Final presentation a.pass ‘vessels’
Anna Lugmeier & Sarah Pletcher
Open Doors Friday 27 - 28 January 2023
apass.be/vessels/
@applebacon @lizardqueensarah
Anna Lugmeier & Sarah Pletcher
‘vessels’ is a public presentation at The Green Corridor of Anna Lugmeier & Sarah
Pletcher that marks the end of their research trajectory at
a.pass (advanced performance and scenography studies).
vessels is a container for sharing methodology, motivation,
and questions proposed by these two makers over their time
at a.pass’ year-long postgraduate artistic research program.
Having related questions, processes, and concerns, the two
researchers interweave their individual approaches towards
the labour of “women’s work” and femme bodies picture
making processes by addressing and engaging critically with
individually developed methods and ways of coming together
in art making.
Both of them have researched in specific performative ways
how to establish and weave different dimensions of female
reality, that have outgrown the framework of patriarchal
structures. In their practices, they intertwine several subjects
and materialities such as porcelain eggs, oyster shells, felt, fragments of film, sound recordings, conversations,
motherhood, storytelling, collaborative thinking, human and
more than human knowledges, all present in the space.
Anna Lugmeier (she/her)
Anna’s research oscillates between seemingly naïve or bluntly
formulated narratives and a critical feminist approach towards
storytelling in film making, while seeking to examine how
collaborators can grow together/with each other through moments
of crisis or speechlessness. She elaborates the complexity of the
non-visible/not yet visible in collaboration, through a filming and
editing process.
Sarah Pletcher (they/them)
Sarah is a conceptual performance artist with a background in
ceramics, fiber and material studies. Their research investigates
the unpaid and unacknowledged labour of “women’s work”
particularly pregnancy, childbirth, and child-rearing, and its role
within contemporary capitalism. Their practice speaks to body
and economic politics of being a femme maker both in artistic and
domestic spaces.