Anthology overview

Scope of the Anthology

The anthology section of the project has been developed by an artist-led editorial collective. With contributions from artists alongside curators and scholars. Individual pieces vary within a  spectrum of academic and non-academic contributions: in some cases, academic texts take on more experimental or conversational forms; some creative and personal contributions reflect first-hand experiences of past Womanifesto events; and other texts consider concepts of collectivity and archival practices, fitting within an established academic mould. 

This anthology makes a polyvocal contribution to the field of art history, and specifically the study of Southeast Asian Contemporary Art, by offering scholarly inputs alongside first-hand reflections and primary resources. It is hoped that the broad scope of contributions will collectively enrich the histories of Womanifesto and offer new insights into the under-researched area of women-centred art histories.

 

Anthology Contents

The anthology contents are all categorised as Musings so you can also explore them by selecting 'Musings' in the network graph, or visiting the 'Musings' category page. 

NB This anthology is currently under review so will be subject to changes. Some draft contributions are available but others will be added once the review is complete.

Editorial Collective | Introduction 

Virginia Hilyard | On Collaborating with Varsha Nair and joining Womanifesto 

Sue Pedley | Reflection on Womanifesto 

Alana Hunt | Reflections on LASUEMO

Lawan Jirasuradej | Reflection on Womanifesto 

Keiko Sei | The quiet battle that Womanifesto has fought, and, together: my reflection on “Womanifesto: Flowing Connections”

Krystina Lyon | Seven Short Reflections

Chantawipa and Chumpomn Apisuk | TradiSEXion the Pre-Womanifesto

Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook | Mangosteen, a Male Stray called Toob Oei, and Womanimalifesto 

Nilofar Akmut | On Boon Bandarn Farm Workshop 

Nitaya Ueareeworaku | Weaving Relationships 

Varsha Nair | Womanifesto II—jogging ahead

Phaptawan Suwannakudt | Busy Invisible-A Voiceover

Özge Ersoy | The Womanifesto Archive: Communities as Practice, Archives as Method

Varsha Nair | Of Key: Notes on Womanifesto’s Fluidity

May Adadol Ingawanij and Roger Nelson | Response to Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook contribution

Yvonne Low | Womanifesto’s Archives—In Search of a Feminist Dwelling Space

Penwadee Nophaket Manont | Womanifesto & Me — Alternative Art: A Path to Solutions?

Megumi Kitahara | Itō Tāri and Womanifesto 

Thanavi Chotpradit | Letter to K

Alana Hunt, Judy Freya Sibayan and Varsha Nair | Conversation on Intergenerational Art Practices

Arahmaiani and Yvonne Low | Conversation

Varsha Nair, Phaptawan Suwannakudt, Nitaya Ueareeworakul | The Womanifesto Way (Conversation)

Karla Sachse | Baskets of Reflection

Jamilah Preenun Nana | A Reflection on Womanifesto's Ethos

Ma Eileen Ramirez, Ohome and Gantala | Backyards and Neighborhoods:  Leaving Room and Making to Scale (Forthcoming).

Marni Williams | Collective Publishing: Finding a Womanifesto Way


Editorial Collective

Dr Yvonne Low is a lecturer in the discipline of Art History at the University of Sydney. Her research looks at Southeast Asian art and Chinese diaspora cultures, specialising into women's practice and artistic networks. Her writings and projects have variously addressed canonical art histories using decolonial, feminist and digital methodologies.

Varsha Nair is an artist and co-organiser of Womanifesto since its conception

Dr Roger Nelson is an Assistant Professor in Art History at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. Nelson's research and teaching focuses on Southeast Asia's modern and contemporary art.

Phaptawan Suwannakudt is an artist and co-organiser of Womanifesto since its conception.

Nitaya Ueareeworakul is an artist and co-organiser of Womanifesto since its 
conception.

Marni Williams is Publications Manager at the Power Institute at the University of Sydney. She is currently completing her PhD at the Australian National University, where she is developing a 'generative model' and nodal infrastructure for multimodal research communication.

 

Project contributors

Project team: Dr Katrina Grant, Dr Yvonne Low, Varsha Nair, Jamilah Preenun Nana, Dr Roger Nelson, Grace Nunnapat Chittreepol, Phaptawan Suwannakudt, Lachlan Thompson, Nitaya Ueareeworakul and Marni Williams.

Website development: Isobel Andrews, Yang Li, Ian McCrabb, and Mufeng Niu of Systemik Solutions.

Womanifesto organisers: Varsha Nair, Jamilah Preenun Nana, and Nitaya Ueareeworakul