Eva Quintas and Mitsiko Miller (Montréal)
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bio Eva Quintas |
After studies in literature and photography, she has participated since
1990 in numerous exhibitions in Quebec, Mexico and Europe. Her current
work is divided among her personal projects which revisit travel photography
and her collaboration on a literary and multi-media photo-novel, Liquidation,
that she has been developing since 1994 with the writer Michel Lefebvre
(http://www.AgenceTopo.qc.ca/liquidation).
In 1997 she began exploring the creative possibilities of the Internet
through the creation of the web episodes of Liquidation as well as participation
in the production of various cultural cyber-reports. |
bio Mitsiko Miller |
Born in Sherbrooke, Quebec, of a Québecois father and a Japanese
mother, Mitsiko Miller is a rebel child of the world who does not like
to do things the way they are supposed to be done. What else would you
expect from someone coming from a family of eccentrics? Since the early
'90s, Mitsiko has been interested in the musicality of words (oral literature)
as well as interdisciplinarity. For her, nothing is definite: her artistic
process, though always inspired by oral traditions, constantly incorporates
new elements. Her work is thus in continuous progress. She has read transgenic
texts, coupling the two official languages (a sacrilege!), produced writing
combining the literary with street jargon, as well as strange monologues
and sound poems using movement... Her hybrid style and dynamic scenic
approach, have earned her an uncontested reputation on the literary scene.
She is known for her cynical ideas and black humor. She is published in
ICI and Night Life and in other literary ventures. Her main passions are
words, electronic music and people. According to her Montreal, her adopted
city for over 25 years, is a bubbling laboratory of ideas where, in spite
of her busy schedule, she manages to observe her subjects: old ladies,
little girls, dogs, machos, nuts and even lepers... Why? because they
ARE the source of her inspiration and of her humorous critique of interpersonal
relationships and social values. Over the years, Mitsiko has been active
in the oral literature milieu, organizing her own spoken word presentations,
La Vache Enragée (1995-1999), producing books and CDs and covering
the scene in the media (Mirror, ICI et CBC). But nowadays Mitsiko prefers
to dedicate most of her time to creation. Having completed her first book
(Le Coeur en Orbite, 1999) and a web project with photographer Eva Quintas
(Carnages, 1999) she is currently preparing a multidisciplinary performance
with musician DJ RAM incorporating spoken word, visual elements and sound
(summer 2000). |
about Carnages |
Carnages is elaborated around the multiple connotations and imageries
of anthropophagy and cannibalism. With a resolute parodic tone, the authors
designed various short stories approaching the negritude, the war, the
body, the food as symbolic spaces of resistance and assimilation. |
presentation |
Wednesday, February 2, 7:30pm, Salle Fernand-Séguin, Cinémathèque
québécoise. The Carnages project juxtaposes, through its multiple hyperlinks, fiction and documentary in a sinister universe where the longing for the other becomes consumption, ingestion, digestion and annihilation. The site's itinerary reveals the symbolism of cannibalism in various forms. The figure of the cannibal haunts Western history through a vast body of work spawning classical mythology, popular and oral literature, art and theory, evolving according to the philosophical and political contexts of various eras. The Cannibal, a distinctly "European Ghost", is a construct of colonization. Whether abject model or emblem of revival, the Cannibal is a product of the ideology of justification and disagreement of conquest. The opposite counterpart of this figure is the cultural Anthropophagite who practices symbolic and ritual devouration. From a circular perspective of history, the Anthropophagite revisits the past and projects it into the future. In the present environment where identity and hybridity have become common concepts for postmodernism, globalization, DJs and the web, the figures of the cannibal and the anthropophagite are re-emerging as the symbols, metaphors and practices of our hungry, edible and voracious societies. Carnages alludes to the voracious and often mischievous nature of the
web and to the tremendous appropriation potential of digital technology.
Thus, an important theme of the talk will be the consumption of culture
taking place on the web: bookmarking, saving pages or images from a site,
have become unconscious anthropophagic actions that we regularly perform
for our "cultural" development. |
Mitsiko Miller |
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