Video: Artist Talk with Lou Sheppard | STAGES Speaker Series
Plug In ICA announced an artist talk by Lou Sheppard on February 2nd, 2023, as part of the STAGES Speaker Series in anticipation of his temporary public artwork for the STAGES biennial in August 2023. Lou Sheppard works in interdisciplinary audio,
Video: Interpreting [Interrupting] Youth: When Veins Meet Like Rivers; ᑲᑎᓐᓂᖅ / okhížata / maadawaan. Session 10, 2021.
Plug In ICA is thrilled to present a video made by participants during the 10th edition of our Interpreting [Interrupting] Youth (IIY) program. The video, produced as a response to our exhibition, When Veins Meet Like Rivers; ᑲᑎᓐᓂᖅ / okhížata
Video: Hannah Black, Lecture (LOL)
Plug In ICA presented an artist talk by Hannah Black on Tuesday, December 17th at 7pm. Black is an unrestricted thinker and engaged speaker. Her talk functioned as the keynote address to close Labour of Love: On Digital Economies in the Arts (LOL), a
Video: The Ghost and the Flesh a Lecture by Morehshin Allahyari
On December 5, 2019 Plug In ICA and The Institute for the Humanities, University of Manitoba presented "The Ghost and The Flesh", a lecture by Morehshin Allahyari as part of "Labour of Love: On Digital Economies in the Arts", a
Video: Ali Shamas Qadeer, Lecture (LOL)
On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7pm, Plug In ICA and School of Art, Graphic Design at the University of Manitoba presented The browser as…, a lecture by Ali Shamas Qadeer as part of Labour of Love: On Digital Economies in the Arts, a series of
Video: Carmen Aguilar y Wedge of Hyphen-Labs, Lecture (LOL)
On Monday, November 18, 2019 at 8pm, Plug In ICA presented the lecture Code, Corals, Capitalism and Curls by Carmen Aguilar y Wedge of Hyphen-Labs as part of Labour of Love: On Digital Economies in the Arts, a series of lectures, screenings, and workshops. Code, Corals, Capitalism and Curls looked at an international
Video: Angie Keefer, Second Thoughts Reading
I half hold that my life is a fine ride as long as I don’t attempt to navigate. The least critical way to describe this outlook is “bemused fatalism,” and as coping mechanisms go, there’s much to be said for