William Cordova
Jean Ulrick Desert
Yoel Diaz Vázquez
Koken Ergun
Alex Martinis Roe
Katrin Strobel
Emeka Udemba
To Whom It May Concern
On Representation, Authenticity, Expectations and Other Inflated Concepts. The project aims to explore the ways in which artists and their works can transgress boundaries of authenticity, identify themselves in order to challenge the notions of representation and power relations.
Artists: William Cordova, Jean Ulrick Désert, Yoel Diaz Vázquez, Köken Ergun, Alex Martinis Roe, Katrin Ströbel, Emeka Udemba.
Curator: To Whom It May Concern
‘Good’ representation is often a reaction against the white stereotypical representation.
Rather, the debate should be about transforming the image, questioning the images that
subvert, posing alternatives
and recognising that it is not an issue of ‘us’ and ‘them’.
Hooks, Bell. Black looks: race and representation. Boston,
MA: South End Press, 1992. p.4
Wahala is a Pidgin English word signifying trouble, confusion, problematic or complicated situations
presumably borrowed from Yoruba or Hausa, and etymologically linked to the Arabic word wahla, which
translates as fright, terror or error. The exhibition project Wahala is a bid to fish in the troubled waters of
representation and authenticity: to investigate presentation and representation in artistic production
using art as a tool, and get a grip on the parasitic power mechanisms that feed on these concepts. In
sync with bell hooks' suggestion of shifting the discourse from the sphere of ‘othering’ and victimisation,
Wahala provides space for experimentation on how the troubles related with representation and various
ideological and material images, which might be associated to or used authentically or unauthentically
to frame representations, could be questioned, challenged, transformed, cleansed or even ridiculed...
with or without proposing an alternative.
Wahala goes beyond the ubiquitousness of representation and authenticity in everyday practices (from
marketing exotic holidays and fitting women or blacks into certain positions to the portrayal of crime,
piousness, poverty or richness according to particular racial geographical or gender dictums), in
academia and in the cultural sector—where artists, scholars or curators still have to deal with
representations or find themselves explicitly or implicitly accused of inauthenticity on the basis of their
background, race, gender or sexual orientation. Along these lines, the exhibition project aims to explore
the ways in which artists and their works can transgress boundaries of authenticity, identify themselves
in order to challenge the notions of representation and power relations inscribed in a social context that
brings them about, and... force a twist in the tail.
Similar to Aristotle’s ambivalent idea of catastrophe, the change of fortune that happens at the end of a
drama and allows for a catharsis of mind and emotion, Wahala can also stand for the metamorphosis of
a problematic into a positive situation. Artistic vision often works in a catastrophic way, like a wahala,
acting as a virus, insinuating in the social body and changing the “horizon of meaning” of a certain
social context.
It is against the backdrop of these reflections that the exhibition project will examine the strategies of
renegotiating stereotypes of representation, and inter alia impart a carnivalesque and satirical overtone
to these notions. It will be a trial to make sense and find a vocabulary to articulate and elucidate in a
hermeneutic way these troubled waters—the Wahala, which essentially accompanies or is an aftermath
of representation and authenticity.
The exhibition is curated by To Whom It May Concern, the SAVVY curatorial collective which consists of Dr.
Bonaventure S. B. Ndikung, Dr. Elena Agudio and Saskia Köbschall
Image: Emeka Udemba
Press contact:
Marina Kochaytseva communications@savvy-contemporary.com
Opening: Opening: Dec. 7, 2013, 7pm
SAVVY Contemporary
Richardstr. 20 - 12043 Berlin-Neukölln
Opening Hours: Sat. 4-7pm
and by appointment