Selina Ershadi & Tyson Campbell

Anti-Time

14

March 2019

14

Mar

2019

29

Mar 2019

7UP

Anti-Time

Selina Ershadi & Tyson Campbell

14

March 2019

14

March

2019

29

March 2019

7UP

Kia whakatōmuri te haere whakamua I walk backwards into the future with my eyes fixed on my past                                         گذشته چراغ راه آینده است Our past is the light that shows us our future path anti-time is a two-person show bringing together the work of Tyson Campbell and Selina Ershadi.

Exploring the complicated and at times contradictory feelings that are stirred up when utilising one’s own personal and collective histories and fissures for art production, anti-time resists clearly deduced narratives and resolutions and instead resides in a place of ambivalence and unease.

Kia whakatōmuri te haere whakamua I walk backwards into the future with my eyes fixed on my past                                         گذشته چراغ راه آینده است Our past is the light that shows us our future path anti-time is a two-person show bringing together the work of Tyson Campbell and Selina Ershadi.

Exploring the complicated and at times contradictory feelings that are stirred up when utilising one’s own personal and collective histories and fissures for art production, anti-time resists clearly deduced narratives and resolutions and instead resides in a place of ambivalence and unease.

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Selina Ershadi

Selina Ershadi is an Iranian-born, Tāmaki Makaurau/Auckland-based, interdisciplinary artist working within a lineage of experimental, essayistic and poetic film forms. She holds an MFA from Elam School of Fine Arts and a BA majoring in English Literature from the University of Auckland. She currently teaches at the School of Architecture and Future Environments, Huri te Ao Hoahoanga, AUT.

Tyson Campbell

Tyson Campbell is of mixed Māori (Te Rarawa/ Ngāti Maniapoto) and pākeha (white-fella) ancestries. He is a Birrarang-a/ Melbourne based multi-disciplinary curator and artist whose work is engaged with the relationships between the Indigenous and the settler-state imaginaries. Tyson is currently researching non-performativity as a way to naturalise and elevate QTPOC spiritualities.