Search
My feed
Eléonore Ozanne

Eléonore Ozanne

(France / Spain)
Eléonore Ozanne is an artist and researcher based between Seville, Bilbao, and Pau. Her interdisciplinary work examines the relationship between the body and the boundaries of everyday spaces. Through a practice of displacement, Ozanne investigates the concept of frontiers, both as physical limits and invisible walls, that we navigate in daily life. Using her body as the central medium, she engages in performative actions to traverse, penetrate, or reconfigure these predetermined spaces and times.

She is an active member of the research teams Gizaartea and Alter, where she contributes to projects exploring notions of precariousness and displacement in a globalized world. Her collaborative research seeks to understand and articulate the nuanced experiences of marginalization and transience.
More

plodge

The Scottish and English word plodging has been wading through the lexical muck and mire since the late 1700s, and it refers to icky, slow, molasses-type walking. Plodge is probably a variation of plod. This word isn’t totally out of use, as a 1995 use from British magazine The Countryman illustrates: “Northbound Pennine Wayfarers, plodging through the interminable peat-bogs of the North Pennines.” Even if you have a spring in your step, it’s tough to skip merrily through the peat-bogs. Credits to Mark Peters.

Added by Geert Vermeire
Problem?

Encountered a problem? Report it to let us know.

  • Include the page on which you encountered the problem.
  • Describe what happened.
  • Describe what you expected to happen.