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  1. The future is risky and possible. Andrew Zealley is Toronto-based. His work situates at the shifting nexus of HIV, queer ecologies and identities, risk, and the body. Organized around sound and listening practices, Zealley’s creative work extends from audio and music methods (and structures) to inform mixed disciplines and media — including ...

  2. Zealley is a Toronto-based artist whose work has been situated at the shifting nexus of HIV, queer identity and ecologies, public sex practices, and the body since 1990.

  3. Andrew Zealley. 2024, Newest Magazine. Examining the historical significance of SILENCE=DEATH, and the current silence surrounding too many issues and crises: environment, 2SLGBTQ+, poverty, food security, class (and the increasing disparateness between layers), and a research specific focus on silence in relation to chemsex practices.

  4. discohospital.com › bioBiography

    Andrew Zealley's practice situates at the shifting nexus of HIV, queer ecologies and identities, risk, and the body. Organized around sound and listening practices, Zealley’s creative work extends from audio and music methods (and structures) to inform mixed disciplines and media — including music, video, photography, bookmaking, pedagogy ...

  5. Art & Research Around HIV/AIDS, Queer Art and Sex. An interview with Andrew Zealley (Environmental Studies) on his dissertation, Risky Beeswax: Artistic Responses to the Biopolitics of HIV/AIDS, awarded the Barbara Godard Prize for the Best York University Dissertation in Canadian Studies in the summer of 2021. — — — — —.

  6. Profiles. Andrew Zealley, Ph.D., MFA. York University, Faculty of Environmental Studies, Graduate Student. Follow. Other Affiliations: OCAD University, IAMD, Alumnus. Research Interests: Queer Theory, HIV/AIDS, Social Activism, Film Studies, Feminist Theory, Queer Ecologies, and 15 more. Papers. Disco Hospital. by Andrew Zealley, Ph.D., MFA.

  7. 28 Sep 2021 · Andrew Zealley holds a PhD from the Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change. His research engages with HIV and AIDS, queer identity, the body, and notions of self-risk-taking.