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CLOUD
CAITLIND r.c BROWN & WAYNE GARRETT
Caitlind r.c. Brown & Wayne Garrett are Canadian artists working with artificial light, experimental spaces, and architectural debris. Their public artworks invite participants to share in strange moments, one step beyond everyday experience. Using massproduced objects to reference cities as an immeasurable quantity of materials and situations, their work provokes a critical shift in perspective. Beautiful, subversive, playful, and radically inclusive, their practice emphasizes transformation above all else.
Brown & Garrett’s work has appeared internationally, most notably at Japan Alps Festival (Japan), Weisman Art Museum (USA), Garage Museum of Contemporary Art (Russia), Pera Museum (Turkey), and art festivals throughout Europe.
Image above:
Caitlind r.c. BROWN & Wayne GARRETT
CLOUD 2013
(CLOUD at the Lights in Jerusalem Festival, Israel)
This edition of CLOUD was commissioned by Garage Museum of Contemporary Art for Art Experiment 2013 (Moscow)
CAMERON McAULIFFE
Cameron McAuliffe is a Senior Lecturer in Human Geography and Urban Studies in the School of Social Sciences and Psychology and part of the Geography and Urban Studies academic group. Prior to this position, Cameron was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Centre for Cultural Research (2007-2010).
McAuliffe is an urban, social and cultural geography specialist and a member of the Urban Research Program, where his research engages with the regulation of difference and the way cities govern ‘marginal’ bodies. His research includes projects on the negotiation of national and religious identities among Iranian migrant communities; policy research on graffiti management; and, the geographies of kerbside waste.
Image:
Leans
Mother Earth 2017
Ogden Street
McAuliffe’s specific interests include: transnationalism and diaspora studies; multiculturalism and the politics of difference; legal graffiti and street art; urban creative economies and the creative city; representation and visual methodologies; public space and disorder; subcultural studies; more-than-human geographies; geographies of religion; and, moral geographies.
McAuliffe’s published research includes articles in the journals Urban Studies, Global Networks and Journal of Urban Affairs, along with local government reports that have informed policy development. He holds Bachelor’s degrees in Arts (Human Geography) and Engineering (Chemical) as well as a PhD in Human Geography, all from the University of Sydney.