
Melanie Manchot
@melaniemanchot
ID: 3854719822
http://www.melaniemanchot.net 03-10-2015 18:34:22
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336 Followers
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Eloquent and wise: Marcus' Coates on the best and the worst of times in our current situation Marcus Coates Kettle's Yard

Thank you The Heong Gallery for this conversation. Can’t wait for your doors to open again so exhibitions can be seen in physical spaces by embodied people.




Really interesting discussion from The Heong Gallery symposium about the creation of Melanie Manchot's 'The Ladies' #WeAreHere with Shahida Rahman and Andrew Nairne



In today's FLAMIN newsletter: Selected X tour Hetain Patel interview Iain & Jane's Nick Cave exhibition Watch: Melanie Manchot, patrick hough, Kristina Pulejkova Wysing Arts Centre Broadcasts #opencall artist opps Read: bit.ly/383rBc6 Subscribe: filmlondon.org.uk/newsletter


If you missed Andrew Nairne Melanie Manchot and Shahida Rahman discussing 'The Ladies' for the 'WE ARE HERE: Women in Art' symposium at the The Heong Gallery, you can now watch it online here: ow.ly/ozu950AlQQe


Ten years on from its original exhibition Whitechapel Gallery, Steven Bode reflects on the making of Melanie Manchot's 'Celebration (Cyprus Street)' film as well as its relevance for today, as it screens on FVU Watch. Read here: buff.ly/2B9vFvz




Such a great opportunity to increase bookshelf space for my growing Fitzcarraldo Editions collection. joanna pocock 'Surrender' is a must have, I highly recommend to anyone who hasn't read it yet. So poignant and important for our strange times.


This is such great news, great shortlist of amazing writers. joanna pocock book Surrender published by Fitzcarraldo Editions is one I will return to over and over and will keep giving to people as it is urgent, full of ideas, hopes and care.

Beautiful and inspiring. Makes me smile in front of my computer. Thanks to Robert Macfarlane - what a great challenge.

'FLIGHTS by Olga Tokarczuk (tr. Jenny Croft) is filled with weird anecdotes such as the one about the anatomist who kept his amputated leg in the headboard of his bed so he could study it whenever he fancied.' Jenny Offill in Guardian Books: theguardian.com/books/2021/jan…