Rita McKeough • 2024 Queen’s University VPR Artist-in-Residence
Artist Talk & Exhibition • Nov 13 2024 • Isabel Bader Centre, Kingston
Free and Public Events! Further information below.
Acclaimed artist Rita McKeough will present an artist talk and exhibition as 2024 Queen’s University Vice-Principal Research Artist-in-Residence. Since the 1970s, Rita has worked from feminist, queer, and ecological concerns in artworks that incorporate audio, performance, electronics, and kinetic objects.
&Բ;🦊 Artist Talk • Nov 13, 5 pm • Isabel Bader Room 222
Rita will give an artist talk, reflecting on her extensive career spanning more than five decades as an artist, performer, and educator. Her art is distinguished by its political engagement, collaborative approach, and interdisciplinary focus, addressing issues such as violence against women, human-animal-plant relations, and ecological collapse.
Exhibition • Wave over Wave • Nov 7–14 • 10–16:00 • Art + Media Lab • Closing reception Nov 13, 6:30pm
As part of her VPR Residency, Rita showcases the restored version of her 2000 artwork, Wave over Wave. The installation consists of two dozen motorized drumsticks that play a rhythmic accompaniment to a video projection and audio recordings of three vocalists. This work was originally developed for a specific site on the harbour in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The artwork explores themes of grief and loss within social histories of coastal communities, serving as a memorial to those who have lost their lives working on the ocean and migrating by sea.
This exhibition is the result of conservation efforts supported by the Vulnerable Media Lab, with technical development and production by Peter Flemming. It is made possible through the Postdoc Initiative Fund and the Agnes Etherington Art Centre.
A closing reception will be held on the evening of November 13, following Rita’s artist talk.
The exhibition is open Nov 11–14, and by appointment Nov 7–11.
Partners: @vulnerablemedialab @aeartcentre @queens_film @queensu_arthistory @queensuisabel @queensuniversity @quartsci @queensevents
#QueensU #ArtistInResidence #contemporaryart #artisttalk #kingstonarts #arthero #ritamckeough
Ms. Nookie Galore performs Sarap
Food is central to cultural sharing, and cooking is an embodied performance of gathering in the kitchen to tell the stories that make us who we are. Join horror drag queen Ms. Nookie Galore as she takes up this act of cultural nourishment by animating the scary stories of her childhood for the audience. Sarap is a reworking and a reanimation of the origin story of the Filipino vampire, the Manananggal, within the context of the migrant worker. The performance explores who Ms. Nookie Galore is through the formats of the cooking show, horror storytelling, and drag entertainment.
HERBARIA
Tuesday September 10 at 6:30pm
Presented by the at the Department of Film and Media, Queen’s University.
Admission is free and everyone is welcome to attend. Seating is “first come, first served” at the door. The screening will be presented in the 68-seat Roxy Auditorium with laser projection.
Herbaria is a poetic documentary that parallels the rigorous and vital practices of botanical preservation and film preservation (the director, Leandro Listorti, is himself an archivist in addition to being a filmmaker and curator). As delicate in its touch as the materials that make up its subject, Herbaria is a reflection on ephemerality and our relationship to nature, time, and memory. Situating the viewer somewhere between past, present, and future, this elegant documentary blends 16mm and archival footage, giving us a tactile and transcendent opportunity to consider what it means to archive. In so doing, Herbaria points to the potential of stepping out of time and channeling our attention towards new possibilities of engagement and understanding with the materials at our fingertips.
Outer Worlds is an extra-ordinary film program that features five, experimental IMAX films by Canada’s leading artists: Oliver Husain, Lisa Jackson, Kelly Richardson, Michael Snow, and Leila Sujir. The theme of the commissioned program is in keeping with the cinematic genre typical of IMAX films—the larger-than-life landscape that forms an outer world beyond the limits of the human sensorium.
Each of the films explores expanded cinema through different ecologies of the non-human: the forest, lichen, snails, water, and sky. The works propose different worlds of experience and distinct grammars of immersion through a meeting with the camera. The films imagine common worlds by reflecting upon the exigencies of intercultural and interspecies communication, a task that has taken on great urgency in the 21st century as we grapple with how to adapt to the ecological realities brought about by anthropogenic climate change.
Janine Marchessault is Professor in Cinema and Media Arts at York University, and holds a York Research Chair in Media Art and Social Engagement. Her research engages with the history of large screen media (from multiscreen to Imax to media as architecture and VR). She belongs to the CinemaExpo67.ca research group. Her latest project is an expanded cinema project, Outer Worlds () – commissioning five IMAX films by artists, which premiered at the Cinesphere in 2019 and will begin touring soon.
She is the Director of (2018–2024), a research collaboration involving more than 20 community and artist-run archives devoted to diverse histories from Indigenous, LGBTQ2+, immigrant, and women’s communities. Her most recent monograph is Ecstatic Worlds: Media, Ecologies, Utopias (MIT, 2017) and co-edited collection Process Cinema: Handmade film in the Digital Age (MQUP, 2019).
Leila Sujir is an artist working in video and video installation. Over the last forty years, Sujir has been building a body of video art works using a mix of fiction, fantasy and documentary with visual and audio collage techniques. Her video art works have been shown in group shows at the Museum of Modern Art (New York) and the Tate Gallery (Liverpool), as well as galleries all over the world. Her work is in collections including the National Gallery of Canada and the Glenbow Museum. Leila Sujir is a professor emerita in the Studio Arts Department at Concordia University. She leads an art research studio-lab based at Concordia University, Elastic 3D Spaces, that most recently received a SSHRC grant, Thinking Allowed (2022), and a Canada Council production grant (2022).
Oliver Husain is an artist and filmmaker. His projects are often collaborations with other artists and friends; and often begin with a fragment of history, a rumour, a personal encounter or a distant memory. He uses a wide range of cinematic languages, technical experiments and visual pleasures — such as dance, puppetry, costume, special effects — to animate his research and fold the viewers into complex narrative set-ups. Recent exhibitions include Beauties of Lucknow, a site-specific installation commissioned by Massey College, Toronto; Lenticoolers at Gallery Susan Hobbs, Toronto (with Malik McCoy); I don’t know you like that at University of Buffalo Art Galleries and Exposure at Camera Austria, Graz (both with Kerstin Schroedinger); all 2023. His website is ; his livestream performances (with Amy Lam) are available on
Mani Mazinani was born in Tehran in 1984, he lives and works in Toronto. Mazinani’s interdisciplinary practice includes installation, video, film, sculpture, photography, multiples, sound, and music. He makes work that connects scale and perception, improvisation and ancient thought. Recent exhibitions and performances include Monitor 15 (SAVAC, 2023), Stories and Storefronts, Toronto (2022); Tate Modern, London (2019, with Michael Snow); The Bentway, Toronto (2018); Tehran International Electronic Music Festival (2017); Suzhou Industrial Park Culture and Arts Centre (2016); Asian Art Museum, San Francisco (2015); and CAB Art Centre, Brussels (2013).
Please join SNID on February 1st, at 1:00 p.m. for an in-person presentation with Dr. Karen Dubinsky, Dr. Susan Lord and Diron Luis Morejon Pérez.
At ֱ, Mackintosh-Corry Hall, room D 214.
Teaching Cuba: Lessons Learned
Queen’s has had a longstanding exchange program with the U of Havana. Between 2008 and 2023, hundreds of Queen’s students studied in Havana through the interdisciplinary Global Development Studies course “Cuban Culture and Society.” Two Canadian instructors and a former U of Havana student, all participants in the course, reflect on experiential learning, Global South education for Canadians, the Cuba we entered and the Cuba we left.
4Serina is an exploration Serina Timperio's art, art legacy, and brain cancer journey. It is also a fundraiser for "Serina's Ride for Research".
There will be a reception and artist talk held on Friday 24 Nov from 4pm to 7pm. Light refreshments provided.
The exhibition will feature works by Serina Timperio, and collaborations with Cam Miller.
The exhibit is open from 21 Nov to 1 Dec, 10am to 4pm, Monday to Friday at the IBCPA, Art and Media Lab
390 King St West, Kingston ON
#4Serina, #braincancer, #kingstonlocal, #artshow, #ygkarts
Unearthed is a walk in the park with a twist.
Join us August 26-30 2023 for a week-long series of artistic experiments, conversations, and performances.
Bringing diverse perspectives to converse with the history of Belle Park and pressing contemporary social and environmental concerns, artists Cheryl L'Hirondelle, Vince Ha, Noah Scheinman, Elyse Longair and will activate spaces in the park on various days throughout the week through music, performance, and temporary installations.
An exhibition at in the Isabel Bader Centre will be running concurrently showing work by Jung-Ah Kim, Elyse Longair, and Vince Ha. Together, the work in the park and the gallery seeks to further conversation about this rich space with an uncertain future.
Visit for details
"At the core of this project is a personal exploration of the intergenerational trauma of the survivors of the communist regime in former Czechoslovakia -- the land in which I grew up and began my artistic journey. In both the film and the installations, the repeating imagery of the hands and clay points to the struggle for free expression, censorship, and oppression under this regime. The film, which is the focal point of the exhibition, is layered with symbolism. The tactile gestures, materials, expressions, and malleability
The participants are invited to sculpt clay at the table with the artist, offering another point of entry in understanding the work through direct engagement."
August 8 - 11
Tuesday & Wednesday 10 - 4
Thurs & Friday 10 - 2
CompuTerra: A Xenofeminist Utopia by Emilie Surette
Aug 1-4
Art & Media Lab
Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts
Welcome to the world of CompuTerra, a future where plants have evolved into machines. This multimedia exhibition explores the feminist and ecological utility of utopianism for a world exhausted by climate crisis fatigue. In this utopia, nature and machines are blurred, creating a jointly composed reality where the plants become not only machines but computer components. In remaking nature, we look to alternative ways of existing in both the technological or virtual, and the ‘natural’ world; as well as finding new ways to engage with the environment and each other.
PANKO by Sierrah Zawacki
Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts
July 25-28
10-4
Artist Talk on July 26th
Memory Junction Museum
by William Jennings
Memory is fast; film is slow. Lost futures and distant pasts collapse into a dyschronic state of time wounded both forwards and back. What room left is there for ghosts in the digital age? It is the burden of present consciousness to filter the oppressive weight of the past.
Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts - Art and Media Lab
July 21 10-3
Save the date!
VIEW FINDER - THE FILM 460 2023-24 SHOWCASE
12-13 APRIL / 10AM – 4PM
Get ready for almost 10h of short movies, a screenplay presentation session, and dozens of installations that will be on display in the Arts and Media Lab (AML) and all over the Isabel!
March 27-31 Art & Media Lab
The Curating Media Practice students have prepared an exhibition of potential exhibitions! Come experience them at the Art and Media Lab, from Mar 27 to 31. Opening Mar 27, 12pm. Opening hours: daily from 10am to 4pm.
FILM 356 Presents Laura Harrison via ZOOM
March 2, 3:30 - 5:30pm
lives and works in Chicago. Her animations focus on marginalized, social outcasts with their own sub cultures. These fringe characters provide a focal point for her concerns with diaspora, trans humanism, gender and the loss of touch in an overwhelmingly visual world. Her films have shown at various festivals internationally including The New York Film Festival, Ottawa International Animation Festival, Animafest Zagreb, LA Film Festival, The Chicago Underground Film Festival, Kerry Film Festival, Japan Media Arts Festival, Boston International Film Festival, Florida Film Festival, GLAS, Melbourne International Animation Festival and many others.
Thursday, Feb. 16 @ 11:45
KCFF March 2-5
For Tickets:
February 1st at 5:30 The Screening Room
Downtown, 126 Princess Street
FREE - RSVP:
SCCS Screening Series is pleased to present John Greyson’s newest feature film, Photobooth, with the attendance of the director for a Q&A.
Photobooth is an agitprop opera odyssey featuring the ghost of Jean Genet, Toronto’s gay penguins, and the activist work of queer folk fighting for Palestinian liberation. Using fragmented formal and narrative structures, Grayson weaves a mindbending tapestry of ideas, histories, emotions and potentials.
John Greyson is Canadian director, activist, and artist. His work has been screened locally and internationally. His recent short, International Dawn Chorus Day received the Golden Bear for Best Short Film at the Berlinale in 2021. John teaches film at York University in Toronto.
This event is hosted by Queen’s University’s Department of Film and Media with the support of the Brockington Visitorship.
Join us for two artist talks on Friday, January 20, 2023, at 11:30-1:00 pm with Beth Frey and Dan Tapper in Room 222.
Beth Frey works with a variety of media, including drawing, painting, video, sculpture and installation. Through her wry, absurdist sense of humour, Frey playfully draws out contradictions in her subject matter, be it gender, the body, social media, or mental health, often integrating representations of herself into her chromatic cartoon-like world. Working from her complexly layered watercolours, Frey incorporates accessible smartphone apps and AI image generation tools to expand this universe and bring her body into it as an active player. Her popular Instagram project, sentientmuppetfactory, uses AI to comically deform bodies and poke fun classic film tropes. Frey has an MFA in Painting and Drawing from Concordia University and a BFA from the University of Victoria. She has exhibited her work in a number of solo and group shows across Canada, Mexico and the US. Frey currently divides her time between Montreal and Mexico City.
Social media links: IG: @bethisms and @sentientmuppetfactory.
Dan Tapper is an artist and creative technologist interested in the intersection between information and experience. His current projects include building sonic VR environments and using machine learning to create new forms of divination.
Jan 30: Curating in a transhistorical perspective (12pm EST)
A conversation with Raphael Fonseca
Raphael Fonseca is a researcher in curating, art history, art criticism, and education. He works as a curator of modern and contemporary Latin American art at the Denver Art Museum. The juxtaposition of different temporalities and how it can bring contemporary reflections to the audience has a significant role in his practice. In this talk, Raphael will discuss some of his curatorial projects engaged in a transhistorical approach to art and images. How can images from different historical moments dialogue in the same exhibition space? How do they create contemporary echoes? What are some tensions between the idea of art and visual culture?
Jan 31: Rituals of Complexity (4pm EST)
A conversation with Fernando Velázquez
Fernando Velázquez is an artist, curator and professor. He explores how technical devices mediate perception, with particular interest in the structures, dynamics, and narratives that give rise current paradigms such as technosolutionism and the anthropobscene. He is interested in emergent and generative creative processes and transdisciplinary methodologies. In this talk, Velázquez will be discussing how his work – which includes installations, objects, videos, audiovisual performances and images generated with algorithmic systems –involve the viewer in a labyrinth of hyperbolic, interactive and ritualistic narratives.
Photo Booth Screening and Talk with John Greyson
Wednesday February 1, 2023
5:30 pm - 8:00 pm
Location
Feb. 1 @ 5:30PM
The Screening Room
120 Princess Street
VML - Activating Cultural Archives for Marginalized Communities
Film & Media Faculty Screenings: Gary Kibbins
Gary Kibbins, 2 new works
Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts, room 222
Thursday, Dec. 8, 7PM
P&Not-P Learn Non-Euclidean Geometry
Pedagogy for primates; a comedy.
The Way to Almsoma
A haunted story, part dreamscape, part travel guide.
With Neven Lochhead, respondent.
The Crossing and Other Tales, Shimon Attie's Immersive Media Installations
October 25th - 30th, 2022 (Tuesday - Sunday, 10am - 4pm)
Art & Media Lab, Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts
Opening Reception: October 28th, 4pm - 6pm, Art & Media Lab
The Crossing and Other Tales features two of Shimon Attie’s immersive single-channel video installations, a multidisciplinary artist who creates site-specific installations in public places, as well as mixed media installations for museums and galleries. Highlighting the survival stories of refugees who have suffered trauma and violence, his installations give visual form to invisible, forgotten, or erased histories and/or communities.
Concerned with questions of memory, place, and identity, Attie employs video, photography, sculpture, and highly collaborative processes with local communities to realize his projects. His work re-imagines new relationships between space, time, place, and identity, and explores how contemporary art practice can inflect and re-interpret social and political history, personal and communal identity, and more broadly, human memory and the imagination.
Attie’s work has been shown at and collected by The Museum of Modern Art, New York; the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris and the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, among many others. He has received fellowships from the John S. Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the American Academy in Rome, The National Endowment for the Arts, The Pollock-Krasner Foundation and The Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University. He has also received the Lee Krasner Award and was inducted into the National Academy of Design in 2018.
If you have any questions or require assistance, please contact: Jung-Ah Kim, jungahkim1206@gmail.com / 847.507.6780
Creating Independent Cinema in Canada: A Conversation with Carol Nguyen
Carol is one of Canada's top emerging filmmakers. She is the guest filmmaker for FILM 257 (Concept Development) this semester. Please join via Zoom; there are two one-hour sessions in the morning and afternoon. All are welcome.
Time: Friday, Oct 28 09:30-10:30AM and 3:30-4:30PM
Join Zoom Meeting
Carol's website where her films may be viewed:
(Don't miss her much-lauded student films, No Crying at the Dinner Table, Facade, This Home Is Not Empty)
Carol at IDFA 2019 (transcript and video), the youngest person to give an opening night speech at the world's most important documentary festival:
CAROL NGUYEN
Carol Nguyen is a Vietnamese Canadian filmmaker, born and raised in Toronto, now based in Montreal. Her films often explore the subjects of cultural identity, silence and memory. Her latest film “Nanitic” premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival 2022, where it was awarded the IMDBPro Share Her Journey Award for Best Canadian Short Film. Her previous film, “No Crying at the Dinner Table,” received the Jury Prize for Short Documentary at SXSW in 2020 and had its international premiere at IDFA 2019. Carol is a 2021 Doc Accelerator Program Fellow and an IDFA Space Project 2022 participant for her project “The Visitors.” Today, Carol is writing and directing several projects, including two feature films as well as an animated short. She is a graduate of Concordia University and has been winning prizes for her films since high school. Her works encompass all genres of fiction, documentary, experimental, and animation.
á&Բ;ҴDzԳá
The Vulnerable Media Lab is thrilled to announce and honoured to host visiting artist-in-residence, á&Բ;ҴDzԳá, from 24 October–7 November. González is a Queer Cuban American filmmaker, independent director, audiovisual producer, and writer who works with an array of archives in his practice. His areas of interest include queer cinema, non-fiction storytelling, and Latin American film and media production.
A special screening of select á&Բ;ҴDzԳá's films will be held at The Screening Room on 1 November, 5:30pm. Co-sponsored with reelout, the public screening will be followed by a Q & A with González.
For free tickets register here:
The two films he will show are:
Villa Rosa (2016, 50 min, Cuba, Span. with Eng. subtitles): Caibarien was one of the most prosperous Cuba fishing villages. Now their progress seems due, rather, to the LGBTI activism of many of its inhabitants.
Sexilio (2022, in progress, 60 min, USA-Cuba, Span. and Eng. with Eng. subtitles )
In 1980, thousands of queer Cubans were expelled from their country during the Mariel boatlift. On the other side of the sea, the possible freedom was also vexed by racism, homophobia, resettlement issues, and the AIDS epidemic. Making a film becomes later a pretext for another queer immigrant to create an archive of those experiences, and to question the unbearable traumas of being in sexile.
Here’s a link to his website.
Media distribution practices: gatekeeping and access
A talk by Dr. Virginia Crisp
Fri Nov 4, 1.00PM – Isabel Bader Centre, Room 222
Dr Crisp will provide a brief introduction to her main academic passions, researching media distribution and co-chairing the international research network, Besides the Screen. In doing so, she will discuss her longstanding interesting in exploring the intersections and overlaps between formal and informal media distribution as well as discussing her more recent conceptual framing of in/formal distribution activities as a form of ‘gatekeeping’. She will also discuss the history and upcoming activities of the Besides the Screen Network and its continuing aim to push the boundaries of screen studies into ever more trans/multi/inter disciplinary, multi-practice and inter-industry activities.
Dr Virginia Crisp is Reader in Media Industries and Cultures at King’s College, London. Virginia’s research spans three interconnected areas: distribution studies, championing multi/trans/interdisciplinary research, and media industry studies. Her first monograph, Film Distribution in the Digital Age (2015) provided a sustained critical examination of the symbiotic relationship between both formal (industry-led) media distribution and informal circulation (piracy). She is currently in the process of writing a book on media piracy with Paul McDonald, due to be published with Polity in 2024. Virginia is the co-founder (with Dr Gabriel Menotti) of the Besides the Screen Network, a network that brings together academics, filmmakers, artists and industry professionals from across the globe to consider the transformation of audiovisual media practices. Virginia is currently the Deputy Head of the Department of Culture, Media and Creative Industries at King’s College, London, which is a vibrant, research-led department that approaches a new subject area with traditional academic rigour.
Theo Anthony Screening and Events
DAY 0 Monday Nov 7: Informal Dinner TBD
RSVP: 9fw1@queensu.ca
DAY 1 Bowling with Theo
Tuesday Nov 8, 4pm-8pm
Splitsville
10 Bath Rd (across from Canadian Tire)
Register:
Queen’s University Department of Film and Media and documentary filmmaker Theo Anthony invite you to spend an evening playing the classic American sport of ten-pin bowling. Theo will teach workshop attendants the strategies and techniques needed to succeed and prepare them with a toolkit that can be applied both in the lanes, and out.
DAY 2 Private Screening of All Light Everywhere & drinks afterward
Wednesday Nov 9, 7pm
Isabel Bader Centre
390 King St West
Screening Room 222
An exploration of the shared histories of cameras, weapons, policing and justice. As surveillance technologies become a fixture in everyday life, the film interrogates the complexity of an objective point of view, probing the biases inherent in both human perception and the lens.
DAY 3 Agnes THE STUDIO: Theo Anthony Workshop on Creative Ideation
Thursday Nov 10, 6:30-8:30pm.
Agnes Etherington Art Centre
36 University Avenue
Andre Belier Studio
Fee: $25*
*Five (5) free spots available that can be obtained by Queen’s students through the bursary option on Agnes’ website.
Starting with the “anatomy of a scene,” Theo breaks open one of his scenes, giving participants a window into how he makes creative decisions, his preparation, references and research. Participants take part in an activity to jumpstart ideation and consider how to take a conceptual idea and work it towards concrete manifestation—whether that be a film, piece of writing or material object.
DAY 4 Subject to Review Screening (2019) & Process Speed Run
Friday Nov 11, 11:30am-1:30pm
Isabel Bader Centre
390 King St West
Screening Room 222
Theo will screen his ESPN 30 for 30 commissioned short film Subject to Review (2019) and then talk about how he moves from the research phase into actualization. This speed run will focus on organizing research material and forming an argument/concept.
Generously supported by the Chancellor Dunning Trust Visitorship
We’re excited to share an upcoming show - ✨Aulak (moving), Glenn Gear Solo Exhibition✨ curated by Jung-Ah Kim.
September 23rd - 30th, 2022 (Monday - Friday, 12pm - 4pm)
Art & Media Lab, Isabel Bader Centre
Opening Reception: September 23rd, 7pm - 9pm, Art & Media Lab
Aulak (moving) features a varied range of Glenn Gear’s current work, an Indigiqueer filmmaker and multidisciplinary artist of Inuit and settler ancestry currently living in Montréal. The show features a dozen works encompassing Gear’s drawings, collages, and experimental animations embedded in material practices of Inuit knowledge. The works explore personal, cultural, and unspoken connections to the land, people, and animals.
Thanks to the VP-Research Artist-in-Residence Fund and to the Faculty of Arts and Science EDII Fund for supporting this important initiative.
THE RETURN OF MAGIC: GILBERT SIMONDON AND THE POSSIBILITIES OF TECHNICAL RETICULATION
A talk by Vinícius Portella Castro (Machado Editora)
Wednesday Sep 28, 11.30AM @ Isabel Bader Centre, Room 222
The French philosopher Gilbert Simondon strangely proposed in 1958 that magic could come to exist again under modern technical networks. What could he have meant by this? This talk will explore Simondon’s cryptic suggestion both by presenting his triphasic theory of culture, in which magic is the first genetic (or rather ontogenetic) condition of culture and collective action, and by discussing a few contemporary instances of digital conjuring, both in art and in politics.
Vinícius Portella is an author, editor and independent researcher born in Brasília and based in Rio. He holds an MA from Dartmouth College and a PHD from Rio de Janeiro State University, both in comparative literature. His two areas of research are mythology and media theory, but lately his focus has been on the work of Gilbert Simondon and the concept of rhythm. His criticism has appeared in the LARB and revista Piauí and his academic articles have appeared in several journals inside and outside Brazil. In 2017 he published the novel "Procedimentos de Arrigo Andrada". He is also an editor and co-founder of Machado Editora.
This Event is not open to the Public.