Hannah Hallam-Eames
Hannah Hallam-Eames is an artist from Te Whanganui-a-Tara/Wellington, Aotearoa/NZ presently based in Melbourne. She is currently researching the velocity and materiality of symbiotic interactions between Biocapitalism and unicellular algae, proposing that algae are the underlying organisers of the world ecology, instead of Capitalism. She is also one half of Red Slyme Incubator (RSI), an ongoing collaborative project with Samuel Jackson. Recent projects include; It is a long time since this moment (as RSI) hosted by Symbiotica and curated by MOANA project space as part of Unhallowed Arts Festival, Fremantle Arts Centre, Perth, 2018. Slime and Shine, as RSI with Marian Tubbs and Jana Hawkins-Anderson, 2018; Blame it on the rain (Film screenings), The Physics Room, Christchurch; Ngā Taonga Sound & Vision, Wellington; St Paul St Gallery, Auckland; WORM, Rotterdam, curated by JPEG2000 and Fresh and Fruity as part of Till the World Ends, 2017-18; Algae are more dangerous foes of truth than lies (as RSI), Firstdraft, Sydney, 2017; Static Culture, Play_station Space, Welington, 2017; Laminal interfaces, with Matt Ritani, Window Gallery, Auckland University, Auckland, 2016; Spilled Brains/Synthetic Circuits, Enjoy Public Art Gallery, Wellington, 2016; i think a lot about how i killed them, RM, Auckland, 2016; As a Lattice, Toi Poneke Gallery, Wellington.
Program / Events
Out of the OozeFri, 23. Nov 2018 Why Listen to Plants? (Microbes, Funghi, Bees)
Thu, 22. Nov 2018