![]() ![]() Yuula Benivolski // Jean-Michel Rolland // Megan Dieudonné & Andrea Rüthel // Bayu Kusuma // Yacob Bizuneh // Lorenzo Gattorna // Vivian Ostrovsky // Zorica Čolić // Anuj Malhotra // Abigail He // Duane Peterson III Others focus on acts of protests themes of social justice and war the excess living styles of the elite utopian proposals of world community and connection and a longing for and appreciation of connections. Several highly personal works celebrate everyday moments with friends or unearth previously unprocessed memories and histories. With the majority of works made while the artists were entrenched in lock-down, the event finds many considering their bodies, personal spaces, computer screens, and relationships with nature - other animals and insects, oceans and plant life, and the light from our sun. The program features a wide-ranging program of artists, established and emerging, from around the globe utilizing and incorporating Super 8mm, 16mm film, 35mm photographs, miniDV, HD, 4K, stop-motion, 3D animation, computer graphics and other formats. Microscope is very pleased to present Pool Party 2022, a three-part screening program of selected works from our 2021-22 Open Call. Screening In-Person November 13 at 3:00pm Sunday November 13 – Thursday November 17, 11pm PT The exhibition is open from January 26th to March 5th, 2023. "What is enjoyment today? What is its connection with capitalist formations of power, production and exchange of goods? Where is the enjoyment in the world of algorithmically produced needs, generated desires and clichéd ways to satisfy them? Is enjoyment a chemical reaction, a communication in the brain that takes place between two or more transmitters with or without additional stimuli? Is enjoyment a relic of the past, a recurrence of enlightened and humanist values and beliefs that are superfluous today, in a posthuman and postproduced reality? (from the text in the exhibition catalog)" I am pleased to invite you to the exhibition "From/To Enjoyment," curated by Maja Stanković, in the Cultural Center Gallery, Belgrade.Īrtists: VKS (Vocal-Curator Syndrome), Dragana Žarevac, Neša Paripović, Milija Pavićević, Emilija Terzić, Predrag Terzić, Jovan Čekić, Zorica Čolić ![]() For the best of both worlds, use an infant carrier or a sling to hold your baby close and keep your hands free.Opening reception Thursday, January 26th 2023 However, if you hold your baby all day, you may not be able to get anything else done. Wear your baby: Your baby may cry less if you hold them close to your body.The hum of the engine and the motion of the drive can do wonders to soothe a baby. A ride in the car can give you both a change of scenery. Use gentle movements: Try some gently rocking, an infant swing, or a walk in the stroller.Just remember to place your baby on their back to sleep to reduce the risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Swaddled babies startle less and tend to sleep better. Swaddle: Swaddling a baby in a blanket helps the baby feel secure.It doesn’t have to be completely dark and quiet (some babies find consistent low sounds, like a white noise machine, comforting), but less stimulation may be effective. Turn down the lights and lower the TV volume or turn it off. Reduce stimulation: Make the baby’s environment calm.Offer a pacifier: If you have a healthy milk supply and your baby is over 4 weeks old and breastfeeding well, you can try a pacifier.Skin-to-skin contact can also help ease little ones. If your baby has reflux or gas, hold them upright to help keep the contents of their stomach down instead. The pressure of your arm on their belly may make them feel better. Try placing your baby in the "colic hold" (with their stomach over your forearm). Hold your baby: Fussy and colicky babies need to be held and comforted more than calmer infants.Since colic is associated with gas, burping is worth a try. Burp your baby: Breastfed babies don't always need to be burped after feedings, but a forceful let-down or a robust milk supply can cause them to take in extra air.Breastfeeding is comforting for your child. Breastfeed more: If your baby is crying, you can offer the breast even if you don’t think they're hungry.Instead, by reacting to your child right away, you’ll make them feel secure and safe, and you’ll show them that they can trust you to be there when they need you. Respond quickly: Responding quickly to your baby’s cries will not spoil your child or encourage them to cry more for attention. ![]()
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