Collective Identity. In all of the works a collective identity is being manifested in an object; a flag, a map or landscape painting...
After spending one year in Tel Aviv participating in the Artport artist
residency program, Noa Gur is showing a new facade of her work, which is
occupied with the politics of display culture.
She explores the politically inspired conditioning of visibility, its
limitations, and links nationally inclined art to acknowledgement of
visual material, examining the contexts where these boundaries are set
through acts of preference, concealment, erasure and censorship. Gur
addresses peoples' situations in political and cultural environments and
comments on the differences in respective acknowledgement with regard to
ethnicity and social background. The work is inspired by the idea of the
educational playground that exhibition spaces provide as a platform that
is disciplining the viewer and forming a bias alined with the
nation-state's narrative.
The show includes pieces concerned with arrangement and restriction of
visibility on these platforms of display. A workshop filmed in the Tel
Aviv Museum of Art as part of a school group visit involves teenage
participants from backgrounds of migrant workers, that do not hold
Israeli citizenship, drawing paintings and sculptures of early Israeli
art, first by looking and then merely by listening to an audio guide.
While doing so, some of the prejudices through which Zionist settlers
legitimize their ownership of the land are exposed.
The next piece "Art Dubai" is a monologue by the gallery's owner about
his experience at Art Dubai art fair, where the fair's director
interfered with the exhibition of one of the pieces and asked to make
changes on the world map it displays. The demand followed a nocturnal
visit to the fair made by the Sheikh. This very act of concealment on
the world map is echoed in the piece "Postmodern Decoration", which
features an interview with the director of the Tel Aviv Museum of Art
where he reveals having covered an artwork with white paint that
displayed the colours of the Palestinian flag.
In all of the works a collective identity, the ethnic or national, is
being manifested in an object; a flag, a map or landscape painting,
which evolves its own topography as layers of concealment reveal
previous world views - almost like aged foundations of political
predecessor's opinions on which current ideals have been built on, like
old cities found under existing ones.
The cultural conditioning of vision and depiction is also regarded in a
work shown in the smaller room. "Reward" consists of two films depicting
backstreet trade deals and illegal money making. Here, the artist
herself with her facial features remaining unrecognised, plays all roles
of the various film characters. The result is a two channel video
installation in which she is seen begging for change, robbing and
shooting. The first time that the project was presented viewers were
asked to compose a portrait of the offender with professional police
software. The portrait showing the most accurate similarity to the
films' perpetrator was given a prize.
Lastly, "Dark pools" (2013) is a video work comprising two screens,
showing Gur's profile while she is seen swallowing a strip recounting
Jesus' "miracle of loaves and fish". Another screen shows a broadcast
from an Indian news agency, showing floods and consequent reconstruction
work, along with information regarding changes in stock markets in East
and South Asia, as the numbers scroll from left to right.
Image: Noa Gur, "Art Dubai", 2014, video still, © Noa Gur.
Preview: Wednesday, 8 October, 6-9pm
Galerie Campagne Premiere
CHAUSSEESTRASSE 116 - D-10115 Berlin
Tue - Sat: 11 -- 6