The Fictive Archive Investigations group invites you to a day of meetings devoted to fiction at the heart of archives. It's a day where spectators will be able to discover a variety of perspectives on the use of archives in artistic creation. It's also an opportunity to explore the relationship between scientific and artistic practices in a number of fields: philosophy, dance, anthropology and geology.
The Fictive Archive Investigations group invites you to a day of meetings devoted to fiction at the heart of archives. A day where spectators will be able to discover a variety of perspectives on the use of archives in artistic creation. It will also be an opportunity to understand the relationship between scientific and artistic practices, through several fields: philosophy, dance, anthropology and geology.
The artists invited to the gallery take part in the exhibition 𝘔𝘦𝘮𝘰𝘳𝘪𝘦𝘴 𝘎𝘰𝘯𝘦 𝘞𝘪𝘭𝘥 and find here an opportunity to clarify or expand their research.
Margerita Pule wrote an article on Memories Gone Wild and the group for the Malta Artpaper
The archive as a historical and creative source
Seeing and touching archival documents gives us access to the past, to events that we reimagine, to people that we remember. But in what way does the archive guarantee truth?
Seeing and touching archive documents gives us access to the past, to events we re-imagine, to people we remember. But how do archives guarantee the truth?