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Object:Paradise

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Object:Paradise
Object:Paradise, z.s.
FormationNovember 2018
FoundersTyko Say, Jeff Milton
Founded atPrague, Czech Republic
TypeArtist Collective, Non-governmental Organization
Registration no.09829911[1]
Professional title
Performance and poetics collective revolving around the pragmatics of language.
HeadquartersPrague, Czech Republic
Tyko Say, Sandra Pasławska, Jaromír Lelek
Websitewww.objectparadise.com

Object:Paradise (stylized as OBJECT:PARADISE) is a performance and poetics collective based in Prague, Czech Republic, formed by writers Tyko Say and Jeff Milton in 2018. The non-profit collective produces anti-poetry happenings, installations, and other multi-media works regarding their manifesto which calls to make poetry readings more dynamic, interdisciplinary, and contextually-dependent, in the name of a language happening.[2]

History

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Object:Paradise was formed in 2018 with the meeting of Tyko Say and Jeff Milton in the Ouky Douky cafe in Prague's Holešovice neighborhood where the two scheduled their first performance to involve characteristics of beat poetry, bebop jazz, and elements of theater, involving a cast composed majority of expats where English would be used as the lingua franca. This event would later be recognized as the first step of the collective's push to create a space where the poetry reading is promoted as a pragmatic performance rather than a literary event, prioritizing shared language and experience between audience and performer.[2][3]

On 13 November 2019, Say and Milton self-released the collective's first album Object:Paradise Volume 1 at their event Channels of Communication where compiled VHS video from the Los Angeles collective Everything Is Terrible! was projected which would later be a common aesthetic and convention of their curations.[4] Later on 20 January 2020, a documentary of the event under the same name was released, signifying the first video production of their events and manifesto in the works.[5][6]

In July 2020, the collective began their transition from hosting events in private spaces to public spaces, specifically at their event Tunnel Vision(s) which was held in the Starý Vítkovský tunel where three stages were erected and the performed language could be interpreted separately depending on the audience's position within the tunnel. The cast of the event was composed primarily of the expat community of Prague and featured various acts such as body grooming, interpretative dance, protest, installation, and readings. The event would later be a critical happening in the writing of the collective's manifesto which would not only prioritize an interdisciplinary approach to poetics, but also highlight the importance of the space in which it occurs.[7][8]

In 2020, the collective's second film, Object:Praha, was released. Premiering at Prague Microfestival[9] and later screened at the Versopolis Festival of Hope, the film documented scenes of Tunnel Vision(s) as well as other happenings in Prague from 2019-2020.[10]

In April and May 2021, the collective had its first curated language installation, titled Now Showing with the New York-based Flow chart foundation where a curation of texts were projected from a high rise balcony before the Žižkov Television Tower in Prague. The installation featured texts from eight writers: Tyko Say, Marc Fischer, Michael Ashkin, Jason Geistweidt, David Levi Strauss, Kay Rosen, Max Goldfarb, and Norman Douglas. The objective of the projection, which occurred during the Covid-19 Pandemic, was to "bring poetry back to an accessible space: on the way to the store".[7] Tyko Say's piece titled We was in turn projected in Hudson, New York in March of the same year.[11][12]

In February 2022 the collective released their second album, OBJECT:PARADISE Volume II, on Seattle-based record label Sifter Grim, featuring over 20-Prague based artists and focusing primarily on topics concerning Prague's Žižkov neighborhood.[13] The composition was released alongside a documentary, Object:Praha II, on the filming of the project.[14][15]

In August 2023 the collective's first international language happening was co-curated by Visegrád collectives ARS LATRANS, Poland; Slam Poetry SK, Slovakia; and ArtPortal, Hungary. The curation featured over fifty performances across Poland and Czech Republic in three events—one of them occurring on a train between Prague to Kraków. The event was funded by the visegrad fund, and was documented in Object:paradise's fourth film OBJECT:PRAHA : IV : Performance, Deformance, Reformance which would later be screened in the four countries.[16]

Releases

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Sound

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  • Object:Paradise Volume I (2019)[4][17]
  • Object:Paradise Volume II (2022)[2][18]

Film

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  • Channels of Communication (2019) [5]
  • Object:Praha I (2020) [10][9]
  • Object:Praha II (2022) [18]
  • Object:Praha III : The Manifesto (2022) [19]
  • Object:Praha IV : Performance, Deformance, Reformance (2023) [20]
  • Existence is Resistance (2024)[21][22]

Print

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  • KROTCH (on-going)

Since June 2022, the collective has published a monthly zine titled KROTCH which features anonymous works from their collective and wider community. The objective of the magazine is to promote an anonymous poetics that can be looked at instead of being read. The publication features poetry, satirical reportage, missed connections, and collages. The print-only magazine is distributed in a samizdat method to prioritize community circulation.[23]

  • Existence is Resistance (2024)

In June 2024, collective members Tyko Say and Sadra Pasławska, along with critical theorist Louis Armand and author David Vichnar, traveled to Lviv, Ukraine to work on a collaborative project to document the role of culture in war and the effect of war on culture.[24] What resulted was full length documentary book and film titled Existence is Resistance which was premiered later in October 2024 at the Prague Microfestival.[21][22]

References

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  1. ^ "Object:Paradise, Z.s., Article of Incorporation". Justice. Justice CZ. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Fernanda, Seavon (March 2022). "Instantiní Nostalgie". A2 (5/2022): 11.
  3. ^ Dünya, Bir. "Roksan Mandel´in yeni projesi Object:Paradise". Salom Dergi.
  4. ^ a b Ingólfsson, Ásgeir (14 December 2019). "Paradísarljóð frá Prag og New York". Menningarsmygl.
  5. ^ a b Ingólfsson, Ásgeir (27 January 2020). "Pragverska ljóðasenan". Menningarsmygl. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  6. ^ "Tyko Say: Smíchov - Časopis Ink".
  7. ^ a b "Culture Prague – There's a Projection Of Hope & Solidarity In Vinohrady". Prague Morning. 25 February 2021. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  8. ^ "Poetics collective Object:Paradise celebrates Žižkov". Prague Monitor. 9 June 2021.
  9. ^ a b Vichnar, David. "Prague Microfestival 2020 Artists". Prague Microfestival. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  10. ^ a b "Versopolis - Festival of Hope".
  11. ^ "Tentacle Poetry Pop-Up". Hudson Hall. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  12. ^ "The Flow Chart Foundation - Program 2021". Flowchartfoundation. The Flow Chart Foundation. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  13. ^ "Roksan Mandel´in ikinci stüdyo albümü çıkıyor". Shalom. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  14. ^ Easter, Nor (26 January 2022). "Object:Paradise Volume II to be Released on Seattle-based Sifter Grim". Prague Daily Monitor. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
  15. ^ Macl, Ondrej (May 2022). Žižkov Where Are You? (7 ed.). Prague: Tvar. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  16. ^ "Performance, Deformance, Reformance, Set — OBJECT:PARADISE".
  17. ^ "Object:Paradise Volume 1". Object:Paradise, Sound.
  18. ^ a b Cristina, Girones (16 February 2022). "Object Paradise, el colectivo artístico que quiere devolver la vida y la voz al barrio de Žižkov". Radio Prague International. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
  19. ^ "Pražský mikrofestival 2022". A2. 14 October 2022. Retrieved 23 October 2022.
  20. ^ "21.00 FILM SCREENING: Object:Paradise, "Performance Deformance Reformance" | XV Prague Microfestival 2023".
  21. ^ a b name="PMF2024_Program">"Programme | XV Prague Microfestival 2023".
  22. ^ a b Armand, Louis; Say, Tyko; Pasławska, Sandra; Vichanr, David; Mytsko, Lyana (October 2024). Existence is Resistance: a documentary (1 ed.). Prague, Czech Republic: PMF Prague Microfestival / International Art Centre Prague. p. 138. ISBN 978-1-326-93399-9. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
  23. ^ ""Oslava nedorozumění": O kontextuální poetice s OBJECT:PARADISE ~ 3/4".
  24. ^ "EXISTENCE AS RESISTANCE: introduction with self-organized initiatives from the Czech Republic". Lviv Art Center (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 31 October 2024.