Markus Degerman
Alevtina Kakhidze
Martin Karlsson
Lada Nakonechna
Helena Holmberg
Mats Stjernstedt
Index at Center for Contemporary Art, Kyiv
Index at Center for Contemporary Art, Kyiv
CCC-K (Center for Communication and Context Kyiv/Ingela Johansson
SE/Volydymir Kuznetsov UA/Inga Zimprich DE), Markus Degerman (SE), Alevtina
Kakhidze (UA), Martin Karlsson's (SE), Lada Nakonechna's (UA)
curated by: Helena Holmberg and Mats Stjernstedt
Exteriors, an exhibition and a series of related projects, initiated and
curated by Index-the Swedish Contemporary Art Foundation in Stockholm, takes
it starting point in contemporary art practice and an interest taken in
various notions of public space. Considering the fact that modern societies
under the pressure of individualism, neo-liberalism and global markets are
undergoing a crucial process of redefining and rearranging individual and
collective values that condition both the private and public life, Exteriors
offers a situation where a local context can be put under scrutiny and
viewed from different perspectives.
Exteriors assembles a series of attempts to, through artistic investigation
and intervention, activate public space seen as the actual cityscape, the
most evident example of current developments. In addition it offers a
discussion about the art institution, understood as yet another form of
public space, posing the question about its possibility to mirror and
question the wider notion of public life. Art institutions have since some
time gone through a flux, through a moment of redefinition where exhibiting
and researching has been completed by what engages contemporary art in the
quotidian, offering an interest in a wider spectrum of contemporary society.
Exteriors as an exhibition looks at the role and current conditions of the
Ukrainian art institutions, now linked to the situation in general for art
in the Middle and Eastern Europe after the downfall of the Soviet Union and
in the wake of EU's Eastern expansion. It furthermore investigates how
history is constructed and inscribed into contemporary culture, and, how
art, as a commodity in an ever faster growing consumer culture, interacts
with and mirrors developments within contemporary urban society and economy.
By re-directing the discussion back into the art institution itself it also
shows an ambition to discuss certain complex relationships, functioning like
interfaces between architecture, design, politics and, in the end, society.
Thereby the exhibition Exteriors opts to move beyond the meaning of exterior
as a surface, beyond the idea of the facade, instead making an effort to
highlight and penetrate certain issues in depth. Time is crucial in this
case, allowing different artistic practice in: all participants have been
commissioned to produce new works especially for the show, which also
includes already ongoing projects. During the fall of 2007, a book will be
published with contributions from the artists, and with texts by Boris Buden
(philosopher, Vienna), Olesya Ostrovska (freelance curator and writer,
Kyiv), Catharina Gabrielsson (architect, Stockholm), and the curatorial
team. An additional presentation will take place in Odessa in late November.
Thanks to Swedish Institute and CCA, Kyiv.
PARTICIPATING ARTISTS:
CCC-K (Center for Communication and Context Kyiv: Ingela Johansson (SE),
Volydymir Kuznetsov (UA), Inga Zimprich (DE) is a collaborative effort where
three artists through a long-term research based art project, Post Funding
Eastern Europe, are looking at current conditions for contemporary art in
Ukraine and other post-communist countries. Beside their presentation at the
CCA, and as a part of Exteriors, CCC-K will host an event at the Artist
Union gallery in Odessa, 24 November 9 December, with focus devoted to
Odessa¹s present and historical art-scene.
Markus Degerman (SE) contributes to the discussion on public space by
directing it towards the art institution and its structures. An additional
wall has been erected inside the space of the CCA, examining relations to
already existing architectural features. In the heart of Markus Degerman's
artistic projects lies an ambition to investigate the connections between
the concrete physical forms of society and its underlying implications,
thereby making political power structures and aesthetic values visually
recognisable.
Alevtina Kakhidze (UA) present drawings, which are portrays of artworks, or
drawings lining out the contours of objects of desire. By drawing these
objects she appropriates them, claiming them to make a part of her Private
Collection, which is also the title of her work. The presentation at CCA
also encompasses drawings in eight glass cases on the street walk of
Khreshchatyk shopping area in central Kyiv: art in display cabinets inserted
in the context of other commercial goods for sale, now commenting on art's
position as commodity in an consumer culture escalating day by day.
Martin Karlsson's (SE) work looks at how history is inscribed into
contemporary culture, and how history is being constructed and used as a
tool for defining national and individual identity as well as the society as
a whole. In his project for Kyiv, the artist has documented the activities
of local re-enactment group 1st Platoon. The group nourishes a specific
interest in the Vietnam War, in which a large number of immigrants from
Ukraine fought for the US. Wearing the traditional uniforms, the group has
been placed in the setting of Pyrohovo Museum of Folk Architecture and Life,
a famous outdoors museum in Kyiv.
Lada Nakonechna's (UA) new film for the exhibition Exteriors shows an all
too familiar scenario from the quotidian of Kyiv street life: a traffic jam
with cars advancing in a slow and never ending procession. The film focuses
the shooting flares beaming out of the shiny car chrome due to the fact that
the filming session happened in a very stark and bright sunlight. Taking the
city as a setting for her two works included in the show - Lada Nakonechna
also inaugurates a public event in a street passage in central Kyiv where
the audience is offered the possibility to walk a version of the typical
premiere red carpet- her work turns into an attempt to describe current
developments within contemporary Ukrainian economy and urban society.
Center for Contemporary Art
Kiev