Session 2: 21/05/25
2-4pm

21 May 2025
Holy Trinity, Prince Consort Rd
London SW7 2BA

with Vancci F C Wahn / Elena Botts / Aly Gear / Grace Papineau-Couture / skoupidostef / Korrē

free tickets now available via Eventbrite



Participatory exposé :  “epiphany”   a  6-part mixed presentation and panel. 



“How can new media and technology reinterpret traditions as both a creative expression and a spiritual reconfiguration of traditional cultures within dominant structures, fostering a shift in networked consciousness amid broader socio-political influences? How do participatory and collaborative practices in new media change, challenge, and chart the trajectory of this reinterpretation?”

 
Vancci FC Wahn

British Textile Biennial 2023/Jack Bolton 

Bio

Vancci F.C. Wahn is a researcher in curatorial studies at Essex. Her PhD project explores the activist journey of Taiwan’s Indigenous peoples in reclaiming their cultural identities while constructing epistemological frameworks to support sovereignty advocacy and challenge colonial power dynamics, both externally and internally. She curated Indigenitude: Crafted Artivism in Taiwan for the British Textile Biennial 2023, using the history of international textile trade and filmmaking to highlight counternarratives in contemporary Indigenous textile and documentary film works.




Elena Botts

Elena Botts, Untitled (2023).  Still

Bio

Elena Botts is an artist and researcher who organizes a project loosely termed "unknown sound collective"  intended as an archive of experimental artists’ interior worlds, these that are externalized through their work, and the interchange through artist communities around the world, and the social change this may or may not represent.  For the Art and Religion CHASE series, this practice as research is evidenced in the work of collaborator Aly Gear, as a panel betwixt the two, and a performance by the artist. 

"some little works"
 




Aly Gear


Aly Gear, Window Series (2024).  Still

Bio

Aly Gear is a Glasgow based artist, writer, and researcher from Foula, Shetland and the Northeastern USA, (unceded Lenni Lenape territory & unceded Nipmuc territory [NJ/MA]) whose work focuses on designing interventions against textual systems and the capacity of these systems to do harm.

For the Religion & Art Colab she responds to the Ecclesiastical and Statist context of Holy Trinity Church, South Kensington via the computational re-animation of two critically curated historiographic Shetland based datasets that counternarrativize Shetland's Lairdic Era (1707-1886), challenge the supposed "Death of the Shetland Norn Language", and critically resituate the Shetland Norn language's people's coercive Britishization and cultural erasure by British Church and State actors.

Aly Gear is an ancestor of a long lineage of Foula/Shetland crofters, (including the last speaker of Foula Norn), stretching back to at least the 1200s before Shetland was part of the British State or the Scottish State, and she is also an ancestor of Foula’s last merchant laird. It is from within this tangle that she makes this work. She studied Chamber Music & Multimedia Composition + Visual Art at Bennington College, Socially Engaged Art + Decolonial Theory + Poetics at Goddard College, and is currently completing postgraduate studies at Glasgow School of Art in Art Writing + Critical Technology Studies + Linguistics. Recent residencies include: Prattsville Art Center (New York), Gamli Skóli (Iceland), & KuBa: Kulturbahnhof (Karstädt). Recent shows include: International Noise Conference (Miami), Judson Church Memorial Dance Center (NYC), HGB (Leipzig), & Market Gallery (Glasgow). 



Grace Papineau-Couture

Grace Papineau-Couture  (2024), Performance Still

Bio

Grace Papineau-Couture is a Canadian artist from Edmonton, Alberta, currently based in Chicago, Illinois. Working primarily in sound performance and sound installation, Grace merges the physicality and ephemerality of analog audio and folk storytelling to address the linkages between drone, myth, ritual, and superstition. With sound as raw material, Grace pulls apart ritual and superstition through field recordings, sampling, and uncanny instruments. Focusing on low-tech and ordinary objects as sonic instruments, Grace constructs haunting sonic meditations that embody breakage, variance within loops, repetitive action, and ritualization of labour. By using industrial materials like sheet metal alongside natural objects like tree branches as instruments, Grace materializes the blurred relationship between modern life and archaic fears through sound.



skoupidostef

Skoupidostef, 'Dakrya, agapi mou' (2024).  
Bio

skoupidostef (Steffi, they/them) was born in the Greek state in 1998. They write, produce and record music, they elaborate poetic works and occasionally experiment with video, and advocate for horizontal, participatory political organization. They currently live in the city of Lisbon.




Korrē

Korrē, Untitled (2025)

Bio

Korrē, 27, NYC. In the digital age, grief has become both hyper-visible and deeply isolated. Social media creates memorials, algorithms curate collective mourning, and yet, the experience of loss is often flattened into fleeting moments on a feed. With Grief Expert (sound performance), I aim to reclaim traditional expressions of grief—through gothic aesthetics, spiritual invocation, and sonic storytelling—as a means of subverting the dominant structures that dictate how Black mourning is perceived and commodified.

Networked consciousness offers a paradox: it connects us across vast distances, creating a communal space where grief and spirituality can be shared beyond physical boundaries. But at the same time, it risks stripping tradition of its rooted context, turning rituals into mere content. My performance seeks to bridge this gap by using music as a conduit for both personal and collective mourning—allowing the audience to engage not just as passive listeners but as participants in an immersive requiem that reclaims Black grief as both sacred and defiant.





Holy Trinity with All Saints
Prince Consort Rd
London
SW7 2BA


Contact:

Nina Danino  
n.danino@gold.ac.uk
Mark Dean
artschap.com/projects