker Josh Klooger.
Hosted by Rob, Jess and Lois [segment times in brackets][7:05] Alternative news: COP25 Climate Change Conference in Madrid, updates on Australian bushfires, President of Iraq steps down amid violent protests and drought continues in Indonesia. [7:30] Melinda Liszewski from Sydney-based grassroots movement, Collective Shout, chats about an international campaign against the sexual exploitation of young women on Instagram called #Wakeupinstagram. [7:45] Interview with geographer Helen Jarvis about genocide in Sri Lanka. Helen was a judge at the Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal on Sri Lanka held in Germany 2013 and describes her involvement in this prerecorded conversation. [8:00] Disability and queer rights activist, Jax Jacki Brown, from Drummond Street Services speaks about a new collaboration between Drummond Street Services and the Disability Resources Centre. Jax discusses new developments in their advocacy work that crosses LGBTIQ+ and disability communities. [8:15] Artist and co-director of Aphids, Eugenia Lim, chats about her latest work Easy Riders. This week, Easy Riders is in residency at MPavilion and is open to the public. Eugenia tells us about how the performance piece explores the experiences of workers in the gig economy by featuring direct input from fast food delivery and Uber drivers.
Following the release of Assemble Papers's print edition (#10: ‘Housing’, available all season at MPavilion 2018), the AP team (editor Jana Perkovic with Eugenia Lim, Cat McGauran and Vlad Doudakliev) hosted a series of panel sessions exploring the intersection between the way we experience, design and plan for a lively and equitable city. What have we learnt from apartments we have built in the past? What kind of apartments do we want in the future? What do we know about apartment life in Australia and internationally; about design standards, enforced and common sense; and explore the spectrum of design responses that emerge from both public and private housing projects? Speakers: Mitra Anderson Oliver (urban planner and policy advisor), Quino Holland (Assemble, Fieldwork), Monique Woodward (Wowowa Architecture) and Katherine Sundermann (MGS Architects)
Following the release of Assemble Papers's print edition (#10: ‘Housing’, available all season at MPavilion 2018), the AP team (editor Jana Perkovic with Eugenia Lim, Cat McGauran and Vlad Doudakliev) hosted a series of panel sessions exploring the intersection between the way we experience, design and plan for a lively and equitable city. Panel three: What would an open city look like? What would an open city look like? How will we grow old together? Who has the right to the city—and how can this right be more equally shared and distributed in future? From embedding Indigenous knowledge, culture and connection to place into the DNA of contemporary architecture to design with and for a diverse and ageing population, return and hear from active thinkers working towards more people-centred cities. Speakers: Sarah Lynn Rees (Palawa/Plangermaireener, Indigenous Architecture and Design Victoria, MPavilion, JCB Architects), Jane Caught (Sibling Architecture) and Bree Trevena (Arup)
Following the release of Assemble Papers's print edition (#10: ‘Housing’, available all season at MPavilion 2018), the AP team (editor Jana Perkovic with Eugenia Lim, Cat McGauran and Vlad Doudakliev) hosted a series of panel sessions exploring the intersection between the way we experience, design and plan for a lively and equitable city. Panel four: Music Makes Cities How does music shape the city as a civic force? We surround ourselves with it daily but don’t often think of music as something that leads to more open and democratic planning, policy, education and city systems. Speakers: Andrea Baker (Monash University), Bec Hornsby (3RRR), Helen Marcou (Bakehouse Studios), Sui Zhen and more. — Image: Sydney Opera House under construction, 1966. National Archives of Australia A1500, K1431
How does architecture shape identity? How do artists, architects, power-brokers, nation-states, immigrants and insurgents make and mark territory? In this lecture, artist Eugenia Lim explores the space between the personal and the geopolitical, selfhood and sovereignty. Lim draws from her research, archives and experiences to navigate a subjective journey through architecture, earthworks and islands. Eugenia Lim is an Australian artist of Chinese–Singaporean descent who works across video, performance and installation. In her work, Lim transforms herself into invented fictional personas who traverse through time and cultures to explore how national identities and stereotypes cut, divide and bond our globalised world. Lim’s latest project 'The Australian Ugliness' surveys the role of architecture in marking a society and shaping national identity. The work has been titled after the bestselling book by Robin Boyd, arguably one of Australia’s most prominent architects and Modernists. Boyd’s The Australian Ugliness denounces the conservative, kitsch and decorative tastes of post-war 1950s Australia, warning against parochialism and insularity. In Lim’s project of the same title, she will build upon Boyd’s ideas, transporting them into 21st century Australia. Presented by Abercrombie & Kent, ACCA’s 2018 lecture series, 'Uncommon knowledge: artists on their special interests' gives eight artists a microphone and an hour to speak about topics that inspire their art and thinking. Featuring a trans-generational cast of artists, Uncommon Knowledge brings together elements of history, lifestyle, philosophy, sound studies, sexuality, cultural politics and more, to challenge us to think differently about society and the world around us. https://acca.melbourne/program/uncommon-knowledge-eugenia-lim/ Image: Eugenia Lim, 'The Australian Ugliness' 2018. Courtesy the artist. Photograph: Tom Ross
Episode notes:In this episode, Jake Treacy, an independent curator and Kiron Robinson, an visual artist and photography lecturer, spoke about their recent experiences of visiting several exhibitions in Melbourne. The exhibitions included 'All of Us' at Blindside, New Objectives at Busproject, 'Utopian Tongues' at SEVENTH gallery, and 'David &: Lou Hubbard, Day Art Group, Eugene Carchesio' at Arcade project Space. Jake shared his insightful thoughts on how an art exhibition could decolonise and deconstruct the conventional 'white cube' and institutional system. For this matter, he talked about his own experiences of working as an independent curator to create inclusive and community relevant exhibitions. Whereas, Kiron shared his questions and thoughts about the ideas about collaboration between visual artists. We joined him and discussed several recent collaborative art works and exhibitions.TWO SPEAKERS:Jake TreacyJake can be followed at Instagram: @jakeadamtreacyKiron Robinsonwww.kiron-robinson.com/THE EXHIBITIONS & ARTISTS MENTIONED BY JAKEBlindside : https://www.blindside.org.auEXHIBITION: All of Us, 13-29 Sep 2018https://www.blindside.org.au/all-of-usJessica Clark, CURATORhttps://www.jessicaamyclark.comJustine Youssef, ARTISThttp://www.antidote.org.au/artists/justine-youssef/Liam Benson, ARTISThttp://www.liambenson.netAdorned - NSW performance grouphttps://riversideparramatta.com.au/show/adorned-wisdom-memory-and-song/ New objectives. at Busproject by Lee Shan Lunhttps://busprojects.org.au/program/new-objectivesUtopian Tongues at Seventh Galleryhttp://seventhgallery.org/project/utopian-tongues/Tane Andrews, ARTISThttp://www.taneandrews.comWork title: With you beside me comes the knowledge of my deathKaren Casey, ARTISThttp://www.karencasey.com.au/projectsTeresa Hsieh, ARTISThttp://www.teresahsieh.com‘Closed to the public’ the collaborative work by Amy Spiers and Catherine Ryan, that I mentionedhttp://www.amyspiers.com.au/portfolio/closed-to-the-public-protecting-space/Felix Gonzalez-Torres“Untitled’, 1991. The images of pillows on billboards.https://www.moma.org/explore/inside_out/2012/04/04/printout-felix-gonzalez-torres/THE EXHIBITIONS & ARTISTS MENTIONED BY KIRONFive Wallswww.fivewalls.com.auArcadeproject.space‘David &: Lou Hubbard, Uday Arts Group, Eugene Carchesio’, 29 August - 15 Septemberhttp://www.arcadeproject.space/david-sequeira/david-lou-hubbard-uday-arts-group-eugene-carchesio/Sarah Scout Presents‘The Waiting Room’, 15 September to 13 October 2018Kate Daw and Steward Russellhttps://www.sarahscoutpresents.com/web/the-waiting-room-kate-daw-and-stewart-russell/THE EXHIBITIONS & ARTISTS SPOKEN BY MEEugenia Limhttp://www.eugenialim.com/?portfolio=the-australian-uglinessJAKE & KIRON'S UPCOMING PROJECTSJake and Kiron’s upcoming events:Jake will deliver a speech in Curatorial Intensive at Buxton ContemporaryBuxtoncontemporary.comhttps://pgav.org.au/2018-Curatorial-Intensive~1171Looking But Not Seeing curated by Kiron open till November 4 atBennett Gallery, Benalla Art Gallery http://www.benallaartgallery.com.au/exhibitionsA simple soup dinner and a bottle of red are shared with Kiron and Jake after the recording.
Join artists Gabrielle De Vietri, Hanna Brontë and Eugenia Lim to talk video art and challenging provocations in the spheres of identity, immigration, race, nationalism and politics. From exploring issues of gender and racial identity through the lens of hip-hop aesthetics to deconstructing the nature of globalisation and economics through video and performance, the artists will discuss their own practice in contemporary video art and film, and what excites them about the form's potential for political expression and social commentary.
In Episode 4, Drew Pettifer speaks to artist Eugenia Lim, academic Carolyn D’Cruz and curator Paola Balla about the complexities of intersectional feminism. Eugenia Lim works across video, performance and installation. She is interested in how nationalism and stereotypes are formed, inventing personas to explore the tensions between alienation and belonging in a globalised world. Listen now: bit.ly/fieldwork_eugenialim More info: http://fieldworkpodcast.com.au/ Subscribe via Apple Podcasts and Stitcher. FIELD WORK is produced by Channon Goodwin, Drew Pettifer, and supported by Bus Projects with funding from Copyright Agency Cultural Fund. Audio production, editing and mixing by Bec Fary. FIELD WORK theme music is by Martin King and graphic design is by Lachlan Siu.