Tintin wulia goma. .

Tintin wulia goma. Join artist/researcher Tintin Wulia in a special performance lecture session exploring the connections between major world events and how such reality is constructed through sensory perception, state-sanctioned histories, and fragile memories of humans. Tintin Wulia (b. Nov 1, 2023 ยท Concentrating on the work of Tintin Wulia, a Bali-born artist of Chinese descent, I examine how her image making connects to historical contentions originating in New Order Indonesia while situating it within the general social and artistic atmosphere of post-Suharto Indonesia. Dr Tintin Wulia is a Senior Researcher at HDK-Valand/Academy of Art and Design and a Visiting Research Fellow at LSE Department of International History. She is Principal Investigator for Protocols of Killings: 1965, distance, and the ethics of future warfare (Swedish Research Council, 2021-2023), collaborator of PI William Walters for Rethinking Declassification: Dis/closure, Infrastructure Tintin Wulia (b. Her work is part of public and private collections including in the Van Abbemuseum, Singapore Art Museum, Queensland Art Gallery/Gallery of Modern Art and He Xiangning Art Museum. Search artworks Advanced search WULIA, Tintin 1972 - present Creator details Principal country Indonesia Date of birth 1972 In 2017 she represents Indonesia in the 57th Venice Biennale with a solo pavilion 1001 Martian Homes. 1972, Denpasar, now based in Brisbane, Godalming, and Gothenburg) is an artist and senior researcher at HDK-Valand - Academy of Art and Design, University of Gothenburg. Dr Tintin Wulia is an internationally exhibiting artist and a Senior Researcher at HDK-Valand – Academy of Art and Design, University of Gothenburg. Wulia joined the University of Gothenburg in 2018, with a Postdoctoral Fellowship in design, crafts and society with a focus on migration, working interdepartmentally with HDK-Valand and the School of Global Studies, at the Centre on Global Migration (2018-2020). . Her work over the past quarter-century was showcased in the retrospective exhibition Tintin Wulia: Things-in-Common at the Hiroshima MoCA (2024-25). kudjpe dc g62s 7lnr vlls zijro iuw htqvb lnhu 7vjzj