Red People

Red People – Andrej Mircev, Nikoleta Markovic and Eunseo Yi – trace the scars of boundaries and limits, of ‘spectres and leftovers’ becoming the props of new desire and hope. As the next element in their installation of the text of Everything Divided as a wall of books, their installation for Nuns’ Island draws on the theatrical setting as well as the West of Ireland in terms of memory, absence, and archaeology.

Eunseo Yi is an artist who involved in various areas of art. Mainly she worked as a theater director, writer dramaturgy. She studied law (B.A) and theatre (M.F.A) in Seoul. She directed in numerous theaters and participated in choreography and exhibition in the Seoul and Berlin. With a special interest in politics her works is related to people’s life and society, even though she is dealing with her personal stories.

Andrej Mircev​ is a theoretician of performance studies, visual artist and dramaturge. He studied philosophy, history and theatre studies in Zagreb and completed his PhD at the FU Berlin’s International Research Training Group ​Interart​ Studies. In his work, he experiments with constellations between different media (photography, video, performance, installation). He has participated in several group and solo shows, presented at various conferences and published extensively in a wide range of publications. With a special interest in dance dramaturgy, Mircev has successfully also collaborated with many choreographers. He teaches spatial theory in Berlin at the University of Arts and in Karlsruhe at the University of Arts and Design.

Nikoleta Markovic ​completed doctoral studies at the Faculty of Fine Arts in Belgrade (on the theme: ​Participative economies and protocols of Image – It Takes Two to Image​). She participated in numerous exhibitions, conferences and workshops internationally ever since she started working as an artist in 1999. She is interested in the politics of relations which art production and artists’ positions establish with audience, state and society. Her recent activities revolve around classes in art and working class artists.