Categories
Exhibition

Narisara Jirojananukun: Supermodern Romance

Narisara Jirojananukun presents her first solo exhibition Supermodern Romance at the UAL Space in Peckham Levels, London. Open from 27 November to 6 December, the exhibition consists of new and existing works blending illustration, fine art and photography. 

The exhibition is curated by Charmaine Wah

In Supermodern Romance, Thai artist Narisara Jirojananukun presents her interrogation of ‘non-places’ through the lens of an investigator at Waterloo Station, London. The exhibition title references French anthropologist Marc Augé’s text ‘Non-places: An Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity’ (1992). Augé posits that non-places, such as train stations, are transient spaces designed to lack specificity in our supermodern landscape, characterised by overabundance and excess. These are spaces where people remain anonymous and lonely. 

Jirojananukun’s work critically inquires about the extent to which non-places lack connection and collective meaning. Through a series of investigative photography, moving image, etching and painting, she reveals and reconnects with brief moments of intimacy. Such scenes include waiting for a loved one with two coffees in hand, the shared anticipation and anxiety of watching train departure boards in a crowd and weaving towards the same direction as a stranger. Her work captures a train station’s gentle possessiveness in holding us in ephemeral moments of connection in our everyday lives. Even though we move apart, we still move towards each other. 

Text by Charmaine Wah

Poster by Narisara Jirojananukun

Artist and Curator Talk:
Supermodern Romance

Come join us at the UAL Space at Peckham Levels for an informal tour of the exhibition, Supermodern Romance. This exhibition was born from a collaboration between University of the Arts London (UAL) MA Illustration student, Narisara Jirojananukun, and MA Curating and Collections student, Charmaine Wah.

In this in-person talk, get an exclusive insight into the artistic and curatorial processes behind the exhibition, our experience navigating artist-curator collaboration, and an open discussion on the exhibition themes in the cosy pantry of the UAL Space. See you there!

Date: 29 November 2024, Friday

Time: 1pm – 2pm

Venue: UAL Space, Level 6

This talk is open to the public, reserve your free ticket on Eventbrite here: 


Artist biography: 

Narisara Jirojananukun is a Thai illustrator, photographer, and visual artist whose work bridges storytelling, printmaking, and photography. Her practice explores moments of human connection in everyday and transient spaces, capturing the subtle beauty of touch, gestures, and interaction. Her ongoing research focuses on how printmaking and photography intersect to create tactile and visual narratives that reflect shared human experiences. She aims to create works that are simple, accessible, and uplifting, drawing inspiration from small, beautiful moments in the world. She is currently completing an MA in Illustration at Camberwell College of Arts, University of the Arts London, where her practice-based research focuses on connection and humanity. Prior to this, she earned a Bachelor of Medical Education Technology (First Class Honors) from the Faculty of Medicine, Mahidol University, Thailand.

Website: www.pgnarisara.com 

Instagram: @pgnarisara

Curator biography:

Charmaine Wah is a Singaporean curator, producer and researcher. Approaching exhibitions as informal learning spaces, her creative practice examines heritage, subcultures, archives and the sonic. Her ongoing research investigates do-it-yourself (DIY) archives of Singaporean experimental and punk subcultures and how they exist at the intersection of political ideology, heritage and cultural memory. In a previous life, she conducted research in mathematics education and education psychology. She is currently completing a MA in Curating and Collections at Chelsea College of Arts, University of the Arts London. She previously graduated with a Bachelor of Social Sciences with Honours (Distinction) in Psychology from the National University of Singapore.

Instagram: @charcharwah

Categories
Exhibition Workshop

Wing Sze Kung: Unfolding Cultural Heritage Echoes

Unfolding Cultural Heritage Echoes is a solo exhibition features work by illustration artist Wing Sze Kung. The exhibition explores the preservation and transformation of cultural heritage in the dynamic contexts of Hong Kong and London. 

Dates: 20 – 22 Nov 2024, 11am – 6pm

Private View: Wednesday 20 Nov 2024, 6.30 – 8.30 pm

“In the face of rapid social and economic change, the exhibition showcases a collection of spatial design, illustration, and animation works. Together, that explores how culture and craftsmanship can persevere and transform, inspiring new connections to our shared past, present and future.

Through the lens of collective memory and sense of place, the exhibition explores the multi-layered dimensions of community, traditional practices and cultural environments, highlighting how these elements bridge generations, time and place. Celebrating the spirit of Hong Kong’s bamboo crafts and London’s Chinese New Year parade, the exhibition invites viewers to interact through narrative illustration and animation, facilitating public awareness and appreciation of cultural preservation.”
— Wing Sze Kung

More about the artist 

Website: www.wincykung.com

Instagram: wincy_szee


Workshop: Exploring Cultural Heritage: Making, Sharing, Transforming

Date: Wednesday 20 Nov 4.30 – 6.15 pm


This workshop aims to facilitate cultural exchange by encouraging you to share and deepen your understanding of cultural heritage through creative making, sharing, and transformation.
Together, we will explore and share cultural traditions, developing a “visual toolkit” and mask to helps transform cultural elements into visual expressions and narrative storytelling. This process builds appreciation for cultural diversity and raises awareness of the importance of cultural preservation. After the making session, we will have a mini exhibition to showcase and celebrate our collective cultures.

Categories
Exhibition Fair Workshop

UAL Intercultural Zine Fair

UAL’s 3rd Intercultural Zine Fair at Peckham Levels, where showcases zines and publications made by students and staff at UAL and external publishers from South London. 

Stall holders include: PageMasters, Books Peckham, Mosaic Rooms, The Feminist Library, CSM Publications, Poetry Translation Centre, Assemblage Collective & more!

Free workshops and talks to join throughout the day.

There are a programme of workshops and talks in the gallery space next to the UAL studio on the fifth floor, including

The UAL Intercultural Zine Fair 3.0 has now wrapped up! Don’t miss this insightful story by Anita Strasser, UAL Visiting Practitioner, sharing her observations and reflections on the incredible day.

Over 500 people at the Intercultural Zine Fair

Anita Strasser
Visiting Practitioner

Friday 8 November saw the third Intercultural Zine and Publishing Fair at the Gig Space in Peckham Levels. And what a fair it was! Over 500 people attended!

Walking up the stairs, you were guided to the fair by posters made by students: the main poster was a collaborative design by students Tra Nhu (IC ambassador and Camberwell student) and Poan Pan (UAL alum); other posters were hand-drawn direction signs by Kesiah Ide (IC ambassador and Camberwell student).

When I arrived at the Gig Space just after 12, I was greeted by a buzzing atmosphere. Music was playing, the tables were lovingly decorated by the many stallholders, and people – professional publishers, established artists, UAL staff and students, and other people – were busy chatting, showing each other their own or others’ publications, buying and selling publications, networking and making. The zine drop-in workshop table was busy all day, with Tasch from Assemblage Collective showing people at one point a brand new technique of zine-making called the lotus fold. There was a constant coming and going and the atmosphere was one of a festival: full of excitement and joy. Everybody seemed to be buzzing and smiling and everyone I spoke to commented on this atmosphere. You couldn’t help noticing it.

Organisers Adam Ramejkis and Annie Loebig were also busy checking up on and chatting to stallholders and dealing with all sorts of organisational matters. Thankfully they were supported by a group of IC Ambassadors who minded the communal and ‘amaziners’ tables, as well as tables of stallholders who went off on a break. They also helped with setting up workshops, directing people to places and with whatever else needed doing. Catherine Li and Ana Teles (who manage the CCW studio and gallery spaces at Peckham Levels) also helped ensure the smooth running of the day, while I was busy documenting everything on camera.

Stallholders included the LCC Zine Collection, PRESS – A Rolling Drum, The Mosaic Rooms (with Chelsea MA Curating and Collection students), Assemblage Collective, The Feminist Library, Poetry Translation Centre, BOOKS Peckham, PageMasters, CSM Publications, Flipped Eye Publishing, Goldsmiths Liberate! Zines Collection, Camberwell Comic Club, Camberwell MA Illustration, Chelsea Cwiklik, POW!, Stroll Press, Naiyue Zhang, Aghh! Zine and Writing Our Legacy, as well as a communal table and a table of amaziners (from @ual.amazines). While the drop-in zine-making workshop table was also in the Gig Space, this time there was also a programme of events in the gallery space around the corner. Walking up the ramp to the gallery space, you could admire more posters, including a series of posters from Camberwell Comic Club. 

The workshop programme was not to be missed. In fact, each workshop was very well attended, with one attracting over 40 people! The first DIY zine ‘talkshop’ was run by UAL alum Lucie Russell (@drawing.people.together) and LCC student and IC ambassador Rosie Wellman (@r0siegd) and focused on experiences of neurodiversity. One attendee said she had travelled all the way from north-west London to attend this workshop and hear others’ stories of being neurodivergent. The second workshop was led by Mosaic Rooms and Chelsea MA Curating and Collection students, a collaboration titled Under the Dining Table. During the session, attendees learnt about the creative journey that inspired their publication Honey-Moon, which explores food as a site of cultural practice, of caring, crafting and sharing. After that, The Poetry Translation Centre conducted a cut-up poetry and zine-making workshop, using the centre’s anthology My Voice: a decade of poems from the Poetry Translation Centre as the source of materials for participants to make their own poems. The programme finished with four live poetry performances, featuring the curators of poetry platform POW! Play On Words Lee Campbell (Senior Lecturer in Academic Support at Wimbledon College of Arts) and Colin B Osborn, as well as Hannah Wallwork and Redeeming Features. These poetry performances were incredibly dynamic, powerful and thought-provoking, touching on themes like poverty, homelessness, stigmatisation, bullying and death. Everyone was glued to their seat, and nobody left disaffected by what they had heard. It was great to see UAL staff and students and outside audiences together in a room.

As we were tidying up the spaces at the end of the day, the same comments were made over and over by all kind of people: that this zine fair was the most diverse they had ever been to; that it had the nicest and most buzzing atmosphere, and the highest attendance of all three fairs. Above all, everyone was clear that these fairs bring together a wonderful community; it is a gathering of creative people with established publishers and artists and students dazzling with their designs and selling work in equal measures. This cannot end… so prepare yourself for a fourth intercultural zine fair in May 2025.

All photos by Anita Strasser, 2024

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For any questions, please contact

Adam Ramejkis at a.ramejkis@arts.ac.uk (Intercultural Communication at UAL and founder of ual.amazines)

Annie Loebig at a.loebig@arts.ac.uk (UAL Showcase)