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New international artists to IASPIS in Stockholm spring 2026

On March 2, 2026, IASPIS welcomes four new international artists to the residency program in Stockholm.

Alanna Stuart (aka PYNE) is a Caribbean-Canadian music artist-scholar, curator, and documentarian based in Toronto and Montreal, Canada. Stuart is presently in the thick of what she dubs a ‘Femmehall’ praxis: a feminine approach to dancehall reggae music production and performance. Stuart’s music praxis emerged from Canada’s 1970s immigration explosion—which brought Stuart’s Jamaican father and Grenadian mother to Canada.

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Matthew Szösz is an artist and educator, based in Seattle. His work is primarily known for its inventive processes and innovative use of glass. Exploring the intersection of material, aesthetics, and the poetic. His work hovers at the intersection of Art, Design and Craft, and explores the relationship between the physical and our experience of wonder, beauty and self.

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Adrien Tinchi is an artist who lives and works in Paris. Balancing anticipation and memory, his work seeks to produce, reproduce, or witness singular events. His practice explores and engages with the various contexts in which an artwork can be presented, relying on stories rooted in real, virtual, or dreamed encounters, and treating them through as many practices as points of view. These moments, sometimes discreet or even invisible, leave traces of a narrative or serve as a pretext for telling one.

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Tsu-tsu is a documentary actor currently based in Yamanashi Prefecture. His practice is guided by ‘tsu-tsu’ (筒). ‘Tsu-tsu’ means ‘hollow’ or ‘cavity’ in Japanese, but derived from his childhood training in Japanese ritual dance, he defines this sensation as a ‘vessel’ of personality common to all humans, one that has been stripped of the attributes formed by words and stereotypes. He reinterprets the act of performance as a ‘centrifuge-like device’ that reveals this vessel. Tsu-tsu has named his series of interviewing and performing as real individuals ‘documentary acting,’ a practice that pursues the very process of ‘one person becoming another’ as its medium.

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