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Rencontre avec Bruce Albert, anthropologue (1/3)
15 mai 2010Rencontre avec Bruce Albert, anthropologue, par Ilana Shamoon, conservatrice à la Fondation Cartier pour l'art contemporain.1/3 : "Davi Kopenawa et les indiens Yanomami"L’exposition Terre Natale, Ailleurs commence ici est actuellement à Bilbao (Espagne) jusqu’au 1er août 2010 à l’AlhondigaBilbao.Plus d'information sur www.nativeland-stopeject.com
Raymond Depardon - "S'arrêter et écouter" / Conférence
19 mai 2010.AlhondigàBilbao - Conférence inauguraleOuverture de l'exposition "Terre Natale, Ailleurs commence ici" à Bilbao.Extraits.Raymond Depardon - "S'arrêter et écouter"
Davi Kopenawa - "Il faut protéger la langue Yanomami"
19 mai 2010.AlhondigàBilbao - Conférence inauguraleOuverture de l'exposition "Terre Natale, Ailleurs commence ici" à Bilbao.Extraits.Davi Kopenawa - "Il faut protéger la langue Yanomami"Plus d'information sur les indiens Yanomami sur le site de l'association Hutukara : http://www.hutukara.org
Raymond Depardon - "Résitance" / Conférence
19 mai 2010.AlhondigàBilbao - Conférence inauguraleOuverture de l'exposition "Terre Natale, Ailleurs commence ici" à Bilbao.Extraits.Raymond Depardon - "Résistance"
Copenhagen Video News #3 - The Challenge of an inclusive....
The challenge of an inclusive processIn Copenhagen, many agree that the outcome is as much important as the process. Developing countries complain – rightly – that the negotiation process is neither open nor fair nor transparent. Things are even worse for the civil society.Since the very beginning of the negotiations, NGOs, advocacy groups and militants have closely associated to the process. Unlike many other UN summits, the climate conferences have always been very open to civil society. Civil society is part of the negotiations, and has always been: NGOs have fed and stimulated the talks more than any other group. If 119 heads of state are expected to come to Copenhagen, this is thanks constant lobbying and pressure from NGOs.A few days ago however, the secretariat of the conference has announced that the access to the Bella Center would be barred to NGOs for security reasons – only 300 delegates would be able to attend. These people have worked tirelessly on a global deal for the last 14 years – at least – and they’re being thrown out at the very last, crucial moment. This is the reason why these two militants interrupted the plenary session yesterday morning. Whatever the outcome of the conference, the process that induced it is a failure per se.
Copenhagen Video News#4 - Black Friday in Copenhagen
Black Friday in CopenhagenOn Wednesday, at a dinner held by the UN Foundation, an American advocacy group, the mood was already geared towards the next conference, to be held in Mexico in winter 2010. Al Gore, John Kerry and Ban Ki-moon probably all knew that nothing more was to expect, and that one could already look to 2010.The Bella Center is packed with the world’s most powerful people today. But they all seem powerless to avoid a failure, to agree on even some basic points. Negotiations will probably last until long tonight, behind closed doors. But for many, the last hope vanished this morning, when President Obama left the conference plenary.more on nativeland-stopeject.com
"EXIT": Visualizing Paul Virilio's Concepts
"Native Land, Stop Eject" Exhibition in Copenhagen - Until February 21, 2010"EXIT": Visualizing Paul Virilio's Conceptsby Laura Kurgan
"EXIT": Visualizing Data Sets - Copenhagen News#2
Native Land, Stop Eject - December 13, 2009Copenhagen News#2"EXIT": Visualizing Data Setsby Robert Gerard Pietrusko and Stewart Smith
Native Land during the COP15 - Copenhagen News#1
Native Land, Stop Eject - December 7, 2009Copenhagen News#1"Native Land during the COP15"by François Gemenne
"Native Land, Stop Eject" Copenhagen, December .09 (TRAILER)
Created by the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain, Native Land, Stop Eject explores the meaning of sedentariness and nomadism today, an epoch in which human migration flows are taking place on an unprecedented scale. The international COP15 conference on climate change organized by the United Nations and taking place in Copenhagen from December 7-18, 2009 attests to this critical moment in history, where the environment conditions what humans do, what they will become, and where they will live.Native Land, Stop Eject thus proposes a reflection on the notions of being rooted and uprooted, as well as related questions of identity in two works created especially for the exhibition. Filmmaker Raymond Depardon gives a voice to those who wish to remain on their land but are threatened with exile. Philosopher Paul Virilio, in collaboration with the artists architects Diller Scofidio + Renfro, Mark Hansen, and Laura Kurgan, examines and challenges new trends in contemporary human movement due to environmental, political, and economic factors.
Native Land - Answers to Internet Users / 1
François Gemenne answers to the questions asked on the Fondation Cartier website about "Native Land, Stop Eject" exhibition. (FRENCH AUDIO)
Native Land - Answers to Internet Users / 2
Paul Virilio answers to the questions asked on the Fondation Cartier website about "Native Land, Stop Eject" exhibition. (FRENCH AUDIO)
Native Land - Answers to Internet Users / 3
Paul Virlio and François Gemenne answers to the questions asked on the Fondation Cartier website about Native Land exhibition. (FRENCH AUDIO)
EXIT - "Remittances, sending money home" Map Extract
From the video installation EXIT in "Native Land, Stop Eject" exhibition.by Paul VirilioDiller Scofidio + Renfro, Laura Kurgan, Mark Hansen, Ben Rubin
Paul Virlio - Identity and Trajectivity
ExhibitionNative Land, Stop Eject"EXIT"Paul Virilio speaks about a key theme from the exhibition: “Identity and trajectivity”.
Paul Virlio - Outer Limit
ExhibitionNative Land, Stop Eject"EXIT"Paul Virilio speaks about a key theme from the exhibition: the Outer Limit.
Paul Virlio - Ultracity
ExhibitionNative Land, Stop Eject"EXIT"Paul Virilio speaks about a key theme from the exhibition: the Ultracity.
Hear Them Speak, by Raymond Depardon (2008) Trailer
Exhibition "Native Land, Stop Eject"Hear Them Speak, by Raymond Depardon and Claudine Nougaret.
EXIT - Population Shift map extract
From the video installation EXIT in "Native Land, Stop Eject" exhibition.by Paul VirilioDiller Scofidio + Renfro, Laura Kurgan, Mark Hansen, Ben Rubin
Exhibition Visit - "Native Land, Stop Eject" in Paris, 2008.
Native Land, Stop EjectNov. 21, 2008 > March 15, 2009“Raymond Depardon and I both came around to this same question: what is left of this world, of our native land, of the history of what so far is the only habitable planet?” Paul Virilio.While the world has reached a critical moment in its history, where the environment conditions what humans do and what they will become, the exhibition "Native Land, Stop Eject" proposes a reflection on the notions of being rooted and uprooted, as well as related questions of identity. Whereas Raymond Depardon gives a voice to those who wish to live on their land but are threatened with exile, Paul Virilio examines and challenges the very idea of sedentariness in the face of the unprecedented migrations taking place in the contemporary world. Paul Virilio´s concepts are given form in a design by the artists and architects Diller Scofidio + Renfro, as well as Mark Hansen, Laura Kurgan, and Ben Rubin.