When Will You Listen, by Anna GrimaWhen Will You Listen, by Anna Grima

Ten fresh Master of Fine Arts in Digital Arts graduates are showcasing their work in a collective exhibition, Propolis: Artwork as Social Interstice. The exhibition is being held in collaboration with Digital Arts Faculty of Media & Knowledge Sciences head Vince Briffa.

The collection includes works by Jo Tabone, Anna Grima, Lucienne Lughermo, Kevin Casha, Anthony Catania, Pamela Baldacchino, Chris Castillo, Sergio Muscat, Pawlu Mizzi and Maria Pantelidou.

The exhibition comes as the result of the interrogation of the world and its social spaces. Propolis is, in fact, a type of resinous mixture that serves to seal unwanted spaces in a hive. In this social context, the artworks find small openings in society.

The dialogue that was created between these artists helped bridge distances between themselves and their forms of expression. Each, from within their unique perspective and artistic formation, reached out to create and communicate.

The resulting artworks are – The Viewer and the Viewed (Kevin Casha), When Will You Listen? (Anna Grima), Spectres of Actaeon (Anthony Catania), Pigs Daunt (Chris Castillo), Regard (Jo Tabone), Sing Softly to Me (Lucienne Lughermo), Prosopagnosia (Maria Pantelidou), Sanctuary (Pam Baldacchino), The Gingerbread Men (Pawlu Mizzi) and “See: Me” (Sergio Muscat).

The exhibition was made possible thanks to the support of St James Cavalier and the Faculty of Media and Knowledge Sciences at the University of Malta.

Propolis: Artwork as Social Interstice shows until July 3 at St James Cavalier, Valletta.

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