Publications

Published Jan. 13, 2019 8:17 PM

TRACES fanzine #01 - Snapshots, collects a selection of graphic-based contributions raising questions and investigating practices focusing on European Contentious Heritage.

Published Jan. 13, 2019 8:06 PM

This fifth issue of the TRACES fanzine is a milestone, marking the midterm of our collaborative research project. It has been conceived as a “beacon”. Rather than a dictionary, a glossary, or a thesaurus (which are meant to provide ‘definitions’), this fanzine has been understood as a tool that brings together selected key concepts emerging from and/or grounding the TRACES project.

Forward by Francesca Lanz.

Published Jan. 13, 2019 8:02 PM

This issue presents the essay “Squaring The Circle: Some thoughts on tracing the remains of Long Kesh/Maze prison in Northern Ireland” by Martin Krenn and Aisling O’Beirn. “The Circle” is a term that is commonly used for an area in the “H Blocks” of the former prison Long Kesh/Maze that contained the administrative hub and was continually surveyed using CCTV. Although the prison shut its gates nearly 20 years ago (2000s), the surveillance of The Circle continues to be “broadcast” by a surveillance box monitor, that is one example of infrastructural hardware which made it past the prison gates after its closure. Many other objects and artefacts from the prison still survive, despite much of it being demolished in 2013. As well as artefacts that were once part of the fabric or administration of the prison, artworks made in the prison also exist.

The dialogical art project Transforming Long Kesh/Maze (TRACES CCP5) investigates the material culture of the Maze/Long Kesh site based on collaboration and dialogue.

Published Jan. 13, 2019 7:59 PM

Many institutions around the world hold collections of human remains. The most contentious of these were gathered during colonial periods where indigenous communities had ancestral remains traded, stolen or gifted to collectors. The TRACES Dead Images project has gathered together voices which need to be heard from across the world, voices of contemporary indigenous people, scholars, curators, artists and members of the public. The vehicle for the dialogue is a panoramic photograph by Tal Adler, depicting the human remains of ancestors held in the Natural History Museum of Vienna.

Forward by June Jones.

Published Jan. 17, 2018 3:17 PM

This issue collects innovative and critical visual researches on the topic of the call “Europe and Heritages in/from the margins”. These contributions offer different interpretations of the concept of “margin” – a buffer, a liminal landscape, a ribbon, a palimpsest – investigated through the works of artists who analysed this kind of space with new forms of cultural meaning and production.

Published Jan. 17, 2018 2:42 PM

This issue of the TRACES Journal collects different innovative and critical reflections on the theme of contested heritages in Europe, aimed at illustrating and assessing creative and reflexive formats, tools and strategies of heritage transmission with the arts. 

Published Jan. 17, 2018 2:41 PM

What role heritage can and should play in addressing social divisions and crises in contemporary Europe is the topic of this issue of the TRACES journal. It has been designed as a dialogue among the scientific coordinators of some of the most recent of the EU's flagship research projects focusing on museums and heritage studies.