Friday, July 23, 2021

Radical Light - Seinäjoki Kunsthall, Finland

 




Seinajöki Kunsthall

Finland


Anne Katrine Senstad

Radical Light - ELEMENTS VI

By Andres Kurg



In Radical Light – Elements VI by Norwegian

artist Anne Katrine Senstad we encounter

abstract light sculptures accompanied by 

ambient sound – a space filled with particles 

of white light that produce a total environment,

encompassing all the senses. Upon entering,

the viewer is welcomed by The Sensory Chamber

an intimate video installation or “antechamber”,

where the hypnotic moving images are projected 

onto a bed of white salt crystals moving through 

hues of blues, red, pinks, whites and turquoise.















The Sensory Chamber IV, 2021. 

Photos by AKS Studio NY and Samuli Kuusisto



In the grand space, the installation Elements VI

is defined by the unity of chromatic white neon

composed of twenty-nine vertical light columns

enveloped by a white horizon that stand amidst 

the concrete columns of the former industrial

and military warehouse. Slender glass tubes 

filled with neon and argon, illuminate the

space at color temperatures between 3500 

to 8300 Kelvin degrees, ranging from warmer 

satin and egg-shell whites to colder green and

 icy blue hues, indicating simultaneously the 

physical character of the color white and its

cosmology of cultural narratives.


Enveloping the public in a sound environment

created specifically for Radical Light by electronic

music composer JG Thirlwell, the abstract aural 

experience embodies the spatial sensations of 

electrical particles, luminosity and noble gases. 

In composing a sensory environment of pure light, 

Senstad is primarily examining the emotional and 

semiotic connotations produced by white as a 

color: bright white light as eternity, purity, perfection, 

symbol of death and rebirth; or naturally clean

white as something that departs from reality

and approaches the surreal – the white tiger,

the albino moose, the great white whale.























Elements VI, 2021. Photo by AKS Studio NY



On the other hand, Senstad’s installation produces 

separation between the light source as an information 

channel and its cultural meanings, demonstrating how 

various shades of white are nothing more 

than sensations of electromagnetic wavelengths 

that can be altered by changing the ratio of noble 

gases harnessed within the glass tubes.


The physical properties of neon and argon facilitate

the transportation of electricity that produce luminal 

spectrums with a discrete durational hum. Light is 

always physically present in space, similar to its 

transformative effects on surrounding objects or 

enclosing walls. The use of light as material, its 

scale and the purity of the white hues, refer to a 

radicalization of space and color, striving towards

their zero-degree, making it possible to pose 

questions on the character of the artwork and 

challenge its place within the gallery.





Elements VI, 2021. Photos by Samuli Kuusisto


The idea of a pure white color has enthralled 20th 

century avant-garde artists like Kazimir Malevich 

or Robert Rauschenberg. It signified for them an 

endpoint of previous artistic developments and a 

transgression beyond the canonic rules of the 

artworld. But a white canvas was simultaneously a 

mirror and a blank slate, receiving signals from its 

environs and registering its temporary interventions. 

From that point, there was only one step towards art 

that undid the separation between the artwork and

its surrounding space. Senstad’s work is situated in 

the tradition of installation art, where the surrounding 

environment and the viewer become part of the 

work itself. By moving between the light columns, 

at different speeds, on different days or at different 

times, observing the change in light and shadow, the 

gallery space acquires an equal role with the 

installation elements and sounds.


Elements VI bears a relationship to the geographic 

location in Seinäjoki – with the silvery and white hues 

of the northern hemisphere during the peak of the suns’ 

atmospheric presence – but it also makes a reference 

to the built history of its location. Not far from the 

Kunsthalle stands the civic and administrative centre 

of Seinäjoki by Alvar Aalto, crowned by the 

monumental Lakeuden Risti Church (1957-60). 

Its white interior creates emotional effects for the 

viewer through the sculpturality of its vertical tectonic 

elements, gently curving vaults and the seamless 

transformation between the ceiling and the apse.





























ELEMENTS VI, 2021 - Radical Light. 

Photo by AKS Studio NY



Representing Scandinavian modernism, the 

spiritual is mediated there through reduced 

geometries, volumetric spatial vision and perhaps 

most importantly, the light from vertical windows 

reflected off from the bright white interior walls. 


Unlike the church, the Kunsthalle closes itself off 

from the external light and transports the viewer 

to a sensorially immersive space of an artificially 

controlled light and sound environment, encapsulating 

the human body in a system of matrices, electricity 

and glass tubes.Senstad’s invitation to contemplation 

and introspection is detached from any institutional or 

instrumental function. The installation becomes 

counter-environment that transforms the visitors’ 

perception of space and time and provides potential

for a radical cultural experience.





Elements VI, 2021. Photo by Tuuka Kirviranta



Andres Kurg is senior researcher and acting head of 
the Institute of Art History, Estonian Academy of Arts, 
in Tallinn. He has an MSc in architectural history from
the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, and a PhD in 
art history from the Estonian Academy of Arts. His research 
looks at architecture in the Soviet Union from the 1960s to 
1980s, in relation to technological transformations and changes
 in everyday life and values, as well as its intersections with 
alternative art practices. He has published articles in the 
Journal of ArchitectureARTMargins, and Home Cultures
and contributed to exhibition catalogues and books. He has 
coedited Environment, Projects, Concepts: Architects of 
the Tallinn School, 1972–1985 (Estonian Museum of 
Architecture, 2008) and cocurated Our Metamorphic 
Futures: Design, Technical Aesthetics and Experimental 
Architecture in the Soviet Union, 1960–1980 (Vilnius 
National Gallery of Art, 2011–12).



The exhibition is produced by Kunsthalle Seinäjoki

in partnership with Kai Art CenterTallinn, Estonia 

and The Finnish Art Promotion Centre/TAIKE


Supported by The Royal Norwegian Embassy Helsingfors.








Monday, July 19, 2021

Social Photograhy - Carriage Trade Fundraiser

 Dear Friends, 

in support of Carriage Trade Gallery in New York,  I'm glad to participate in the yearly fundraiser "Social Photography" alongside some great artists, art writers and authors, as well as musicians from Sonic Youth and other friends of Carriage Trade. 

 
On the issue of Social Photography and it's potential during our times, my donated editioned photograph to purchase at Carriage Trade is an architectural portrait and memorial of the symbolic modernist Y Building in Oslo designed by architect Erling Viksjø, with its rare exterior Pablo Picasso mural "The Fishermen", a gift to the Norwegian people that he created in collaboration with Norwegian artist Carl Nesjar, one of many collaborations between the artists over 17 years.  
 
After it was announced in 2019 that the unique Y shaped concrete building was to be demolished by the Norwegian government, I felt as an artist and a citizen the need to record and experience it's sloping angles, materiality and volume, and the architecturally integrated Picasso/Nesjar mural on the facade still available to the public - to honor the building's beauty, historic prominence and it's symbolism of societal value systems, before extinction. 
 
To mark the sad anniversary for the July 22, 2011 tragedy in Norway that began at the very Picasso clad Y building in the governmental complex in downtown Oslo before tragically ending at the social-democrat party's youth camp at Utøya, finalized by the demolition of the Y building that was carried out in summer of 2020 during the pandemic in the face of international uproar - the photograph represents numerous questions we are left with from this era - but importantly; how could this happen?
 
The online preview for purchasing opens July 21, 2021 - and the exhibition opens to the public August 5th, 2021.
 
Warmly,
Anne K Senstad




Social Photography IX

Online Preview Begins: 
Wednesday, July 21, 2PM
socialphotography.carriagetrade.org 

Online Sales Begin: 
Friday, July 23, 2PM
See details on purchasing below* 

Gallery Exhibition: 
August 5 - September 30, 2021

 

Now in its ninth year, Social Photography brings together cell phone pictures of participants from a wide range of disciplines, generations, and places. In the spirit of broad access to cell phone image making technology, the emphasis of the project leans toward sensibility and the anecdotal over skill and mastery of the medium of photography.

Taking advantage of technologies that allow for images to be sent from anywhere, which are then formatted, printed, and displayed in an in-person exhibition at carriage trade, the range of participants in Social Photography reflect both the gallery’s community in Lower Manhattan as well those associated with it in other parts of the world. Linking the virtual with the physical through an online display that is then presented in print form, Social Photography IX might be seen as a counterpoint to the increased placelessness of remote exchanges normalized in the pandemic-era.

Spanning nearly a decade, the growing, informal archive of Social Photography cell phone pictures occasionally reflect significant local, national, and international events (Occupy Wall Street, George Floyd protests, U.S. presidential elections, pro-democracy movements in Hong Kong) existing side by side with the everyday, the personal, the urban, and the domestic.

With a limited curatorial directive, trends are inevitable (a slight increase in pet photos this year is most likely a result of increased time spent indoors during the pandemic), while the elusive nature of where to “put” cell phone photography with respect to hierarchies of photographic image production (fine art photography, photojournalism, social media fodder) remains intact. What began in 2011 as an investigation of a novelty medium which simultaneously offered an alternative to the conventional non-profit benefit exhibition has become a kind of tradition, as it sustains and expands carriage trade’s community through its many participants, while helping support the gallery’s upcoming projects.

Social Photography IX Contributors:

Dennis Adams / Peggy Ahwesh / Lucas Ajemian / Graham Anderson / Michele Araujo / Michael Ashkin / Hallie Ayres / Mengfan Bai / Agnes Barley / James Barondess / David Baskin / William Beaudoin / Lisa Beck / Philip Bednarski / Peter Bellamy / Catherine Belloy / Amy Ben-Ezra Theodora Ben-Ezra / Liz Berg / Julien Bismuth / Joi Bittle / Lisa Blas / Ann Bobco / Richard Bosman / F.P. Boué / Norman Brosterman / Christine Burgin / Bibs Carlsen / Antoine Catala Alejandro Cesarco / Danny Chau / Myrel Chernick / Stella Cilman / Mary Clarke / Matt Connors Eli Coplan / Jeri Coppola / Fred Cray / Jody Culkin / Reilly Davidson / Mira Dayal / David Deutsch / Georgie Devereux / Daniella Dooling / Saskia Draxler / Paul Druecke / Anne-Claire Duprat / Peter Fend / Bernadette Fiscina / Elias Fokine / Andrea Frank / Susan Gamble & Michael Wenyon / Rainer Ganahl / Marc Ganzglass / Victor Esther Garcia / Hunter Gause / Jeff Gibson / Liam Gillick / Andrew Ginzel / Robert Goldman / Jasmine Golestaneh / Kathy Goncharov / Michelle Grabner / Ethan Greenbaum / Barbara Gundlach / Clair Gunther / Cynthia Hawkins-Owen / Anthony Hawley / Lorna Hayden / Duy Hoàng / James Hoff / Laura Hunt / Scott Indrisek / E. J. / Bryn Jayes / Neil Jenney / Lulu Jiang / Danielle Johnson / Werner Kaligofsky / Simone Kearney / Douglas S. Kehl / Mathias Kessler / Anjali Khosla / Anna Kleberg Tham / Essye Klempner / Hilary Kliros / Nicholas Knight / Udomsak Krisanamis / Nina Kuo Stephen Lack / Justen Ladda / Marc Lafia / Eugenia Lai / Erik LaPrade / Louise Lawler Elizabeth LeCompte / Mika Lee / Maggie Lee / Simon Leung / Max Levin / Matthew Li / Laura Li Wenxiao Li / Nora Ligorano / Lysjs Lim / Ming Lin / Jeanne Liotta / Hsiang Hsi Lu / Judith Luongo / Stephen Maine / Jiří Makovec / Sakura Maku / Adam Marnie / Vijay Masharani Esperanza Mayobre / Tom McGlynn / Jessica Mensch / Emilie Meyer / Molly Miller / Veronika Molnar / Sojung Moon / Andrew Moore / Lucy Mullican / Real Salvator Mundi / Muntadas Christian Nagel / Diane Nerwen / Chee Wang Ng / Isabella Norris / Almost Not / John Oakes Kristin Ordahl / Daylon Orr / Hannah Park / Laura Parnes / Stephan Pascher / Gelah Penn Andreas Petrossiants / Zoe Pettijohn Schade / Michael Poetschko / Jeff Preiss / R.H. Quaytman Lee Ranaldo / Xander Rapparport / Marshall Reese / Calvin Reid / Alejandro Ribadeneira Walter Robinson / Daniel Roche / Aura Rosenberg / Lorin Roser / Betty Roytburd / Ryan Rusiecki / Vicky Sambunaris / Valerie Saputra / Ken Saylor / John Schabel / Jeffrey Schiff / Heidi Schlatter / Kristina Schmidt / Nadine Schmied / Gary Schneider / Barry Schwabsky Michael Scott / Felicity Scott / Anne Katrine Senstad / Jacques Servin / Elaine Sexton / Trevor Shimizu / Zhi Shu / Amie Siegel / James Siena / Shelly Silver / Adam Simon Jason Simon / Day Sinclair / Leah Singer / Janice Sloane / Inna Smolina / Molly Soda / Claudia Sohrens / Andy Steinitz / Gary Stephan / Steel Stillman / Charles Stobbs III / Carol Szymanski / Sikay Tang Gwenn Thomas / Colin Thomson / Cassidy Toner / Momoyo Torimitsu / Dan Torop / Sophie Tottie / Kristal Uribe / Gail Vachon / Pegi Vail / Kate Valk / Ali Van / Lotte Van den Audenaeren Liselot van der Heijden / Virginia Inés Vergara / Doris Vila / Julia Wachtel / Chloe Walecki / Max Warsh / William Wegman / Barbara Weissberger / James Welling / Elvia Wilk / Tonero Williams Scott Williams / Nechama Winston / David Winter / B. Wurtz / C. Spencer Yeh / Sun You / H Spencer Young / John Yu / Michael Zansky / Jiajia Zhang

*Preview begins Wednesday, July 21 at 2PM / Online sales begin Friday, July 23 at 2PM

https://socialphotography.carriagetrade.org

1 print: $75.00 
2 prints: $120.00 (use promo code: 2/$120 at checkout)
3 prints: $150.00 (use promo code: 3/$150 at checkout)

Friday, July 2, 2021

IMMERSIVE WORLDS - EMMY nomination


EMMY NEWS 2021


IMMERSIVE WORLDS - an Arts TV series created by Producing Partners and has run for 2 seasons on ALL ARTS TV - a WNET PBS network, has been nominated for an EMMY Award as part of 14 ALL ARTS TV EMMY nominations.

In Season 1 Episode 8 - IMMERSIVE LIGHT, my work was presented alongside James Turell,  Dan Flavin, and Anthony McCall - a 40 minute episode journeying through experiential and perceptual art, as artists working sculpting light and working with light as matter.

Click HERE see the episode on ALL ARTS TV streaming.












Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Radical Light - Anne Katrine Senstad - Seinajoki Kunsthall






Radical Light - Elements VI

A documentary interview with Anne Katrine Senstad from the solo exhibition Radical Light at Seinajoki Kunsthall 2021. The exhibition Radical Light - presents two spatial installation works: Elements VI, a monumental, perceptual and experiential neon light sculpture installation - and The Sensory Chamber IV, a 111 minute sensorial 7 color video projection, sound and bed of salt installation work. Senstad’s immersive light sculpture environment is an invitation to encounter a perceptual and sensorial taxonomy of light and sound in pure form. In Radical Light Senstad examines the transformational potentials of experiential space and ethereal topologies. The installation is accompanied by a 38 minute looped sound composition by acclaimed composer JG Thirlwell enveloping the vast light sculptural matrices and the sensory chamber in a unifying sensation of vastness and electric impulses of spatial noise and poetic grandeur. Kunsthalle Seinäjoki, Finland. June 16 - September 4, 2021 In collaboration with Kai Art Center, Estonia and The Art Promotion Center Finland. https://www.seinajoentaidehalli.fi Video by www.halocreative.fi


Radical Light - Seinäjoki Kunsthall - Video doc

 



Click on image for Vimeo link


Radical Light - Seinäjoki Kunsthall 

A documentary interview with Anne Katrine Senstad from the solo exhibition Radical Light at Seinajoki Kunsthall 2021. 

The exhibition Radical Light - presents two spatial installation works: Elements VI, a monumental, perceptual and experiential neon light sculpture installation - and The Sensory Chamber IV, a 111 minute sensorial 7 color video projection, sound and bed of salt installation work. 

Senstad’s immersive light sculpture environment is an invitation to encounter a perceptual and sensorial taxonomy of light and sound in pure form. In Radical Light Senstad examines the transformational potentials of experiential space and ethereal topologies. The installation is accompanied by a 38 minute looped sound composition by acclaimed composer JG Thirlwell enveloping the vast light sculptural matrices and the sensory chamber in a unifying sensation of vastness and electric impulses of spatial noise and poetic grandeur.

Kunsthalle Seinäjoki, Finland
 
June 16 - September 4, 2021

In collaboration with Kai Art Center, Estonia and The Art Promotion Center Finland. 

https://www.seinajoentaidehalli.fi

Video by www.halocreative.fi


Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Music for Plutocracy - Exhibition Documentary video

 



The multi sensorial exhibition Music for Plutocracy is the 5th experiential light and sound installation in the series entitled ELEMENTS by Anne Katrine Senstad with an enveloping sound environment by JG Thirlwell. 

S12 Gallery, Bergen, Norway

Jan 16 - March 28, 2021.  

Sunday, February 7, 2021

On Eternities Tablets - Open Art Advisory

 



PRESS RELEASE


OPENART is pleased to present:


On Eternities Tablets: 

Anne Katrine Senstad




A Virtual Solo Exhibition

Curated by Sarah Walko



November 24 - February 28, 2021



VIDEO Link: Curatorial walk through with Sarah Walko HERE







You cannot legislate music to lockstep nor can you legislate the spirit of the music to stop at political boundaries …Or poetry, or art, or anything that is of value or matters in this world, and the next worlds


Joy Harjo   



Joy Harjo, the current poet laureate of the United States, writes a sets of instructions for the soul in her book of poems Conflict Resolution for Holy Beings. The spirit of myth and the subconscious in everything, her imagery of immense landscapes that fuse with the vast stretches of our hidden mind and the politics of being human through her own experience as an indigenous woman in the US. They float across lands and time in a way that parallels the visual works presented in this exhibition by Norwegian artist Anne Katrine Senstad. The exhibition brings together three bodies of work based on light, space and perception, and investigate interior and exterior horizons. The title is from a Norwegian poet and writer, Hans Børli whose poems Senstad recently found revisiting and drawing on that also traverse eternity, nature and the human condition during crisis.  

Elements III Blue is Senstad’s immersive light installation built of horizontal and vertical blue lights. A space both enclosed and open where the horizon in the distance is absent. Blue in nature makes us think of the sea and the sky. The experiential installation explores how light redefines a space, affects us from the physiological to the philosophical, how we define our “blue,” and define ourselves in vast placeless space. Senstad explains “I wanted to create a matrix of horizontal and vertical expressions of blue light, evoking fractal topologies. In space, distance is the present—the horizon extending far beyond our frame of reference as blue columns of light ascend to the empyrean. I wanted to interpret the idea of blue as a physical environment out of my own curiosity about the emotional, physiological, and scientific phenomena that constitute our concept of color and as we experience it. But also, one lifelong pursuit and desire in my work is to capture the impossible beauty and sensorial properties of color in the abstract.” 



Elements III Blue Video clip - to see the full 10 minute exhibition video piece with sound by C.C. Hennix, please visit the  Open Art Advisory Vimeo page HERE


Borealis Sculptures are Senstad’s color sculptures carrying notions of ephemerality that pervades all of her work but embedded now in a utilitarian plexiglass object of mass production. The shadows cast shades of blues, greens and whites onto the wall, dissolving planes and creating a sense that each piece is hovering just slightly from the surface. The compositions, form and color are minimalist but as you rotate around them new layers of transparent geometric colors create new forms and new colors. In their color, these sculptures reference the northern hemisphere, atmosphere, layers of ice in glaciers, mountains. “As a northern spherical phenomena the Aurora Borealis operates in electrically charged color compositions recorded in our retinal memory, evoking that of a stratospheric elusivity,” Senstad writes. “In these works, I can examine the relationship between ephemerality and spectral luminous shades within concrete planes. By harnessing it onto the physical surface, I objectify and materialize that which cannot be held and reorganize light and color into the folds of the physical. It plays with the transformation of the ephemeral into an entity and a phoneme shaping of time.” 











Borealis no 010, 2020












Borealis No 020, 2020












Borealis No 030, 2020











Cosmosis Collages no 4A5C Composition 01, 2019

scale: 40 x 65 inches, edition of 6

Photographic C print from color film negative











Cosmosis Collages no 4A5C Composition B1B, 2019

scale: 40 x 65 inches, edition of 6

Photographic C print from color film negative










Cosmosis Collages no 4A530 Composition G1, 2019

scale: 40 x 65 inches, edition of 6

Photographic C print from color film negative


Cosmosis Collages is the third final body of photographic works in this exhibition, developed in dialogue with the birth of Senstad's light sculpture installations Elements in 2018. The photographic works are conceptually and politically inspired by early 20th century movements such as the Suprematists and Constructivists. These aesthetics of utopian and scientific ideals that were deeply engaged in experiments in medicine, technology, philosophy, and psychology while simultaneously engaging in concepts of the cosmic universe. Practitioners sought deep spiritual alignment while experiencing the question what is it to be a being in a physical state and how can we master eternity, life, and mortality. 

The title, Cosmosis refers to the idea of experiencing oneness with the universe as a result of these investigations and experiments. Senstad was influenced by these philosophers who sought to conquer "eternity" and become immortal. Senstad explains: "It's been of a great interest to me to examine what drives human activities towards the desire for eternal life as part of my work on ethics and perception, which I find is much of the psychological central underpinnings of the very existence of society. The illusion of vanity can serve as fuel for a forward driving search for new scientific discoveries, creative inventions and technological developments when it is benevolent, yet when it exists as a negative force, it swings the pendulum to a series of unsupportive manifestations such as loss of moral compass, immense greed, and various forms of societal madness such as cultism. One can say that an understanding of internal freedom and oneness with the universe, as in the psychological and emotional state of cosmosis, in various religious and esoteric philosophies, is a form of true attainment of happiness or satisfaction, and is represented as a state of infinite euphoria, a purity of spirit and ecstatic rapture. In eastern thought, we see that the release from all human suffering, and configurations for the path towards ultimate liberation, is the very idea of wealth itself."

We are living in a time of global pandemic, severe climate change crises deeply affecting our blue oceans and worldwide uncertainty of our future. A question that roams from literal to philosophical in all of Senstad’s work is simply where is there and where will there be solid ground to stand on? It is not a question that demands an answer. Like Rainer Maria Rilke’s advice on uncertainty “Do not now strive to uncover answers: they cannot be given to you because you have not been able to live them. And what matters is to live everything. Live the questions for now. Perhaps then you will gradually, without noticing it, live your way into the answer, one distant day in the future.” 

It is this journey through the universe that Senstad’s work takes us on to ultimately end up delivering us back to ourselves, facing our own horizons, within this massive universe in which we are connected to it all. It is a reminder to not carry the questions, but to live them into infinity.











Cosmosis Collages no 4A577 Composition 12, 2019

scale: 40 x 65 inches, edition of 6

Photographic C print from color film negative




 Cosmosis Collages 427.4A7 video sequence, 2020


















Cosmosis Collage 427.4A7 – Composition no 204, 2018

Size: 32 x 44 inches. 

Edition of 6

Photographic C print from color film negative



















Cosmosis Collage 6A42.2 – Composition no 1C2, 2018
Size: 32 x 44 inches.
Edition of 6
Photographic C Print from collaged color film negatives




Cosmosis Collage 1010 – Composition no 1B, 2018

Size:50 x 60 inches. 

Edition of 6




Left: Cosmosis Collage 4A531220 – Composition no 20, 2018

Size: 40 x 65 inches. 

Edition of 6


Right: Cosmosis Collage 4A52.1B.220 – Composition no 7B, 2018

40 x 65 inches. 

Edition of 6



 
For inquires & press information:
info@openartadvisory.com

For sales inquires:
Christine Lee
christine@openartadvisory.com
+917.224.0680
www.openartadvisory.com

Images courtesy of the artist.

 

 

 


 

Tuesday, January 19, 2021

CENTERPOINT NOW - Are We There Yet?

CENTERPOINT NOW - Are We There Yet?

A new issue of Centerpoint, marking the 75th anniversary of the United Nations, now available in hard copy, limited edition, and online. 

(Click here to flip through the book digitally)

CENTERPOINT NOW is a World Council for Peoples of the UN publication (WCPUN) that highlights issues on the agenda of the international community, with a view to showcasing the extraordinary diversity of ways in which the UN’s values and objectives can be promoted and implemented.

Editor-in-Chief and Executive Director of WCPUN: Shamina de Gonzaga. Senior Editor: Nina Colosi.

To order the book: Centerpointnow@wcpun.org


Senstad's short film UTOPIE/UTOPIA with acclaimed actor Bill Sage and audio management by JG Thirlwell, is presented in the groundbreaking WCPUN book Centerpoint Now - Are We There Yet? published on the occasion of the UN's 75th anniversary and seeks to raise awareness to critical issues of sustainability, gender equality, global warming and human rights in context of politics, ethics, science and technology through the language of educational, creative and cultural productions.


"Art is the universal communicator of complex ideas" 

Astronaut Nicole Scott.