RMIT SCHOOL OF ART

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Melbourne Now: Dr Laresa Kosloff

Laresa Kosloff New futures TM 2021 (still); video with sound. Purchased, Victorian Foundation for Living Australian Artists, 2021
© Laresa Kosloff and Sutton Gallery, Melbourne

RMIT School of Art is thrilled to see so many staff, students and alumni featured in the NGV exhibition Melbourne Now.

Today we feature alumnus and Senior Lecturer Dr Laresa Kosloff.

Alumnus and Senior Lecturer Dr Laresa Kosloff works across video, audio, Super 8 film, photography and performance. Her practice is concerned with representational strategies, each linked by an interest in the human body and notions of agency in everyday life.

Three of Kosloff’s video works are included in Melbourne Now, each assembled and edited entirely from corporate video stock footage sourced on the internet. In La Perruque, 2019, a businessman pens a novel during work hours, imagining his co-workers as characters in a fantastical narrative. In Radical Acts, 2020, a group of climate scientists clandestinely distribute a pathogen that renders corporate workers less productive and more accepting of motivations beyond profit. This work concludes with a song sung by climate activist Violet Coco, who was recently sentenced to fifteen months in prison for an act of non-violent civil disobedience with the climate action group Fireproof Australia. In New Futures, 2021, a biohacking initiative wages war between the industrious and hyper-charismatic ‘synthetic’ personalities and disgruntled hackers, nostalgic for an apathetic past. Darkly humorous, incisive and exploring themes of duplicity, neoliberalism and the climate crisis, the videos are connected by a questioning of representation in the public realm. In an act of what the artist refers to as ‘political ventriloquism’, each work is steered by stylised narration and overdubbing that imbues new — and at times unsettling — meaning into the found footage.

Free entry
Booking is not required

The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Fed Square
Level 2

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