Liz Rosenfeld is an NYC-born, Berlin-based transdisciplinary artist who works with film/video, performance, drawings and experimental writing practice. Liz addresses the sustainability of emotional and political ecologies, cruising methodologies, and past and future histories regarding the ways in which memory is queered. Their work deals with flesh as a non-binary collaborative material, specifically focusing on the potentiality of physical abundance and excess, approaching questions regarding the responsibility and privilege of taking up space and how queer ontologies are grounded in variant hypocritical desire(s).
Their work has been shown internationally in film festivals, museums and galleries, and their film White Sands Crystal Foxes was nominated for Best Experimental Short Film at the Berlinale’s 2022 Teddy Awards. Liz was also one of the nominated artists for the ANTI –Contemporary Art Festival’s 2022 Shortlist Live Award, and their short films are represented by Video Data Bank and LUX Moving Image. They are currently on tour with their new book, Crossings: Creative Ecologies of Cruising, out on Rutgers University Press and co-written with Dr. Joao Florencio.
Links: Liz Rosenfeld: http://www.lizrosenfeld.co/
João Florêncio & Liz Rosenfeld, Crossings: Creative Ecologies of Cruising (Rutgers University Press, 2025): https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/crossings/9781978837546/
We all sweat as we provide care, as we labour, as we perform our work, as we fuck, as we survive and as we sacrifice one choice for the other. How exactly do we define our work and how does that work entangle and circumscribe our sexual identities, our racialized bodies, our creative lives and the ways in which we provide care? How do we perform both tasks and identities within the framework of that which we consider work? These conversations are a means to speak between intersectionalities by anchoring through our (always, already, and ever pervasive) sexualized and racialized bodies, our working bodies, our artistic bodies and our performative bodies. I hope that they contribute to dialogues which normalize sex work as work, and all work as deserving of respect, healthy conditions, and a living wage.
You can find out more https://www.alfabus.us/s-w-e-a-t/
Mad Kate (they/them) is an electronic producer, sound designer, performance artist and writer who began working the Berlin performance and club scene in 2004, expanding their unique identity-queering, genderfcking and sexpositive performative work throughout music, theatre and film. Their explorations of borders between/within bodies, audibility, consent, proximity, and touch as political practice have brought them to theaters, communes, technomansions, prisons, dungeons, squats and galleries around the world.