Hello and welcome to The Coop a HEN Hangout and we're so happy to welcome you all to the first session of 2025. So we are the organizers of The Coop. So I'm T Braun, Franklin Bonivento van Grieken Denise Rogers Valenzuela, and we are the curators of The Coop. and we work in consultation with Laura Levin and Tracy Tidgwell and Firmo Pompeu will be doing Portuguese English interpretation today. So to activate the translation, you select the globe icon at the bottom of your screen, and if you don't see it, click on more. And it's called interpretation so you can listen. So Denise is holding up to show. You can listen to the original audio or English or Portuguese, and you'll hear two voices during the interpretation, the original speaker and Firmo. But if that's too much sensory stimulation, you can always select mute original audio and you can switch between those two options during the event, and this information we pasted in the chat. And if you have any tech issues or questions, you can message Denise in the chat. Yes, and also we will have closed captioning in English and to activate the captions you click on the three dots or where it says "more". And if you can't see the captions, which is like two ccs in a little box and also at the bottom. Yeah. And if you have any questions, just message me. Yeah, and finally, we want to let you know that we will be recording today's event for archival purposes, and The Coop is an online gathering where we invite guys involved with the Hemispheric and Cultures Network and beyond for a conversation and although many of you are involved with hemispheric encounters in the Hemispheric encounters network or hidden for short is a growing network of activists, artists, academics, students and community organizations from across the Americas that explore hemispheric performance as a methodology, a pedagogical strategy, and a tool for social change. And if you will like to hear about future sessions of the group, you can follow Amy's very encounters on Instagram at Amy Encounters. And if you would like to see any positions or something you like, you can view them on their website. You can also get in touch with us via email and then that group that hang out at gmail.com. I will post these links in the chat. So no worries. You don't have to memorize all this information. So to be in touch. Okay. And before we hear from our speakers, we want to offer a land acknowledgment. So today, obviously we're gathered online. So we're all in different territories and each with their own original caretakers and their particular iterations of colonialism unfolding. But Franklin and I are presently in Chicago or what is known as Montreal. So today I'll just speak from that perspective. So Montreal corresponds to the Unceded territory of the connected Hakka people, and the name of this territory and connection is to charge, which means broken into since this is an island that's crossed by two rivers and has been a gathering place for many First Nations people and continues to be so. And we acknowledge that our acknowledgment is faulty and that land acknowledgments in general are very fraught. But as hosts of this event, we still want to express gratitude to the original hosts of this land and these waters that connect to people and remind ourselves of the material relations and histories that enable our offline lives and this virtual gathering to happen. And I'm sure today's conversation will offer insightful perspectives on these issues. Yeah, regularly. We also have here Tracy Tidwell, who I would like to acknowledge and send all the good bye to Granada. Her account with not having the best time. So now let's turn to our guest. Today. We will have a conversation about the exhibition event or archives at Cisco Niteroi, curated by Juliana Day, Fernando Cardoso and Danielle Colella, which showcases works by 14 artists from Kassel doing residencies in at the point at which Hergé, one of the world's most climate vulnerable regions in Rio de Janeiro. Through reflections on marine erosion, the artworks explore environmental, collective and process based perspective reinterpreting erasure, erosion not just as destruction, but as a catalyst for new ways of seeing, adapting and acting in the world. Joining the conversation are curators Juliana then and Fernando Caruso, as well as researcher Sergio PEREIRA Andrada, a professor into Department of Arts and Culture of Theater Studies at the University University from Amsterdam in the Netherlands. We also have Sharna Johnson Johnson, professor of performance creation in the Department of Theater of Concordia University of Montreal, and Laura Levine, director and a professor, and again, countries from Yale University. So please, Fernando, Julia, tell us more about all this wonderful project and all your welcome everyone. Okay. So good afternoon to you all. Julia I will try to speak in English, but if I have any problems, we have a few more here to help us. First, I'd like to also to thank you all for receiving us to talk about the exposition. It's joy for us to be able to share this with you. We got really happy with the result of this exposition, and we think that some kind is a way of showing you parts of the work that we've been doing there. In the more concrete, how can I say visible way so we can find out if you can just start rolling down the PowerPoint. This is a great introduction to for you to know that in the last year we received more than 16 artists and researchers there in at the phone sharing interest in thinking about how arts compassion that some agent in their community project their perspective whether live in some territories and also to be able to communicate about this situation, expanding the narratives it's not really states locally localize it in the territory to amplify this day's debate. So we for this exposition, we made the selection of artists, and especially from some specific groups that have been there. One specific with the Palais in 2022 and another one with if nineties. It was visual erosions in 2018 and also with a group of and School of Arts in Rio that calls scholars and see to we can translate maybe is school of non place into 219. So we will show you a bit of 14 works that we'd like to to arrange in this exposition. So Fernando you can disperse again as a methodology of work there. We always try to put ourselves as mediations in between the, the artist and the territory as we were living there for the last seven years. So we receive them. And most of all, we, we put our focus on experience with the ambiance, with the atmosphere, with the erosion, and also with the wood part of the environment, of the pleasure that the environment still can offer there. So our mediation focus on listening to the people who live there and who deal with erosion and to learn living with the erosion and to adapt with the the climate crisis that the territory has living for the last 17 years. So we have they are people who already lost not one house, but sometimes five houses, seven houses. And how do people adapt to this and create a conviviality with this process? We think there's the same kind of pedagogical experience in this conflict with erosion, and we think that this is an important message for artists to receive. So our work there, as you will be able to see, it's not focus on only works in as a special, a separate ambiance for the artist to create, but also in the in the beach, in the sea, in the river with people. It's what we like to think as a contextual art environment. So art that is created in beloved, in the context, not in solitude experience, so that you have some image of those experience of walking around and just feeling the territory. We believe a lot in the kind of information that the experience can bring to the creative process. So now you can press again, please. There is an image of some process of artists. It's one image of inside the house, as you can see. But then you can see also some of collections that artists used to to do in the beach. In the the right side, you can see those small word images that I don't know is to all feel the the small things that people use to buy houses. And when the houses are destroyed by the process of the erosion with the sea, the sea and the erosion process. Do some sculpture in this work that I miss is the basis of the houses. Yes. Thank you. And yes, so there you can see, you can have an estimate of of time that the debris is rolling in the sea and in the beach. And we have different size of this week. So it's a it's an interesting process that one of the artists made, not only him, but it's it's an interesting process to think about how time, process, destruction also. And in the other side, we have an artist that work a lot photographing and as to making collages with the I don't know which college is the right word, but making together different photographs, cutting and rearranging to to think differently about the images and the imagination that came that can be created when we organize the images so you can press there. We were in in that specific place. It's a bar and also ateliers and also a house. The we well lived great friend of us, Nicole. And his place was amazing because he created oh delete. There was his house was the bar where it sells drinks but there he he works with the material of the lens as well to to build a really specific place totally created by him. And he also has this this conception of creating with what the art gives with the sea brings and reminds in 18 functions and and images with that most of the time people see only garbage. So it's a it was a specific place that we normally take the art is there to to amplify the the perspectives of art and what we can use to to create the to recreate the materials so you can go a place. There is Daniele Pulido which is also an artist and the was the creator exposition there, his writing future in the sand. But what seems to be the sand there in this image was actually the rest of the street. How can I say this word in English? Also A to the the concrete. Yes, the concrete of the street. It used to be a street, but the sea has already destroyed these specific area used to have like four kilometers ahead. And now the what is happened in this beach is that the oh, the city is going backwards. As the sea events in the city. The city is building, rebuilding itself back like the sea came and the the constructions go backwards. And there I don't know if you can see the there's this area where you have a limit between the sands and where is reaching future. So it's like a catastrophic image future, but also invites us to think about future. What can we what can we do in this case but is so work that Daniele have been doing in different places and he's been thinking about this as a as a as a crisis, as a problematic and he's been reaching these in so many spaces. And then he chooses this one. And I think we saw was a specific work. It was not what is in its position but we we choose to to show to you because of this limited experience that these were written in this place can bring to us. You can go ahead, please that you have some experience of video works that was being there in the image above is for an the ground and see that repeatedly with these groups of three and do a and of dance where she she goes backwards and then she got into this tree and then she dance in this route and we have a video of this performance in the exposition and it's also video. Maybe you can see another moment, if you like. We can talk to her and maybe send to you, because it's a it's a kind of fusion between between the body and the root with the sea that came in the route while she was there. So it's really sensitive work as well. You can best fit, please. Well, there is inside Nico's house, as you can see. I was telling you that he built everything and each small part of this bar was created by him with any material that you can imagine. Like there's no limits to to, to what is a basis for a creation. And there is another resident, Lucien, of Uncle Sam's, that spend a few days with us there and made some performance in the in this bar. And then Vogue Canada was able to make some photos and in the exposition we we could put this photos in there in the lumber. I don't know if you know, I need help to translate lambada. There's word for it in English for wallpaper. Wallpaper, maybe. Thank you, Marty. I think it's wheat bait. Wheat paste, posters, controversy. But Qatar's King Kong Energy feed the Congo Energy defining wheat wheat based posters of that that can come in You guys. Yeah. Give money to popular book soup to a buffet. It's a stick with it stomach was a happy then there's no point of this Maintain the structure and the dignity of the work. It's to be a to to be able to do fast and it can be destroyed first as well. And there were some good images in this that we can put in this position also. So you can most there is maybe what eyes who just enter in the meeting with this helping with the translation and he was doing she was doing this is performance which I don't know this word as well. He did a basic who can help me is a material of the fishermen that they use to reach net fish in that. Yeah. Yeah. In the it's a traditional ways that fishermen works not like the big structure of of fishing. Fishing. Yes. And and also Mariana, after this performance in the other side of the screen, you can see a process of the DVD performance that she made did 18 and 2022. And this video went to exposition. Not the, the performance with the fishnet, but the also you can see the ambiance. And we wanted to show you a bit of the the visual of the environments there and how we always are trying to to make the words the works being created in the territory, not in the isolated form. You can't best fit. Please. Okay there is that Sweden and he's also a video artist and he works with old films and he is there in this image that you can see he would like very the the film in the same berry I think the hunger it yeah yeah and those and then the sand and though the small animals and different lives in the sand interfere in the feel and after he he he process this and best since this feel in the the exposition so you have a very specific image as results of these and he work there they this image is in the same with the sea interfering as well as you can see. But he also puts the film inside the river for a few days and then blessed by the fishes, the the vegetables, vegetable, the everything in the sea, the other the the animal life that interfere in the film and then is beautiful to see the results. And we could put in the exposition, also see possible. That's from Vito. He's a painter and he so so on that he used to work with this with the group theater. But as we know that he thinks we invited him also in the residence and ask her to to make some paintings in houses that are already abandoned by the the old owners. Sorry. And that he's performing. Let's talk with these but there I don't know some plug for that. Yes. This white flag that's Carolyn fell and see another artist that were with us and this day was, as you can see, a cloudy day, sort of raining day with strong wind. So I don't know these these white flags. And it has a and and I don't know, something like a peace sign. But in this environment with non beings, in an environment that is always in tension with the nature is so always in this conflict between the building of the city and the the sea that is coming inside the city and making this restriction. So in this context specific, this white flag don't bring us exactly the the beast energy, but instead like a conflict with this symbol. Now you can go ahead, sit it, please. Yeah. This is a part of the educational program that we do there as well. This is a group of students that we receive with the teacher that teaches there and knows the work and is always in contact with us to bring some students for us to talk about this relation between art and education and what are the possibilities of the art to talk about the environmental crisis. It's hard to talk about what's there. Even though they lived in this. The daily lives is a sensible subject because, you know, obviously is is the reality. But it's it's the said subject is a trauma. It's a live the trauma, the daily situation. So sometimes we discover that it helps to talk about these and to deal with the trauma of the the losing, losing of houses, losing of memories. So this kind of pedagogical function of it, to talk about environmental surprises is important to us as well. Say, please, you know, this Rossini is a and an artist from India that in the end we went there to work with this and make a video performance as well. Then the best piece, this is a parts of a frame of the video work that I've done there I've been working with achieves. Then thinking about something between was how can we make a private, achieve a public achieve and vice versa. What is the is this complex and political and delicate issue like what is a private achieve and how public can this be to collaborate this to to talk about things that are political that's attached to everybody. This lady he made and now she's following the sea, destroying this building in front of her house. And they made a small documentary about it which calls concrete sea. And the maybe I think, how you can you put another image, but I think that maybe I can pass the words now. Yes. To for you to talk about the exposition properly and then we can lead to talk a bit more in the conversation. I will put my microphone won't evolve Falak Fuku. But if you mean to this was so present, then do premiere or Kim Panorama is now the community organizer. I suppose so. There was one victim as oppressed don't suppose sums up para sit on a peasant. Sometimes you will and I in the process. Yeah. Ki is interesting. AC was imagines a qui mostyn-owen mccomas as oppressed photo organized in response pensando simply as the swings in three l isn't the homeless budding career, i.e. losing three in three process which are that Euston Nasser Let's imagine. It's interesting today struck by the stories daily so Mills Key is to maximize agitate the kill will Scott engage in passive messages trapped by this conventional the questions about the ice cube standing up riot yes here the skill could use is in Stella's voice, a key vote. The main concern to transform and have been to me main Michaela. So I'm going to get started. The action in a material dodge, a keystone that concrete that makes me to think about art history, about concrete art, phantasmagoria. And those material has a ghost like character. That's how I see the act of fishing and fishing has this presence in Brazilian history. It also has an important role to play in terms of economy. Paolo Vitor also works the VAT. As you can see, this is a window that he found at the beach and a lot of Arizona near. We can see Daniel's work in the background. He also works with material fan on the beach. So this whole part of the exhibition made, but with material found on the beach, there is a dialog between this materials found on the beach. They were not traditional and modern modern works, but Daniel also works with collages. He uses wood. You can see some of them in the background and he grows them. He uses the plastic from from pop bottles to to make these montage. We can see here some video work. This is part of the video that's part of the exhibition. We'll also see some of Isabella's work. We'll see them in more detail later here. You can see some of her work. This is a type of route, but it's actually made of latex. This is the one that you see towards the center of the photo. There's something else in the background that has a more aggressive character. It's made of glass and that in clay beside her work, you can see taste is work. Here. This is work made in a studio. The goal is to bring the atmosphere, parts of the landscape that they saw and tried to capture. You can see Louisiana's photos on the wall. This is part of the meeting with Oceana, Nikos Bar. This is Rafael's work, and that's Cara's work. So this was a very quick walk through the exhibition, but now we can look at them in more detail. So this is Danielle's installation here. The detail shows how he added these pieces together using plastic bottle. All the elements were found on the beach. This is my work. This is how I attach the net. It shows the idea of creating these geometric forms and adding the Brazilian neo concrete system. This material is very abundant. The the nets fall apart and the fishermen just throw them out. I have made a lot of work with it because this is the kind of material that's very dangerous for for marine life when it's back in the ocean. So there is there is an attempt to to take care of this material, to repurpose them. Now, the crabs there is there is a relationship to life. And still how erosion of erosion comes in. So all I'm doing is putting it together. I'm finding the bricks and these iron broads and I'm putting them together. So they kind of reminded us of these creatures, creatures that live in the main, the mangroves and a phone in this is Paolo, beside the window that he painted. Thank you. The work amounts to the idea that the sea is coming back to popular idea of the locals, especially with the Fisher people. This idea that the sea is reclaiming what belongs to it. In fact, that piece of land at some point ready belong to the sea. Scientifically speaking, that's also true. So that's that's what it says. The sea is coming back. You can see this in the painting. This is also beautiful work that was present. This is Rafael, his work. He organizes these pieces of bricks on top of notebooks in invites us to think about a type of geological writing. Also about the process of the artist. We are creating a language through the erosion. This is part of the reference. This is Isabella's work. You can see it in a close up to delicate work. She uses glass, ceramics, latex. And here is the same work from a different perspective. This statue is work. This is a film that he collected from an old file. He buried this in the sand. Money sack sand. This is a specific kind of sand that's present there. It's a low radiation sand. Let's let's watch this now. This is Tice's work, also a very intricate, very delicate work. Your beautiful interior lives. She creates this dynamic between salt, glass and iron. The salt kind of erodes the iron that holds up the glass. You can see this and the image the one on the left was when she first put it together. And this is later that showing the corrosion that salt caused in the work. This is Jerome Rossi's work. It's a still video, still image here. Filmed the window of a warehouse that's actually being buried by the sands. There's a little bit of movement in the plants here, so we create this. We had a TV in the back to make it to bring by this idea of a window. This is Corral corrals work. We also saw this during Julia's presentation. She has a huge flag that she brings to the meeting place between the river and the sea. He made this work here by creating these stamps, postal stamps. It remains a little bit of a video, right, Because you can see the flag movement along the way. And here is the flag. We installed it on the outside of the exhibition here. We can see why this work. This is her meeting with Maker. And then we paste post again here and she glue them on the outside. She talked a bit about her meeting with Nico in Arizona, Lou, who is an activist, a trans artist, a black person, and she adds all of that to her work, a black trans trans woman in Brazil. It's important to her to share these moments, moments where she can express her artistry, her subjectivity, and she was able to share a lot of her thinking with that. Here are the videos. We're not going to be able to watch them now, but I like to tell you here the videos that are present there. Fernando Breakfast video. Julia talked about Julia video. This video of Mariana and Sara. Jamie it's so there and I tried to stay on point. So we have enough time to talk. I hope this gives you a general view of the exhibition We had to choose. There were many artists that came through Casa Dona. I hope that this gives you an idea of the work that we did. I'd like to thank you. And I want to open the floor so we can continue the conversation. And it's my turn. Okay, Tyler, do this. Do this before what you brought to us today. Fernando. Julia, I have had the opportunity to visit. I had a phone with both of you. I was able to witness the work that you developed there. I think it's important to share this to this group that's with us today. I'm reinforcing something that I see in your work, Right? There's this persistence. You've been there for eight years now. You've been there since 2017, so it's been eight years. And the work I know how important this is to to you and you know, and this is also a cancer position as to other works that visit out of Toronto that come and go or make a spectacle out of it, the this is an erosion process that's 60 years long. It has been sped up doing to industrial activity in the area and there is a violent process that's been getting aggravated with through interventions of abuses on the environment. And this shows the many ways that artists and art can also produce, make and also use some of these process for their work. I think what you're trying to do is to show a an option to think about a continuity, a process of creating connections. You have this work of environmental awareness within the community. You work with the Landless Movement in Brazil. Ramon Oh, I'm sorry. Then there is a lady that's an activist. I forget her name. Please forgive me. No, no, no. In the manga and it's. Yes. Yeah, I can hear you. I'm sorry. There. There was there was a pause there. So. Yes. You've been working on different fronts, right? Academic research and, art, art, research. You were working on your postdoc, doctor. You work with a theater group, Grupo Arizona, the Russian group. So. But I have a question. My question is related to this choice to not make a spectacle of the erosion process. It's a choice not to romanticize this process. Can you talk about that? How how do you see this process of not knowing, of avoiding making a a spectacle or to avoid romanticizing that the the event and by creating peer right that uses the line from the song and right of of creating something, of recreating something, something that needs to be constantly re created then there is an idea to keep creating and recreating. There is there there are there are many, many layers. And this erosion is very symbolic. How do you understand there's non romanticizing, there's erosion process, there's known looking at this process as something exotic, but also now making it, you know, a doomsday kind of scenario. Can you talk about that? Shall we shall we comment on this? I guess it's better to to hear all the questions first and then we'll answer. And at the end. One. Yes. Hi. Hi. I'll be brief. Can I. Can everybody hear me? Great. Okay. Well, I mean, I wanted to, first of all, say thank you to Julia and Fernando for presenting this amazing work and, you know, maybe picking up a little bit on what Sergio is commenting on about how do you do this work and be in community and not so into romanticizing the work. And I mean, I don't know if I have much of a as much of a question or a comment, but what I was struck by is this tension and drawing attention and mobilizing publics and community around this tension of of of these culture, nature, nature, culture dynamics and especially with some of the earlier work you were sharing, Julia, kind of thinking about even just from the images and through this screen, there's this that some of these artworks are conjuring feelings of, of tenderness. For me, ritual mourning. And I started to think about, like this kind of process of ritual, of witnessing that's happening on the site as well. So I'm just wondering if that that for me has something to do with kind of countering, making the spectacle and, and, and kind of thinking about this witnessing or these actions. I don't know if that's what you've been witnessing because you're so embedded and embodying that site and have been for a long time. So I think it's it's a it's a question of thinking about how you see do you see this work as a kind of ritual or or mourning or witnessing. And I think when we see images of the water, you know, immediate, you start to kind of feel like we're in the rhythm of of this erosion and witnessing in this kind of a still life form and in the documentation. So I don't know if that's really a question as much as it is a comment. I find I really find the work in the project really moving. So I wonder if you could speak a little bit to that or and the other question I had was to what degree the locals and the community are embedded in and working with, Have they? What's the if you could say a bit more about the importance of their agency in the work and, and, and hosting I guess outsiders coming in to to work in the site for that. No it's okay. I mean if I, I what I was expecting us to sort of ask a question and answer or ask the question and answer. So I think like showed I'll be brief if we're if we're going in this way, I'll also say thank you for sharing this with us and congratulations. This is really moving and amazing work that I think we can all learn so much from. I'm really interested in something that Fernando said. We were talking about creating a language for the erosion and and it made me think about the question of what role performance plays in your work. You know, how a question what I keep coming back to because the presentation of the work in this way, in this form we're seeing it in a kind of an installation and format. But you're also describing dance the the woman who is dancing and the root of a tree, for example, must look familiar with some of your other work. That's more theater based and had the pleasure of engaging in a workshop that Fernando led that was theater based as well. So I'm kind of interested in like how is what role performance plays in creating a kind of language for the erosion and if it if it does at all, and what can performance do that other art forms can't or or is performance not the most useful term in thinking about this particular body of work that you're sharing with us? Just interested in the specificity of artworks and the language that they create in the context of environmental collapse. And I think that like for me, that also goes back to something that Julia was talking about that I found really moving, which is thinking about the pedagogy part of this work and Julia, you were talking about how art in the context of environmental crisis can help us with dealing with the trauma of loss, the trauma of losing tangible things that mean a great deal to us, and and also the loss of memory eventually as well. So I see these two things as kind of operating in conversation with one another. The idea of I hear the idea of creating a language as being in conversation, this idea of helping people to deal with trauma. And I was interested in hearing you talk a little bit more about all of that. And then secondarily, just because Hemispheric Encounters is a transnational project, thinking about whether this language is site specific or whether it could be transferable to other contexts of environmental collapse. You know, in North America, for example, we've seen really stark images, for example, of L.A. and severe environmental destruction, a totally different context, totally different situation. But we're talking about climate disaster in another context. So can can we think about laying a language that that troubles as well? So my thoughts evolve along book together go and okay feeding and I respond I think I think I can I can answer better that way. So you brought up a lot of problems. You brought up paradoxes, struggles, obstacles. I think a reason to be there is to work on those paradoxes. How can we build how can you build the work that works with the language that deals with destruction, something that goes beyond and negative? Look, But how does this abstraction affect other things being produced? Someone leaves the house because the sea is approaching. Someone else will come in or within that house will create a bar, something that worked during the summers. It this and now this is this is something new. It creates new life. It created new possibilities. This is something that might have been considered gone, wasted the this idea of romanticize of of making a spectacle. But it's it's it's definitely a challenge for have been there for years with host artists that stay for for a week and then they move on they can create work that we have no control over. And that's that's why our focus there is the mediation between the artists and the land so that these artists can hear to the people, so that their experience that will impact them and in a sense sensitive way in their work later on, they may develop something that will sell or not. You know what? We're not worried about that. We're more worried about the learning process that this or have later on. Obviously, we have no control over what they will do out of our the information that they gathered there were always running meetings so people can can talk about their experiences to the artists. So we I don't have a better answer. I'm from Rio. I was shocked when I arrived in at our phone at the teaching experience needs to go through living with the laws and to create within it. It's an existential condition. The pedagogy is not specific to a content, the environmental laws, but it touches all of us if we are people that take the environmental problems seriously. And yeah, we are in Brazil, we are feeling it. I believe we'll all have to deal with this loss. The lot, the material loss, the loss of a certain lifestyle, lots of lots of loss. How does the community receive this? Well, very well. They're often very happy about it, Believe it or not, this is not a topic that receives a lot of attention. So we don't. But we moved there. And so we we became neighbors. And that's how people see this. The work our work is to bring attention to us, but to put the spotlight on it, to to create a dialog around it. I think performance has a special role in the work that we develop. I think it's the context I think is the very nature of performance that allows us to use that and to to performance is a language that's very important to us. We as a theater group, we were always very linked to the performance. Our works were always rooted in performance. You know, I might be on the beach, it might be some archive work. It was a type of theater that was that was born from the territory. And I'm going to wrap up. Sorry, there are lots of questions I still want to make from our friend on the I'd like to touch upon the idea of the end of the world. There is an important thinker in Brazil. I read some Quranic. He here said that the world has ended many times. Many worlds have. So when we go over there, what we see is that this is not the end of the world. It's the end of a world. It's something that will lead us to a new experience. It's part of a cycle. It's not the apocalypse that will be the end of all of us. We are going to have to keep dealing with it. Consequences of our actions, of our explorations, our way of interacting. So it might be more complex than simply an end, something that would simply put an end to our problems. There is no end and their worlds have been ending for a very long time. I think at a phone TED talks about that and in many ways and it extrapolates and and connects to many other experiences of ending many that we have lived by living now. And we'll continue to live. I think it has an existential pedagogy, pedagogy. It's sad and happy at the same time. It brings a sadness and a melancholy in its nature. I think it's a very rich experience to live in that territory, something very valuable. That's it for me. I'm going to try to add something to what Julia said, and I'm going to start with Sergio's points. It seems to me that when we work with an art and we try to engage or we try to be environmentally responsible, we we we don't really have an answer, but there is something we know we are going to need to build alliances. We're going to have to compromise. We're going to have to involved with the territories. We're going to have to spend time there. There are some points that we know are just vital so that the work will make sense in a way so that they will have some sort of impact for the people that live there. We we live there, but we chose to live there. However, there are people that live there because they have nowhere else go. We know that our presence there is different from it. We're always going to be foreigners there in one way or another. So how can our work be become relevant to them? We don't know. But we understand that there is art that doesn't care about that. There is art that is for producing the exploitation processes, but we are there and we it is our job to sometimes point the finger and say, Hey, what you're doing here is this like you're not being any better? Excuse me. There is there is no sound from us. It's back. And then those sound I stopped there is this similar to a similar place called us. Assume that I'm. I'm sorry. Unfortunately I can't hear Fernando's audio, so we need to be aware. Art. Art can have many different ways, many different ways to interact. I'm sorry. I don't know. I don't know what's happened. I'm going to. Maybe. Maybe if I. Yeah. Yeah, It's better now. Yeah. So where should I go back to this? Carry on from where you were. It seems to me that there is nuance that we can. We can know this. There is. There is artwork. Fernanda Sound is frozen again. Well, I mean, I think we had like a huge like at least a good summary of the response, like, oh, what to say? Like this connection was originated by this team, but I mean, maybe it's mom and who clones this space and we can or should wait a little bit. Yeah, let's wait. We can wait then. Yeah, let's wait then. At least they they back. I will send a message on their phone. Yeah. He saved both of them. Lost the connection. Let me see what he's saying. Uh, standby. He would try again via cell phone. You know, when we are working the hemispherical. Me, the. This is always a thing, you know, the connection, always the the timezone. So we need to have it all like entourage like, like performative moments for kind of the intermissions when people leave. I think I would like to nominate the niece who creates incredible short puppet shows to have something ready for sessions so that the puppet theater can take over as we're as we're waiting for the connection to come back. It could be a way for us to organically deal with the discomfort of good. Oh, see, that's exactly. Yeah. I also nominate Jess. Jess can also. Yes, provide. Yes, but yes. Oh, time. Here's Julia. Julia's back. Oh, no. Oh yeah. She's about Wow. Sorry. Let me get sick. It's. No, Hey, come here. One moment. Yeah. Looks like he. He's. It's going to another. Yeah, They're shooting today. So now that Kim is loyal to them, the. He can't hear me when they have internet. But how erosion effect that. Yeah. The end of the world. The beginning of the world interview follow the book that's. That's a lesson that gives you a little bit about relationship trouble artist creating a Rasmus showing so I where it has dimensions that aren't always related to two as I invest commitment generally I know the I I create I create here shows that commitment we provide is some we have other work. Some work that are more territorial such as moving museum. There's a little child giraffe to perform in the Dodge or that idea to create a direct dialog with the community interest. They want to bring words to to the community, to the fisherfolk community. But we need to be watchful. We need to be always thinking about this social mapping to what I said. It doesn't matter whether I work with painting my near physical, just trouble you ten. Is there any way that I can make this this work echo with this place as custodians and permits you made because you survive the sky and trouble you could dance a case in tone, add a super talented disaster in there. Yeah. So this is in strings section, this question key callout. It tries to follow too much modeling. While talking about Laura's point, I talked about the idea of creating a language that's connected to erosion quite in to maintain the hand that you're watching, just as in check it out. So something that we learn along the way, we are raised thinking that you know that the artist is some sort of genius that is created. He or she is creating something that something so special and so different. There's a there's a that ego plays a big role as become fuzzy. But what we understand now is that the work to work with is to create a partnership. Clark hasn't seen the theme compared to Rio, and of course we still offers in some sort of way, but we share the the, the, the authorship with the territory of Zoom due to June, January Church Commission. And we know that this work isn't simply the product of an artistic genius. Is this job. We are listening to what the erosion is producing, to what those lads are telling us taught them. We are working on some sort of interpreter that the man. I think the idea of like translation in an arts is also something that's really interesting. Whipsawing the sink is exciting. The man is into the key to Archibald parts inside the Apache. That's a perspective. You can also understand art from this perspective is something that's beyond what's human. A perspective on art doesn't all belong only to the human perspective. We could think about art and in this way, and there's this type of art that we were working with as something that actually exists in this process. In this meeting point, you start to realize that it exists within this environmental processes in time that exists within the senses. And the other thing is, I don't know that there is a way create this language aside from this relationship to create Abdallah El Apache sea sponges. But I think once created, yes, that language can expand. Yes, we are working locally, but we understand that these are global topics. They are particular to a phone that we keep them at. A phone is reflecting questions that exist and in other places seeing you ask them to you Marquesa and this issue the dome and I think that is reflected in the works. Keita visit is a puzzle that may asking I might be. I may be missing something. Uh, a proposal. But in general terms, I think that's that. That's what I had to to share with you. These are my thoughts. Because insofar as I go over and now what do we do? We a comment about spam camera and clap noses so game the Kentucky cat Zimmer which McCoy's I don't know if there's an is there anyone here that would like to say something because it's just myself Flora and Shauna. But maybe there is someone else here that would like to make a comment. Mr. Hopkins Just to make sure that wrapping up of sad my response to the farmer, But I'd like to open the space. Everybody's too shy to say anything. It's fine. No problem. Yeah, I think we have to to wrap up now. Otherwise we. We would need our back up for fear. Marcus have been doing an amazing job. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Thank you. Feel more. But, God, this human penalty of the people together feel they are. The stories are amazing translators. Great job. Always. But regardless, in regard to Jane Spiller teleported in the presence. Still presence. Thank you. Thank everyone. Thank you for this opportunity. It's so important to us. It's so important to be part of this. I don't think I. I thanked everyone from the Nicole. Yeah. I mean, she as it's time to get out this opportunity. That's where the contextually very grateful for this opportunity to share this with you. And I hope we can continue this dialog. Yeah, it's it's so important. It's such an important work. It still is but that we're very happy about it. Both of my time after I got this set. I mean, momentum is very can countless and can you to take them right now to to thank in the name of this great encounter this is large network we had. Fernando is our most post-doc member. He just finished his product project about June and I'd like to thank him. We gave us the opportunity to meet because he's doing a work unit. And so I'd like to thank for this partnership and I hope that we can keep working and as I get more, I think it's that then easy D And frankly, everybody, thanks to all the people that have gathered to the moon. Thank you, everyone. Thank you.