MEDIA / ARTIST TALKS
5 QUESTIONS FOR ASMA KAZMI: A CRITICAL MASS for the VISUAL ARTS PODCAST
Welcome listeners to 5 Questions: A Critical Mass for the Visual Arts Podcast in which we ask 5 questions of our interviewees aimed at positioning and contextualizing their respective bodies of work within the St. Louis art world. This episode we’re talking with Asma Kazmi.
DISSONANT MATTER TALK with GUILLERMO GALINDO, ASMA KAZMI, and SUGATA RAY
Kala Gallery is excited to present Dissonant Matter, a two-person exhibition of work by Guillermo Galindo and Asma Kazmi. This exhibition brings together new work by Galindo and Kazmi and focuses on tales of migration from non-human perspectives. Their projects reflect on the history of colonialism, global flows of trading goods and migrant labor, and transformation of information and knowledge systems.
SALIMA HASHIMI | RUMOURS of SPRING: REFLECTIONS on PAKISTANI CONTEMPORARY ART (2020 Habib Lecture)
September 16, 2020
SPEAKER: Salima Hashmi, Artist, curator and contemporary art historian
MODERATORS: Asma Kazmi, Assistant Professor of Performance Art, Dept. of Art Practice, UC Berkeley; Atreyee Gupta, Assistant Professor of Global Modern Art and South and Southeast Asian Art, Dept. of History of Art, UC Berkeley; Nauman Naqvi, Associate Professor, Comparative Liberal Studies. School of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences, Habib University
NAIZA KHAN | WALKING across DISCIPLINES (Artist Speak Series)
Institute for South Asia Studies, The South Asia Art Initiative
UC Berkeley
FLAT FILES ARTIST ASMA KAZMI dailymotion.com
Asma Kazmi discusses her work in the Flat Files at the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis.
EPISODE 523: NALUKAI STUDENT PROJECTS bytemarkscafe.org
First, we hear from Asma Kazmi from UC Berkeley to tell us about a VR art piece entitled ‘Cranes and Cube‘ on exhibit at UH Manoa Commons Gallery. Then we hear from George Donev and Diza Hendrawan who both recently participated in Nalukai Academy, one as a mentor and the other a participant. Student Corner and Shelfware are the two projects we discuss.
SIDE BY SIDE / IN THE WORLD CURATOR AND ARTIST WALKTHROUGH (San Francisco Arts Commission)
Organized in conjunction with the exhibition side by side/in the world on view at the San Francisco Arts Commission Main Gallery from July 12-September 14, 2019. Curated by Jacqueline Francis and Kathy Zarur.
A walkthrough of the exhibition followed by a panel discussion with exhibiting artists Asma Kazmi, Lauren Toomer, and Alberto Toscano.
2012 GREAT RIVERS BIENNIAL ARTIST TALK
Assistant Curator Kelly Shindler leads a discussion with 2012 Great Rivers Biennial artists Mel Trad, David Johnson and Asma Kazmi.
TEACHING WITH AND ABOUT VR/AR — Lightning Talks | UC Berkeley
As newer technologies such as virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) gain in popularity, how are they impacting teaching and learning in the classroom? What does it mean to teach with rather than just about VR and AR? Where and in what ways is VR/AR showing up on campus? These lightning talks capture some of the exciting work happening in different disciplines and corners of campus.
PRESENTERS: Mohammed Keshavarzi, PhD student, Architecture | Asma Kazmi, professor, Art Practice | Madison Hight and Damini Grover, Berkeley VR Club | Davienne Gabriel, History of Art undergraduate | Wayne Delker, Fung Institute for Engineering Leadership and Kat Quigley, Lawrence Hall of Science | Justin Underhill, postdoc, History of Art | Bala Kumaravel, PhD student, EECS | Jean Ferguson, Moffitt Library | Chris Hoffman, Research IT | Wei Sun, VivEdu.com
THE ARTIST ASMA KAZMI | GREAT RIVERS BIENNIAL ARTIST — Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis
Asma Kazmi (b. 1978, Quetta, Pakistan) works across various media to connect people, media, and objects. Her project, titled Between Word and Image, centers on the artist's collaboration with three individuals taking part in an adult literacy program in St. Louis. Kazmi talks about her work on the occasion of the Great Rivers Biennial exhibition at the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, on view May 11–August 12, 2012.