Eleena Jamil

 
 

Eleena Jamil is founder and owner of Eleena Jamil Architect (EJA), one of Malaysia’s leading architectural practices. Her work is founded on researching the specific social and climatic imperatives of individual briefs within their broader cultural frameworks.

She was shortlisted for Dezeen Architect of the Year in 2018 and won the Iconic Architecture Award 2021 by the German Design Council for End-lot House. She recently led About Making, a short research project supported by the British Council that explores the roles, processes, and worldview of traditional Malay house craftsman ‘tukang’ and their relevance to contemporary making of sustainable architecture.

For more information visit www.ej-architect.com

Image 1 - 2: WUF09KL Bamboo Pavillion

Image 2: Bamboo Playhouse

Image 3: Kampung Endah Library

Kyrre Midtbø Kalseth

 
 

Kyrre Midtbø Kalseth is an Industrial Designer and Passivehouse & Energy Advisor living in Gratangen, Northern Norway. From here he runs the design collective and design studio Erlikpluss (EgualsPluss). The practice focuses on doing both commissioned and self initiated work within the field of design & architecture that in some way or another aims on creating ecological conscious and fun projects. 

 

He works with various scales and disciplines and the projects are therefore spread within the field of architecture, sustainable building practices and materials, co-creation, product design, graphic design as well as the physical building of small scale architecture. He has worked a great deal with arena development for festivals and cultural arenas such as SALT Art & Music (Oslo), HAVET Arena (Trondheim), Trænafestivalen (Træna) and Rakettnatt Music & Arts Festival (Tromsø). He produces visual profiles, as well as products, architecture and art projects. Kalseth has received numerous design awards and in 2021 was awarded a work scholarship from Kulturrådet (Statens Arbeidsstipend), to work with self initiated regenerative architectural projects. 

 

Last year Kyrre also established a new practice together with architect Sami Rintala and Cultural Entrepreneur Erlend Mogård Larsen where they design and build both floating and land based sauna and bathing projects; Vulkana Floating Objects. (www.arkobjects.com)

Image 1: The Snolke Cabin (open hiking mountain cabin, Gratangen, 2019)

- An open hiking cabin in wood that is prefabricated and carried to site and mounted by the efforts of the local community. 

 

Image 2: Haihuset / The Shark House (Explorers Club for marine life, Engenes, Andørja, 2020).

The project had the aim of utilizing the terrain without any harm to the site, using a floating steel structure to hold the massive wood buildings hovering above the rocks towards the sea. The buildings are almost self sufficient, using an air-to-water heating system and natural ventilation.

 

Image 3: Hemmingodden Lodge (Fishing & Hiking Hub, Hemmingodden, Lofoten Islands, 2021)

- All the new units for the site were prefabricated and craned on to piers out towards the sea that bears resemblance of old fish racks (hjeller) that use to be here. They are fully removable from the site in a matter of days.

 

Image 4: ARK Lauga - Floating Sauna & Bathing Village (Havet Arena, Trondheim, 2022)

- ARK Lauga is a part of a large urban development scheme in Nyhavna. We have developed and delivered a floating village which measures 400 square meters. It boasts four public saunas, a Russian inspired banja, one bathtub inspired by the Japanese Onsen, as well as a salt water pool, bar and reception and outdoor shower. The buildings are made in massive wood and are topped off with sedum / green roofs. The whole structure is fully demountable. 

Ketut Karya

 
 

Ketut Karya is Co-founder and Director of Samong Haven, Bali. Ketut has over 10 years of experience working in the travel industry, starting as a trainee at a hotel, working his way up to manager, before co-founding Samong Haven. Ketut has first hand experience of how tourism has (and continues to) changes where he lives, both for the good and not so good.

Samong Haven Bali is a development initiative aiming to create a socially responsible tourist destination with the arts at its core. Its development criteria include supporting culture, community and conservation and positively impacting the local environment, people and its visitors. Theoretical and practical outcomes from 'An Urgent Situation' will directly shape Samong Haven’s future development.

Don Lawrence

 
 

Don Lawrence is an award winning architect, based in Oslo, Norway. He holds a Bachelor's degree in Architecture from the Cooper Union in New York City and a Masters degree in Architecture from the Arkitektur og Designhøgskolen in Oslo, Norway. In 2013 he established Don Lawrence Arkitekt AS which focuses on projects bordering between art and architecture´s potential for to develop senses of place.

Don discovered his interest in architecture as a young boy in Jamaica through combining his love of hand-drawing and his curiosity for the natural sciences. He has always been a dreamer and enjoys nothing better than crafting thoughtful architectural solutions.

For more information visit www.don-lawrence.com/index.html

Image 1-2: Tree house design

Image 3: Apollo cabin

Image 4: Bee garden

Image 5: Wooden pavilion

Tadeo Nedala

 
 

Tadeo Nedala’s work ranges across architectural design, product design and graphic design. He graduated with a Bachelor of Environmental Design with Honours at Uganda Martyrs University in 2019. He is currently a product designer at Baraza Design Village in Uganda where he provides detailed drawings and illustrations for interior furniture pieces.

Alongside his professional work, Tadeo is undertaking a Master of Architecture at Uganda Martyrs University. He enjoys the physicality of architecture and is interested in the process of emphasizing architectural details to form objects. Previous work has included contributing to the design of a temporary Mobile Money Kiosk in Kampala, Uganda. The work explored existing kiosks to better understand the use of space, materiality and character of business. This exploration resulted in the redesign, fabrication and installation of a new mobile money kiosk for a mobile money vendor.

Ibrahim Mufti Pradityo

 
 

Ibrahim Mufti Pradityo graduated in 2020 from University of Stavanger with a master’s degree in city planning and urban design. His thesis, investigated how urban areas could be developed to better facilitate families with young children.

He currently works as an urban planner at Nomad planning office, and advocates for socially sustainable cities. In his professional practice, he works with citizen participation processes in combination with Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and qualitative analysis methods.

Image 1: Participatory planning in the historical neighbourhood of Vaterland in Fredrikstad, Norway

Image 2: Mural unveiling, “children’s dream city”. Photo: Mad Arkitekter

Image 3: Mapping the walkability of Skien, Norway

​Tanja Thorjussen

 
 

Tanja Thorjussen (b. 1970) is an artist living in Oslo (NO). Her artistic medium spans between drawing, sculpture, performance and art in public space. Through speculative research her artistic practice revolves around how ancient art can inform the present.

At the upcoming exhibition at Archeological Museum – University of Stavanger (NO) in 2023 she is making artworks about historical objects from the collection, speculating on its meaning through artistic methodology such as drawing and intuitive listening.

Her current artistic focus is on the mystic and spiritual in nature and bodies of water, hydrofeminism, and the science embedded in indigenous knowledge and ancient mythology. Thorjussen holds a BFA from KHIB in Bergen (NO) and Parsons The New School in New York (USA) and is educated as curator from Telemark University. She is the initiator of LOCUS since 2006 and PAO - Performance Art Oslo since 2012 and from 2019 she is elected chairwoman of Tegnerforbundet (The Norwegian Drawing Association)

Marit Silsand

 
 

Marit Silsand (b.1980, NO) is a visual artist living and working in Oslo. She works with analogue photography, video and site-specific installations. In 2010 Silsand graduated from the Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam, where her studies included an exchange program to San Francisco Art Institute in 2008. From 2003-04 she studied at Fatamorgana–The Danish School of Art Photography in Copenhagen. Silsand is a member of Bjørka, a collective atelier space for lens based artists in Oslo.

Ayman AlAzraq

 
 

Ayman Alazraq makes films, photos, and mixed media artworks. His short film The Passport was screened at the National Museum of Cinema in Turin (Italy), the Cologne International video art Festival (Germany), among other places. His video and photography installation You From Now On Are Not Yourself was screened in venues in Spain, Norway, Denmark, and the Gaza Strip. In 2015 Alazraq’s short film Oslo Syndrome was presented in the Statens kunstutstilling in Oslo, Dubai International Film Festival, and London Palestinian film festival. In 2017, he produced the interactive installation WALL-1 in collaboration with Emanuel Sviden. WALL has been exhibited in various places, including; Podium Gallery, Oslo, 2017; Tabaklera, Spain; 2 Theaterhaus; Jena, Germany, 2018; Westfalischer Kunstvrein, Munster, Germany, 2019. Public Art Norway (KORO) permanently installed the work at the University College of Western Norway. You're going to miss me when I'm gone, artwork projection on the City Hall wall 2020. The film, Into My lungs was screened at Kunstnernes Hus, Oslo in 2022.

Images 1-4: still images from the film ‘Into my lungs’, 2022.

Motaz Al Habbash

 
 

Motaz Al Habbash works as an artist, producer and curator. Born in Palestine, he has been based in Norway since 2014. As an artist he primarily works with video, and aas an organiser he has been involved with large projects such as the mentor program Her og der - which supports newly arrived artists in Norway - and the artistic programme It's hard to be an Arab. In 2021, Al habbash curated the the exhibition Absent Presence at Kunsthall 3,14, Bergen, and his video work “Stolen Well” was shown at Trafo Kunsthall.

Diala Brisley

 
 

Diala Brisly is a Syrian artist whose artistic practice spans a variety of media, including animation, painting, conceptual art, illustration, comic books and murals. Social justice and freedom are reoccurring themes in her work which often highlights the educational situation of Syrian children, and refugees in general. Stemming from her own experiences, recent work explores themes of well-being and psychological issues, such as post trauma.

Image 1: It’s a baby girl, Lifejacket series

Image 2: Leave us

Image 3: Integration, Survival mode series

Yamile Calderón

 
 

Yamile Calderón is an artist born in Colombia who now lives in Oslo. She studied photography at Bergen National Academy of Arts. She was awarded The Art Photography Prize by The Norwegian Association for Fine Art Photographers for her work Accidentally I got a GoPro. She is currently exhibiting Oslo Stories at Carl Berner Project room. She has recently published her second photo book, Narcos & Homes which documents property of Colombian drug traffickers that has been confiscated by the government.

Calderon's work is inspired by her childhood memories and explores interrelationships between experience, memory, and social and cultural context. By approaching the documentary genre from a subjective perspective, she uses visual and narrative strategies to explore interpretations of reality.

Calderón has participated in various collective exhibitions and has presented her work internationally in Pingyao, Hong Kong, Helsinki, Copenhagen, Kiel and New York. In Oslo her work has been presented at Oslo Kunstforerning, Kunstnernes Hus, Galleri BOA, Noplace, Fotogalleriet, and Galleri Brandstrup.

Tania Cañas

 
 

Tania Cañas is an artist-researcher based on unceded Kulin Territory. Her practice looks at the relationship between ‘art making’ and ‘community making’ in the context of community- led methodologies at the intersection of performance, decoloniality, borders and displacement.

Her socially engaged practice creates dynamic community-led creative platforms as sites of collaboration, modalities of resistance as well as ways to rethink processes and re-cast institutions. Tania's unique practice develops creative processes that foreground voices as authors of their collective experience, actively reshaping the conditions of creative possibility within communities-rather than treating communities as sources of data for academic commentary.

She is the artistic director at Arts Gen, a community arts and health organisation, and leads the Performance and Community Engagement as well as the Social Practice courses at the Victoria College of the Arts, University of Melbourne. She received her PhD from the University of Melbourne in 2021.

Image 1: ‘ten things to consider’, 2016.

Image 2 & 3: “Unwelcome Mats”, 2015.

 
 

Jad El Khoury

 
 

Jad is an architect and visual artist. He holds an MA in architecture from the Lebanese University and a MFA in art and public space from Oslo National Academy of the Arts. His work has been shown internationally and he has received awards including the Institute of Public Art Award and the Arte Laguna Prize for Urban Art and Land art.

Jad writes, ”After studying architecture in Beirut, I have worked with traces of war in Lebanon, where I grew up. I am part of the first post civil war (1975-1990) generation. To me, transforming accidental monuments of bitterness in the city into choreographed installations dancing with the wind was a necessity. It is my method to poetically rebel against religious sectarianism and suffering.

My practice intertwines reality with fiction, facts with uncertainty, architecture with art, memory with forgetfulness. From illustrating repetitive meditative patterns with ink on paper, to temporary installations with architectural materials on contemporary ruins, the methods, research and mediums I work with are constantly being metamorphosed depending on the contexts and situations I encounter.”

Iman Jabrah

 
 

Iman Jabrah is a Palestinian American multidisciplinary artist currently located in Cincinnati, OH. She is a recipient of the full scholarship from China Scholarship Council, currently pursuing masters in Fine Art at China Academy of Art with a previous BFA in New Media Art from Northern Kentucky University. In early 2022, Jabrah received the Artswave’s Truth and Reconciliation grant to sponsor Amid exhibition during her curator-in-residence at Wave Pool gallery; Amid exhibition showcases artworks at the Cincinnati Art Museum by ten Palestinian women and queer artists from the West Bank and diaspora. Her latest exhibition was part of Women of Crypto Art in collaboration with DoinGud for the United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals. Most recently, Jabrah is set to exhibit with the Professional Artistic Research (PAR-) Projects at Studeō PAR-, in July 2022 at Cincinnati, OH. Many of Iman’s initiative projects aim toward community; to build collaborative cultures and to continue to increase exposure to displaced Palestinian artists through shared exhibitions, residencies, and collective projects.

Image 1: Protest. Sculpture, 2022.

Image 2: drop. Sculpture, 2022.

Image 3: Woman. Sculpture Photography, 2021.

Image 4: Make America Great Again. Sculpture, photography & digital art, 2021.

Nastassja Nefjodov

 
 

Nastassja Nefjodov is a German-Russian lens-based artist living in the Netherlands. She graduated (with honor) from the Fotoacademie Amsterdam in 2021. Currently she is a participant in FOTODOK's Talent Development Program: Lighthouse and  the Graduate Mentoring Scheme 2021 from Redeye: The Photography Network. Nefjodov is also an active member of the online educational community and platform Work Show Grow School.

 

Her work has been exhibited internationally, including at festival Encontros da Imagem in Braga, Portugal (2021), Neue Schule für Fotografie Gallery in Berlin, Germany (2020) and  Rotterdam Photo, The Netherlands (2019). Her book My grandfathers, the war and I won the EI Photobook Award 2020 and her book Into the blue was shortlisted for EI Photobook Award 2021. She has contributed to publications including Mini Albums East Central (2021), United, Work Show Grow Publication (2021) and home is... of Julia Borissova (2020).

 

Her practice stems from her family stories which relate to ruptures in European history. She focus on the emotional impact, rather than factual, theoretical, or political aspects. Through her art, she wants to invite people to rethink history from a personal perspective of what it does to a person, to families. Not only in the present but across generations, as a second, often neglected layer of war stories.

 

The entry point of her projects is often the family archive, her and her family members memories which she then reflects on in combination with her own imagery and words. Another central element of her exploration is the immersion into the places of the past using the camera both to find traces of the stories and documenting emotions and reflections of the now.

 

The results of her projects often turn into three dimensional objects/installations allowing the viewer to experience the multilayered stories by stepping into, immerse themselves within Nefjodov’s world and therewith feel encouraged to connect to and to tell their own stories.

Image 1: From the book „Meine Großväter der Krieg und ich“ 2020

Image 2: Book: „Meine Großväter der Krieg und ich“ Foto by @the_bookphotographer

Image 3: Untitled, from the work „Ins Blaue hinein“, 2021

Daria Pugachova

 
 

Daria Pugachova is an artist, performer and art-activist based in Kyiv, Ukraine. She studied architecture at Kyiv National University of Construction and Architecture. From 2013–2019 she played drums in the female trio Panivalkova. After musicians split up Daria dived into a field of contemporary art. 

In her projects, Daria uses participatory practices to unite a community and integrate art into daily life. She works with performance, video and artivism. Her artistic approach lies in the presence of the artist and direct interaction with the audience in public space. Her work explores history of place to awaken memories with the community, and to visualize its possible future. “By performing in public places, I connect with all kinds of people” says Daria, “Some of them may never attend exhibitions. So art should step out of galleries and become a part of everyday life, thereby changing it”.

Daria received the Golden Aesop Grand Prix at Gabrovo Biennial of Contemporary Art for the work ’Stones’ and the project Dasha+Zhanar. In 2022, due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Daria left Kyiv and to continue her artistic practice in Europe.

Khalid Shatta

 
 

Khalid Shatta’s work is inspired by modernist painting, but also by the art of ancient civilizations and by the culture of his birthplace, Sudan.

Shatta says: “I’m inspired by painters such as Hussein Gamaan, Kerry James Marshall, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Paul Klee and photographers like Malick Sidibé, Seydou Keïta and Gordon Parks. Ancient Sudanese history is another significant inspiration. Being of Nuba descent, I believe in trying to uncover the cultural heritage we lost under Islamic conquest and European colonialism.

I am currently exploring a theme I call the migration of the soul – the sensation of being out of place. We live in a time where many people feel a disconnection from their own bodies and existence. I make use of ancient Kemetic and Cushitic symbols from the historical kingdoms of the Nile valley civilisations. I believe that everything is connected through our shared history, even in this chaotic state of migration.”

Yanina Zaichanka

 
 

Yanina Zaichanka is a Belarusian artist, currently studying for a BFA at the Oslo National Academy of Arts. Prior to moving to Oslo, she had been actively involved in the contemporary art scene in Minsk. In 2018-2019, she studied Contemporary Art and Drama at the European College of Liberal Arts, Belarus. Her work has been shown at two solo exhibitions – Freedom (of Speech) from the Unbearable at Pradmova Festival of Intellectual Literature in 2020, and Being a Woman at ECLAB in 2019. She has contributed to group shows, including CIAHLITSY - an exhibition of “queer art” - and Halasy - an exhibition of art de-stigmatizing people with mental health conditions.

Image 1: The Inhuman Face of War, 2022


Image 2: Still Counting, 2021-


Image 3: My Family’s Paths, 2020-


Image 4: Illustration for Paval Lubetsky’s essay Leviathan-2020: When They Are Eager to Make Sacrifice, But Are Sacrificing Others For Some Reason, 2020

Gary Zhexi Zhang

 
 

Gary Zhexi Zhang is an artist and writer, whose films and essays are interested in private and political narratives of the digital. He studied at Glasgow School of Art and University of Cambridge, and is a staff contributor to Frieze Magazine. Recent exhibitions include Tenderflix ‘Futures' at ICA, London and Would you like help? at EMBASSY Gallery, Edinburgh.

Video: Gary Zhexi Zhang, lacoste1, 2015


© 2015-2021 PRAKSIS / Registered Organisation 915 733 417



Partially funded by: