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Writing Desire

Ursula Biemann

2000 00:25:00 SwitzerlandEnglishColorStereo4:3Hi8 video

Description

"Ursula Biemann’s Writing Desire is a video essay on the new dream screen of the Internet and how it impacts on the global circulation of women’s bodies from the third world to the first world. Although under-age Philippine 'pen pals' and post-Soviet mail-order brides have been part of the transnational exchange of sex in the post-colonial and post-Cold War marketplace of desire before the digital age, the Internet has accelerated these transactions. Biemann provides her viewers with a thoughtful meditation on the obvious political, economic and gender inequalities of these exchanges by simulating the gaze of the Internet shopper looking for the imagined docile, traditional, pre-feminist, but Web-savvy mate. Writing Desire delights in implicating the viewer in the new voyeurism and sexual consumerism of the Web. However, it never fails to challenge pat assumptions about the impossibility for resistance and the absolute victimization of women who dare to venture out of the third world and onto the Internet to look for that very obscure object of desire promised by the men of the West. This film will promote lively discussion on third world women, the sex industry, mail order brides, racism and feminist backlashes in the West, and on women’s sexuality, desire, and new technologies." --Gina Marchetti, Ithaca College

About Ursula Biemann

Ursula Biemann is an artist, writer, and video essayist. Her videos address the interdisciplinary-discursive ecotone of geology and climatology merged with human politics and history. Engaging in the political ecology of oil, forest, ice and water, the artist interweaves vast cinematic landscapes with documentary footage, SF poetry, creative imaging and scientific findings to explore a changing planetary reality.

Her artistic practice is strongly research-oriented and involves fieldwork in remote locations, which has recently taken her to the Amazon, the Upper Nile and the Arctic region. She works the findings into multi-layered videos by connecting the micro-perspectives on the ground with a theoretical macro level, proposing a reflexive exploration of planetary and videographic organization.

Biemann’s pluralistic practice spans a range of media including speculative video, ethnographic practice, interview, text, cartography, probes and scientific materials. Her work also adopts the form of publications, lectures, and curatorial as well as collaborative research projects. She is a member of the World of Matter collective multi-media project on resource ecologies.

Her earlier writing and experimental video work focused on migration, mobility, technology and gender. She also made space and mobility her prime category in the curatorial and book projects Geography and the Politics of Mobility, The Maghreb Connection, and the widely exhibited art and research project Sahara Chronicle on clandestine migration networks.

With the video essay Black Sea Files (2005) she shifted the primary focus to natural resources and their situated materiality, further developed in Egyptian Chemistry (2012) and Forest Law (2014). With Deep Weather (2013) and Subatlantic (2015) she opens a post-documentary space to explore the larger temporalities of climate change.

The artist had solo exhibitions at the Broad Art Museum at MSU, Neuer Berliner Kunstverein n.b.k., BAK Utrecht, Bildmuseet Umea in Sweden, Nikolaj Contemporary Art Copenhagen, Helmhaus Zurich, Lentos Museum Linz, and at film festivals FID Marseille and TEK Rome. Her work also contributed to major exhibitions at the Arnolfini Bristol; Tapies Foundation Barcelona; Museum of Fine Arts Bern; Nottingham Contemporary; KIASMA Helsinki; San Francisco Art Institute; Jeu de Paume Paris; Kunstverein Hamburg; and many others, as well as the Art Biennials in Gwangju, Shanghai, Liverpool, Sao Paulo, Bamako, Istanbul, Montreal, Thessaloniki, and Sevilla.

Ursula Biemann received her BFA from the School of Visual Arts (1986) in New York and pursued post-graduate studies at the Whitney Independent Study Program (ISP) in New York where she lived most of the 1980s. She was appointed Doctor honoris causa in Humanities by the Swedish University Umea (2008), and received the 2009 Prix Meret Oppenheim, the national art award of Switzerland, and the Prix Thun for Art and Ethics 2018.

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