Kati London
Thomas Duc
Laila El-Haddad
Dan Phiffer
Mushon Zer-Aviv
Daniel Garcia Andujar
Zhou Hongxiang
Banu Cennetoglu
Negar Tahsili
Kate Armstrong
Ali Taptik
Basak Senova
Group show. The exhibition looks at the notion of space as a decisive factor in our perception of the realities that surround us. The works on view are re-positioned, re-linked in space-time relative to the "reading" done by each viewer, building alternative paths.
Curated by Basak Senova
The perceptual re-construction of space is a continuous process, generated by
diverse inputs such as our senses, memory, history, consciousness as well as
technology. It is a process, consisting of momentary fragments, which are impossible
to record. They are temporary, augmented, designed,
and loaded.
“Unrecorded” exhibition looks at the notion of space as a decisive factor in our
perception of the realities that surround us. The works of Kati London (US), Thomas
Duc (France), Laila El-Haddad (Palestine), Dan Phiffer (US), Mushon Zer-Aviv
(Israel), Daniel Garcia Andujar (Spain), Zhou Hongxiang (China), Banu Cennetoglu
(Turkey), Negar Tahsili (Iran), Kate Armstrong (Canada), and Ali Taptik (Turkey)
unfold and restructure all possible perceptual codes through their own inspections,
observations, and approaches. They ask questions about the physicality of the space;
content of mediatized spaces; clashes between realities and perception of spaces;
spaces and situations, discharging information; and narrative spaces.
Exhibition space is deliberately designed to minimize the interaction between the
data input of physical space and the audio-visual senses of the viewer, in order to
drive the viewer into the realm of each work. Thus, each and every work leads to
another, through a unique navigation established by each viewer. In this respect,
works in the exhibition are re-positioned, re-linked in space-time relative to the
“reading” done by each viewer, building alternative paths. Inevitably, the
exhibition takes the phases of informational capitalism, global scenarios for
socio-political, cultural and economic gaps into consideration, on each and every
visit.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a series of lectures and workshops developed
by a group of artists, writers, curators and theorists including Jalal Toufic (LB),
Nat Muller (NL), Technologies To The People (Daniel G. Andujar) (ES), Laila
El-Haddad (PS), Dan Phiffer (US), and Mushon Zer-Aviv (IL).
6 March 2008
A presentation and talk by Laila El-Haddad (Palestine), Dan Phiffer (US) and Mushon
Zer-Aviv (Israel)
You Are Not Here
Laila El-Haddad, Dan Phiffer and Mushon Zer-Aviv will present the You Are Not Here
project and discuss the mediated interpretation of space in the context of military
occupation and the resistance to it. You Are Not Here project tries to expose the
contrasts and the similarities between two cities. Both in the case of Baghdad / New
York and that of Gaza City / Tel Aviv while the cities realities are politically
involved both the emotional and cognitive perception of these corresponding spaces
are completely detached from one another. You Are Not Here attempts to challenge
this detachment by providing a mediated experience that still maintains a human
scale.
8 March 2008
A talk by Nat Muller (The Netherlands)
Soft Reality meets Soft Space: An Attempt towards an incomplete Glossary
A proposal for interpreting the soft collisions between messy systems of
representation and
spatial conceptions.
13-14-15 March 2008
A 3 days practical and theoretical workshop/meeting by Technologies To The People.
Directed by Daniel G. Andújar (Spain)
DIT "Do It Together" Workshop Series
The Apprehension of reality from the Postcapital Archive
This interdisciplinary workshop is open to cultural & media producers, artists,
scientists, theorists, activists, and anyone interested in design, visual
communication, art, media, and cultural sciences. The objective of the workshop is
to facilitate reflection upon the structures of the "public" process, communication
methods, and the possibilities these present. It also aims to intervene artistically
using modern communication technology methods, and to test new "public"
participation models.
31 March – 1 April 2008
A 2 days lecture by Jalal Toufic (Lebanon)
You Said “Stay,” So I Stayed
Attending to the film Groundhog Day, Jalal Toufic will lecture on the will and its
relation to eternal recurrence. The ordeal of the will is not only that one has to
go through countless recurrence and, in the guise of one’s computer emulations or of
some of one’s versions in other branches of a bifurcating universe, in desperation
commit suicide myriad times; but also that once the will is accomplished, one
thenceforth is going to have not only to accept everything that happens, even vast
catastrophes, but also, since a genuine will is an ontological selector that
automatically renders anything that cannot be willed in the mode of eternal
recurrence impossible, to affirm its eternal recurrence: amor fati.
Akbank Art Gallery
Istiklal Caddesi No: 14-18 - Istanbul
Admission is free. Registration in advance is needed for the workshops.