The Finnish Cultural Institute for the Benelux is delighted to support Finnish artist Kristiina Koskentola, who is based in Amsterdam, Helsinki, and Beijing, as she presents her work in Casco Art Institute’s spring programme Sensing the Ways: On Touch, Story, Movement, and Song. The programme features artistic proposals by Kristiina Koskentola, Teresa Borasino, AZ OOR, and Serena Lee.
Sensing the Ways: On Touch, Story, Movement, and Song
Exhibition: 22.3.–25.5.2025
Festive opening: 22.3.2025, 15:00 with presentations
Casco Art Institute: Working for the Commons
Lange Nieuwstraat 7
3512 PA Utrecht
The Netherlands
info@casco.art
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The proposals presented in the exhibition and public programme Sensing the Ways inquire into situated ways of knowing that emerge through body and movement, shaped by deep connections with the land, more-than-human life worlds, and spirit.
Integrating aesthetic, poetic, archival, and performative strategies, the artists’ works invite reflection on the possibilities that arise when knowing is reconceived as an embodied practice, one that is intimate and firmly rooted in emotional and reciprocal presence. Resisting forms of rationalization, they challenge modern/colonial epistemological frameworks.
Sensing the Ways further offers a thoughtful artistic consideration of the politics of knowledge regeneration. Tending to how the addressed knowledges move and are reshaped across generations, communities, and geographies, the artists assert the vitality of alternative epistemologies in the present and the need for their ongoing renewal.
How might attuning ourselves to sensory forms of knowing—generated through touch, story, movement, and song—bring about radical transformation? What might it mean to honor the ways knowledge travels and transforms across time, space, and being?
In Sensing the Ways, each artist brings forth exhibited works and public activities, engaging with specific sites and histories:
Kristiina Koskentola presents works that channel and intertwine ancient shamanic philosophy and practice with contemporary thinking and futurist visions. Developed in collaboration with Manchu shamanic composer Han Xiaohan, the practitioners have been working together on the Finnish-Russian border, specifically in Karelia, around Lake Saimaa, and in Manchuria’s Daxinganling region along the Amur River—a natural border between China’s Northeast and Russia’s Far East. The project delves into these practices within the Taiga landscapes, reflecting on resilient, interconnected knowledges.
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Teresa Borasino carefully explores Quelccaya, the world’s largest tropical glacier, in the Peruvian Andes. Now at the risk of disappearing—along with the Indigenous communities, ancestral practices, and knowledge systems, it sustains and that sustain it—Quelccaya bears the pain of ongoing colonial violence and escalating lithium extraction. Borasino’s video installation traces the pulse of this wounded glacier as a living organism. Intertwining its presence with anti-colonial narratives, she reimagines ways of being and sensing that honor the deep interdependence between all forms of life.
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AZ OOR’s practice centers on the Amazigh movement. It proposes speculative narratives to explore and highlight the transnational networks that advocate for the cultural rights and resistance of this indigenous group. Through Issaffen n Irifi (Rivers of Thirst in Amazigh), a scenography and storytelling circle, AZ OOR confronts colonial legacies, extractivism, and environmental destruction. This cycle is part of The Fable of the Agronauts: a space tale in which the pre-colonial past becomes present and ancestral knowledge is used to imagine a liberatory post-Indigenous world from the vantage point of indigenous survivance in North Africa.
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Serena Lee opens up her artistic research on taijiquan, a martial art developed in China with both combat and health applications, as a way of thinking through moving. Transforming the space, she invites us to spend time with the questions raised through this embodied practice, within various atmospheres for collective study. Playing with invited study partners who practise in different modes, the project finds different ways to pose the question: How do we know what we know? By inhabiting this shifting constellation of materials, processes and ideas, we trace the ways that taijiquan practice might inform an ethics of knowledge production, subjectivity, and interrelationality.
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Sensing the Ways marks the beginning of Changing the Fabric of the Night Sky. Through various constellations of inherently relational practices, this multi-year initiative imagines beyond the world as we know it.
Sensing the Ways is made possible with financial support from the Mondriaan Fund, the City of Utrecht, Stichting DOEN via Arts Collaboratory, The Finnish Cultural Institute for the Benelux, The Canada Council for the Arts, and Culture Moves Europe funded by the European Union.
Cover image: Clockwise, from top left: scenic elements from AZ OOR’s Fable of the Agronauts, presented at Jan Van Eyck Academy, 2023; video still of a white birch forest in Hulunbuir by Kristiina Koskentola, 2025; Serena Lee, Playing the Mountain (still), 2022; Teresa Borasino, Glacial Resurgence, 2025.