Tania De Rozario

Tania De Rozario (born 20 February 1982) is a writer and visual artist who has exhibited and curated in Singapore, Amsterdam, and San Francisco.[1]

Tania De Rozario
Born (1982-02-20) 20 February 1982
Singapore
OccupationVisual artist and writer
NationalitySingaporean
EducationBA (Fine Art), RMIT (Australia)
Notable awardsGeorgette Chen Arts Scholarship (Singapore, 2000), Winston Oh Travel Award (SouthEast Asia, 2001), National Arts Council Golden Point Award (2011), National Arts Council Arts Creation Fund (2012)

Biography

Tania De Rozario was born in 20 February 1982. Tania De Rozario has showcased her visual art at spaces such as the Esplanade, The Substation, as well as the Singapore Philatelic Museum.[2] She is also the co-founder/curator of Etiquette, Singapore's first annual arts event focused on feminist issues.[3]

Tania is a 2011 Hedgebrook alumna[4] and winner of the National Arts Council Golden Point Award for English poetry (2011).[5] Her poetry and prose can be found on the Santa Fe Writers Project,[6] SOFTBLOW,[7] Moving Words Journal, Quarterly Literary Review Singapore[8] and GASPP: A Gay Anthology of Singapore Poetry & Prose.[9]

As an art educator, Tania De Rozario teaches drawing at The Substation[10] and tutors in Contemporary Contextual Studies at LASALLE College of the Arts.[11]

She has been involved with curatorial projects such as Sugar & Spice – A Literary Showcase (part of AWARE),[12] and was a featured author in Singapore Writers Festival 2012.[13][14]

Of her art, Tania De Rozario states that she has "always been interested in starting conversations about sex, gender and sexuality through art and writing. . .the quickest way to engage people is to come from personal places of love, loss and desire. . .when people are able to relate to certain common aspects of relationships, gender becomes a secondary issue." Tania adds that she wishes to "create spaces in which people can approach gender and sexuality from points of commonality, not difference."[15]

In 2014, Tania's Tender Delirium (Math Paper Press, 2013) was shortlisted for the Singapore Literature Prize. The book is "a confessional collection of poems and short prose about estranged lovers, despairing mothers, queer desire and obsessive longing."[16]

Selected publications

  • Somewhere Else, Another You (Math Paper Press, 2018) ISBN 9789811186639
  • And the Walls Come Crumbling Down (Math Paper Press, 2016) ISBN 9789810983697
  • Tender Delirium (Math Paper Press, 2013) ISBN 9789810747831
  • "My Jericho", GASPP: Gay Anthology of Singapore Poetry & Prose, Oct 2010[9]

Awards

  • SPH-NAC Golden Point Award – Winner (English Poetry), 2011[17]
  • Writer-In-Residence, Hedgebrook, (Washington State), 2011[4]
gollark: It'd still be very slow, and pointless.
gollark: I mean, if it was Turing-complete it could compute all the pixels it'd need to display to run Crysis given input fed in somehow, but not actually display them.
gollark: CC can't solve the halting problem, I think that's an example.
gollark: Oh. Right. That's quite a lot then.
gollark: Maybe if computers get really fast in a few decades someone will actually try and do that.

References

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