Perfect Strangers
Perfect Strangers
This exhibition introduces the work of Kutlug Ataman to Australian audiences for the
first time. Internationally acclaimed for his film works in museums, and an
independent filmmaker in his own right, Ataman is a leading figure in contemporary
art and Turkish cinema.
Ataman's film works focus on individuals who inhabit the margins of conventional
society. Narrative driven and interview-based, they explore the role of film as a
medium through which reality and fiction collide. In this world people play out a
range of characters and roles, merging real lives with heightened drama and
intrigue, and reinventing themselves before the artist's camera. In Ataman's works
the issue of time is central. Of extended duration (in one case, eight hours), the
works are often experienced haphazardly as viewers move in and out of the gallery
space. In this sense reality becomes further fragmented as each viewer puts together
their own version of the story.
Kutlug Ataman: Perfect Strangers is the artist's most comprehensive survey
exhibition to date. It encompasses works from 1997, when he first began to show film
installations within a museum context, to the present day. It presents two key works
The Four Seasons of Veronica Read and Stefan's Room as partner pieces for the first
time. In these works we are introduced to Veronica Read and the collection of 900
amaryllis bulbs and plants that crowd her small London flat; and to Stefan Naumann,
a passionate collector and world authority on tropical moths. Also on display are
parallel stories about four Istanbul women and their wigs; a Jamaican man speaking
of his experiences as a foreigner in Berlin; an octogenarian Turkish opera diva
reflecting on her life, loves and losses; a beautiful transsexual living in exile in
Switzerland; and a Turkish woman speaking in two adjacent screens on the divided
state of Cyprus. We are also introduced to six Arab Alevite citizens of Turkey in th
e multi-screen work Twelve, in which they recount stories of their past and present
lives.
This exhibition also presents Ataman's powerful forty-screen installation Kuba,
in a special off-site presentation, a short walk from the MCA in Sydney's historic
Rocks precinct. This major work features interviews with forty residents of the
Istanbul shanty-town known as Kuba. Not located on any official map, this
locale is home to impoverished Turks and Kurds, religious fundamentalists, political
dissidents and other disparate individuals who are bound in solidarity by their
'outsider' status.
Kuba is commissioned by Artangel and co-produced with Carnegie International
2004/2005, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York;
Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary (T-B A21), Vienna and Theater der Welt,
Stuttgart, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney.
Kuba is located on Level 2 of The Argyle Centre, Playfair Lane, The Rocks (2
minutes' walk from the MCA) and is open daily from 10am-5pm until Sunday 24 July
2005. Kutlug Ataman: Perfect Strangers continues at the MCA until Sunday 4
September 2005.
The Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, sits on Sydney Harbour across from the Opera
House. Located at Circular Quay West, The Rocks the MCA is Australia's only museum
dedicated to exhibiting, interpreting and collecting contemporary art from across
Australia and around the world.
Media enquires: Imogen Corlette, MCA Publicity t 61 2 92452434