When people ask about the work, one thing I downplay, but sometimes say, is that it is also political. It’s about getting access to visual arts for me as a blind artist, and making it accessible too. It’s not just a postcard from the country of the blind, it’s also an entrance ticket to visual arts, or so I hope. A festival such as Mapping is tough going, although even with my level of sight I could enjoy all installations at MAMCO, with the exception of that by Mathias Oostrik. However, most performances, workshops, sessions were inaccessible, not because of the sight thing, but because of an inability to get the information I need in large crowds (i.e. a room with more than 5 people in it). In those situations I really need a guide/bodyguard/pointer-out, but that such a person is not always available. And so, being at a festival, usually an excellent way to get to knowledge, simply by connecting with people over drinks, was of very limited use. And I think that this is the main factor holding back participation by blind people in visual arts: for now, “blind art” exists as if in a Reservation, with specialized organisations promoting it, arranging showings of blind artists’ work. Only a handful, it seems, operate as other artists do. At Mapping it certainly felt like an uphill battle. It occurred to me how isolated I was, how apart from the general flow of things. With that came the opening up of a huge field of practice. Immersiveness, spatial interventions: that road seems open to me








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