Lawrence Abu Hamdan
Nabil Ahmed
Maayan Amir
Anthropocene Observatory
Anselm Franke
Armin Linke
Territorial Agency
John Palmesino
Ann Sofi Ronnskog
Jacob Burns
Gabriel Cuellar
DAAR
Alessandro Petti
Sandi Hilal
Eyal Weizman
Forensic Oceanography
Charles Heller
Lorenzo Pezzani
Grupa Spomenik
Damir Arsenijevic
Ana Bezic
Pavle Levi
Jelena Petrovic
Branimir Stojanovic
Milica Tomic
Ayesha Hameed
Samir Harb
Helene Kazan
Thomas Keenan
Steffen Kraemer
Adrian Lahoud
Model Court
Lawrence Abu Hamdan
Sidsel Meineche Hansen
Lorenzo Pezzani
Oliver Rees
Modelling Kivalina
Andrea Bagnato
Daniel Fernandez Pascual
Helene Kazan
Hannah Meszaros Martin
Alon Schwabe
Gerald Nestler
Godofredo Pereira
Nicola Perugini
ScanLAB Projects (Matthew Shaw
William Trossell)
Susan Schuppli
Francesco Sebregondi
Shela Sheikh
SITU Research
Robert Beach
McKenna Cole
Therese Diede
Akshay Mehra
Charles Antoine Perrault
Bradley Samuels
Xiaowei Wang
Caroline Sturdy Colls
Paulo Tavares
Srdjan Jovanovic Weiss
NAO
Eyal Weizman
Ines Weizman
Anselm Franke
Eyal Weizman
The exhibition interrogates the forensic turn manifested in contemporary popular culture, as well as in juridical culture in courtrooms, human rights investigations, and international forums for justice.
curated by Anselm Franke and Eyal Weizman
In the framework of The Anthropocene Project 2013–2014
From DNA analysis to tracking Internet activities, forensics is central to the ways by which states police and govern their subjects. The exhibition interrogates the "forensic turn" manifested in contemporary popular culture, as well as in juridical culture in courtrooms, human rights investigations, and international forums for justice. One of the starting points of this turn was the identification of the remains of Joseph Mengele in Brazil in 1985 and the subsequent forensic exhumations of victims of the "Dirty War" in Argentina in the mid-1980s. The political aesthetics of forensics shifts across several registers—from persons to matter, from the survivor and victim to the human remains, to material and digital traces. It also involves a turn from the human to the environment, from figure to ground. The increasingly destructive entanglement of human and natural forces in the age of climate change poses major challenges to the classical figurations inherent to law and human rights. Whereas criminal law seeks to establish a linear or causal relation between perpetrator and victim, between violent actions and material traces, "field causalities" are inherently relational, non-linear, and diffused over space and time.
Exhibition
The exhibition Forensis seeks to critically interrogate the emergent forensic aesthetics and suggest ways of inverting the forensic gaze—from the state policing its subjects to subjects policing the state. Forensis thus designates a field of action in which individuals and independent organizations in situations of political struggle and violent conflict can confront crimes of states, corporations, or other political actors. The exhibition encompasses both investigations that chart new territories in making use of forensic methods and technologies, and critical reflection on the use of forensics and its political bearings.
As an exhibition, Forensis presents not just research materials, but moves beyond the symbolic field of art exhibitions by producing legally relevant and consequential material that serves as evidence in political forums and courts. It presents the work of the architects, artists, filmmakers, and theorists who make up the Forensic Architecture project at the Centre for Research Architecture at Goldsmiths, University of London, as well as that of its close collaborators and guests.
Conference
The conference "The Architecture of Public Truth" brings together the fields of law and aesthetic production. Artists, writers, lawyers, judges, activists, theorists, and architects will raise questions about recent transformations in the conditions under which spatial and material evidence is recorded and presented. The conference sets out to explore ways in which new kinds of engagement with the materiality of politics might open new political possibilities and shift existing fields of knowledge. The panels will explore a wide range of issues and scales: from the human body, through buildings and territories, to the scale of the planet as the ultimate forensic object, which human-induced climate change has transformed into both a construction site and a ruin. The conference includes contributions by, among others: novelist Jonathan Littell (The Kindly Ones); Luis Moreno Ocampo, the first Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court in The Hague; legal theorist Brenna Bhandar; Baltasar Garzón, Spanish jurist who indicted Augusto Pinochet and present legal advisor to Julian Assange; Al Jazeera producer Marcela Pizzaro; media scholar and artist Susan Schuppli; geo-philosopher Kathryn Yusoff; Michael Sfard, Israel's foremost human rights lawyer; and Wolfgang Kaleck, General Secretary of the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights, who has recently submitted a Communication to the International Criminal Court against British war crimes in Iraq.
The exhibition includes contributions by
Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Nabil Ahmed, Maayan Amir, Anthropocene Observatory (Anselm Franke, Armin Linke, Territorial Agency/John Palmesino and Ann-Sofi Rönnskog), Jacob Burns, Gabriel Cuéllar, DAAR (Alessandro Petti, Sandi Hilal, Eyal Weizman), Forensic Oceanography (Charles Heller, Lorenzo Pezzani), Grupa Spomenik (Damir Arsenijević, Ana Bezić, Pavle Levi, Jelena Petrović, Branimir Stojanović, Milica Tomić), Ayesha Hameed, Samir Harb, Helene Kazan, Thomas Keenan, Steffen Kraemer, Adrian Lahoud, Model Court (Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Sidsel Meineche Hansen, Lorenzo Pezzani, Oliver Rees), Modelling Kivalina (Andrea Bagnato, Daniel Fernández Pascual, Helene Kazan, Hannah Meszaros Martin, Alon Schwabe), Gerald Nestler, Godofredo Pereira, Nicola Perugini, ScanLAB Projects (Matthew Shaw, William Trossell), Susan Schuppli, Francesco Sebregondi, Shela Sheikh, SITU Research (Robert Beach, McKenna Cole, Therese Diede, Akshay Mehra, Charles-Antoine Perrault, Bradley Samuels, Xiaowei Wang), Caroline Sturdy Colls, Paulo Tavares, Srdjan Jovanovic Weiss/NAO, Eyal Weizman and Ines Weizman
The Anthropocene Observatory's third episode, Down to Earth, is part of the Forensis exhibition, and opens at the same time. It is a project by Armin Linke, Territorial Agency (John Palmesino, Ann-Sofi Rönnskog), and Anselm Franke. Forensis is part of the Anthropocene Project 2013–2014 at Haus der Kulturen der Welt.
Forensis emerges out of the European Research Council funded project, Forensic Architecture based at the Centre for Research Architecture, Department of Visual Cultures, Goldsmiths, University of London.
Forensis is a co-production of Haus der Kulturen der Welt, funded by the Capital Cultural Fund, and Forensic Architecture, funded by the European Research Council.
The education program is run in collaboration with the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR), and supported by the Embassy of Argentina.
Haus der Kulturen der Welt is supported by the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media as well as by the Federal Foreign Office.
Press contact:
Anne Maier
T +49 30 39787 153 / anne.maier@hkw.de
Opening: March 14, 6pm with performance Pythagorean lecture:
the irreducible surplus matter by Grupa Spomenik/Monument Group
Conference: "The Architecture of Public Truth"
March 15–16
Haus der Kulturen der Welt
John-Foster-Dulles-Allee 10 Berlin