Deutsche Guggenheim
Berlin
Unter den Linden 13/15
+49 30 202093-0 FAX +49 30 202093-20
WEB
Found in Traslation
dal 26/1/2012 al 8/4/2012
Daily, 10 a.m. - 8 p.m.; Mondays, admission free

Segnalato da

Sara Bernshausen



 
calendario eventi  :: 




26/1/2012

Found in Traslation

Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin

Because language is experienced in real time, Found in Translation prominently features the time-based mediums of video, film, and 35 mm slide installation, which are augmented by photographs and prints that incorporate language as a formal element. The show brings together recent works by nine artists who look to translation as both a model and a metaphor to critically comment on the past and to produce richly imagined possibilities for the present.


comunicato stampa

curated by Nat Trotman
Associate Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York

The necessity, and the difficulty, of communicating across cultural and historical divides is now an unavoidable aspect of our lives. Within this context, translation, in both its linguistic and more figurative senses, has become a fundamental tool for making sense of reality. Unlike ever before, we must consider what can be lost (or gained) in translation, and what effects these endless transformations have on the world around us.

Found in Translation brings together recent works by nine artists who look to translation as both a model and a metaphor to critically comment on the past and to produce richly imagined possibilities for the present. For these artists, converting a text from one language to another exposes a discursive field in which the terms of identity—class, race, religion, sexuality—are negotiated, and meaning is generated. An apparently straightforward linguistic task therefore becomes a microcosm for the interaction between cultures, laden by power relations but also open to new aesthetic possibilities. Delving equally into history and fantasy, the works on view here investigate diverse political and social contexts; at their hearts, language continues to provide the crucial link between the cultures and temporalities they explore.

Because language is experienced in real time, Found in Translation prominently features the time-based mediums of video, film, and 35 mm slide installation, which are augmented by photographs and prints that incorporate language as a formal element. Acts of reading and speaking predominate: Siemon Allen, Alejandro Cesarco, Brendan Fernandes, and Lisa Oppenheim examine the various distortions that cultural changes can wreak upon works of literature. Sharon Hayes, Matt Keegan, and O Zhang look to language as a public forum, focusing on the politics of speech amidst shifting historical contexts. Patty Chang and Keren Cytter delve into the realm of fantasy, translating texts into cinematic explorations of melodrama and desire. Together these artists highlight ways that translation can illuminate the complex historical and political processes that govern life today.

Image: Patty Chang
The Product Love, 2009
© Patty Chang and ARRATIA, BEER, Berlin

Press Contact: Deutsche Guggenheim/ Sara Bernshausen t: +49 (0)30
202093-14 e-mail: sara.bernshausen@db.com

Opening january 27th

Deutsche Guggenheim
Unter den Linden 13 / 15, 10117 Berlin-Mitte
Hours: Daily, 10 a.m. – 8 p.m.; Mondays, admission free
Christmas holidays: 24. + 25.12. closed; 31.12. open until 4 p.m.; New Year, 1.1.,
open from 2 p.m.
Entrance fees: Adults/ Reduced: € 4 /€ 3
Children under 12: Admission free School groups with / without guide: Admission free
Groups up to 20 people: € 35 Family Card: €8

IN ARCHIVIO [30]
Gabriel Orozco
dal 5/7/2012 al 20/10/2012

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