fr / en

  • Exhibitions and Events
  • Grants and Residencies
  • Publications
  • Videos
  • About
  • Bétonsalon
  • Newsletter
  • Search
  • Colophon
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Villa Vassilieff

    Villa Marie Vassilieff
    Chemin de Montparnasse
    21 avenue du Maine

    75015 Paris
    +33.(0)1.43.25.88.32
  • Research grant & residency : Global South(s) Professorship at the Maison des Sciences de l’Homme
  • Events
  • Research grant & residency : Global South(s) Professorship at the Maison des Sciences de l’Homme

    Together with the Global South(s) Chair at the Collège d’Etudes Mondiales, Maison des Sciences de l’Homme in Paris (held by Françoise Vergès), Villa Vassilieff launched a six-weeks research res­i­dency pro­gram for researchers in human and social sciences who are based out­side of France. This call-out is equally open to artists. On the one hand, the res­i­dent works with Global South(s) Professorship directed by Françoise Vergès, and on the other with the Villa Vassilieff team, with a research in the frame­work of the gen­eral sci­en­tific direc­tion of the Collège d’études mon­­di­a­les, or to develop a research pro­ject fit­ting with the Collège d’études mon­di­ales policy, and more specif­i­cally with at least one of the fol­lowing topics devel­oped by the Global South(s) Professorship: the cir­cu­la­tion of ideas and the modal­i­ties of artistic and cul­tural pro­duc­tion between Europe and the world; the dif­ferent modal­i­ties of rep­re­sen­ta­tion of « the other » studied from a crit­ical per­spec­tive.

    Villa Vassilieff covers travel costs for the researcher and the Collège d’études mon­di­ales pro­­vides a 3 300 euros grant for a 6 weeks research.

    The res­i­dent has access to the rich net­work of aca­demic and artistic insti­tu­tions built by Villa Vassilieff and Maison des Sciences de l’Homme, and will be offered a cus­tomized guid­ance through meet­ings with researchers and art pro­fes­sionals. The res­i­dent will also ben­efit from the var­ious research pro­grams devel­oped by Villa Vassilieff with museums, public and pri­vate archives, uni­ver­si­ties - such as the inter-uni­ver­sity net­work Usages des Patrimoines Numérisés, of which Villa Vassilieff has an active role - or art schools; those pro­grams focus on rarely explored res­sources. Residents will be invited to con­tribute to the Collège d’études mon­di­ales and Villa Vassilieff respec­tive events pro­grams.

    Call for can­di­dates is closed for 2017. The next call will be pub­lished in Spring 2017


    GRANT HOLDER 2017: ANTARIKSA

    Indonesian researcher Antariksa (Kunci Cultural Studies Center) will be the grant ben­e­fi­ciary for 2017.

    Portrait de Tsuguharu Foujita par Jean Agélou.

    Antariksa is a his­to­rian and co-founding member of KUNCI Cultural Studies
    Centre, Yogyakarta, Indonesia—a research col­lec­tive focusing on crit­ical
    knowl­edge pro­duc­tion, research-action, and ver­nac­ular edu­ca­tion. He is the author
    of Tuan Tanah Kawin Muda: Hubungan LEKRA-Seni Rupa 1950-1965 [Tuan
    Tanah Kawin Muda: The rela­tion between art and the Institute of People’s Culture
    1950-1965] (CAF/IVAA, 2005). His pri­mary research is on art and mobility of
    ideas in Japanese-occu­pied Southeast Asia. He is now working on his new book
    日本占領期のインドネシアにおけるアート集団主義 [Art col­lec­tivism in
    Japanese-occu­pied Indonesia] (Kyushu University Press, 2017). Antariksa is
    cur­rently Associate Fellow of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS)-
    Yusof Ishak Institute, Singapore.

    "My research in Paris is a con­tin­u­a­tion of my ongoing study into art col­lec­tivism in
    Japanese-occu­pied Indonesia, based on archival research and oral his­tory
    inter­view in Indonesia, Japan, the Netherlands and Singapore. My research seeks
    to col­lect and to ana­lyze archives (art school archives, exhi­bi­tion cat­a­logues,
    pho­tographs, and so on) in order to better under­stand Japanese war artists’ (Fujita
    Tsuguharu, Miyamoto Saburō, Mukai Junkichi, Inokuma Gen’ichirō, and Ihara
    Usaburō among others) expe­ri­ence in Paris and their inter­ac­tion with artists’
    com­mu­ni­ties and col­lec­tives in Paris. I seek to track the trans­mis­sion of ‘Western’
    aes­thetics from Paris to Japan to Indonesia and how this has trav­eled and
    influ­enced the idea of aes­thetics and our visual memory of wartime Japan and
    Indonesia."

    Antariksa at Salon de lecture Jacques Kerchache Antariksa at Salon de lecture Jacques Kerchache


    The Fondation Maison des Sciences de l’Homme (FMSH) was set up in 1963 by his­to­rian Fernand Braudel to pro­mote the study of human soci­eties and research into social and human sciences (SHS), in rela­tion with other dis­ci­plines.

    Its pri­mary mis­sion is to foster the inter­na­tion­al­i­sa­tion of SHS research by encour­aging the mobility and hosting of researchers, devel­oping inter­dis­ci­plinary and col­lab­o­ra­tive research pro­jects, dis­sem­i­nating knowl­edge and pro­moting research.

    It houses and pro­motes col­lec­tive research infras­truc­tures and instru­ments as well as national insti­tu­tional SHS net­works. One of its aims is to host shel­tered foun­da­tions that share close ties with its social pur­pose.

    A pri­vate foun­da­tion recog­nised for its ser­vice to the public (FRUP), the FMSH receives funding to carry out its activ­i­ties related to its mis­sions on a non-profit basis.

    More info here.

    The Collège d’études mon­di­ales (School of World Studies), cre­ated in 2011 by soci­ol­o­gist Michel Wieviorka, is an aca­demic centre for the devel­op­ment of pro­jects by inter­na­tional researchers in a firmly mul­ti­dis­ci­plinary envi­ron­ment.

    It pro­motes new ways of thinking and working: research con­ducted by the philoso­pher and the economist, the doctor and the polit­ical ana­lyst, the lit­erary expert and the anthro­pol­o­gist all provide mutual stim­u­la­tion for under­standing the changes at play in the con­tem­po­rary world.
    The School’s sci­en­tific activity is organ­ised around three key areas: "New norms and insti­tu­tions", "Rethinking social jus­tice" and "Subjectivities: pro­duc­tion and knowl­edge", designed to study these changes, be they indi­vidual or sys­temic.

    The School pro­gramme is com­posed of chairs, ini­tia­tives (pro­gramme incu­ba­tion) and research sem­i­nars.

    More info here.

    Partager

    Grants and Residencies