Arena
Centre of Contemporary Art, Znaki Czasu, COCA Torun, Poland
Apr 11, 2014 to Sep 28, 2014
Online Exhibition
Press Release
Arena
from Apr 11, 2014 to Sep 28, 2014
Aderemi Adegbite, Manolis Anastasakos & Alexandros Vasmoulakis, Mirosław Bałka, Guy Ben-Ner, Joseph Beuys, Victor Ehikhamenor, Ninar Esber, Hans-Peter Feldmann, Edy Ferguson, Dor Guez, Chaja Hertog & Nir Nadler, Adelita Husni-Bey, Jannis Kounellis, Oliver Laric, Cristina Lucas, Maha Maamoun, Jumana Manna & Sille Storihle, Jasmina Metwaly, Gustav Metzger, Avi Mograbi, Anna Moreno, Ciprian Mureşan & Gianina Cărbunariu, Ima-Abasi Okon, Itamar Rose, Roee Rosen, Michal Rovner, Justyna Scheuring, Ruti Sela & Maayan Amir, Marinella Senatore, Katharina Sieverding, Łukasz Surowiec, Adrian Tranquilli, Zbyszko Trzeciakowski, Adejoke Tugbiyele, Mona Vatamanu & Florin Tudor, Andrzej Wasilewski, Wooloo and Zafos Xagoraris
Curated by Dobrila Denegri
Screening programs curated by: Antonia Alampi, Jude Anogwih, Sergio Edelsztein and Katerina Gregos
Annex: exhibitive program The Silence of Marcel Duchamp Is Overrated curated by Piotr Lisowski
Web platform: http://arena.csw.torun.pl
In our age there is no such thing as “keeping out of politics”. George Orwell's words still sound very current and truthful, especially if related to the last two decades. From the fall of the Berlin Wall, to the crash of the World Trade Center, up to the Global Financial Crisis, life is becoming increasingly subjected to the influence of politics on a planetary scale. Art is both driving and documenting this upheaval. It is looking for new models of social transformation, but it is also creating space for reflection and discussion. These premises form the basis of Arena – a project which intends to function not just as an exhibition, but also as a set for dynamic programs of screenings of video works, which today diffuse and channel artistic messages in a mass way, as well as a platform for lectures, meetings and discussions which will involve international curators as well as participating artists and guest-lecturers from Poland.
The exhibitive project Arena takes the work and the artistic persona of Joseph Beuys as the point of departure. Being a personification of the artist in the role of a demiurge, a teacher, an activist as well as a “public worker” in the broadest sense of the term, Beuys is a reference figure whose legacy still matters when questions of the political and social engagement of art are raised. The title of the exhibition refers to his piece Arena (Where Would I Have Got if I Had Been Intelligent!) which marks a shift in his own work as an artist and an activist, and here will be presented through the re-edition of documentary materials that the well-known German artist and photographer Katharina Sieverding realized especially for the exhibition. Departing from Beuys’ Arena and its inherent (un)documentary and unfixed nature, the exhibition itself will develop through a discursive and changeable format, presenting the work of contemporary artists who address the question of art’s (artist’s) place within a broader social and political arena. In this sense Arena indicates the thematic frame which this exhibition takes, as a starting point in order to pose the questions: in what way does art deal with social contingencies and current political conflicts and how does it reflect moments of crisis? In a broader sense, arena is an archetypical image that alludes to the spectacularization of violence and theatralization of conflict, notions which, when transposed in our current time, imply reflection of hyper-mediated reality and the way in which the mass-media create / represent history through images. Hans-Peter Feldmann’s work 9 / 11 Front-Page, consisting of a collection of more than one hundred front-pages from international newspapers reporting the attack on the World Trade Center, can thus be seen as a reflection on the way in which certain images become instant icons and how such images influence / transform our perception of present and historic events. As a counterpart, the work MASS MEDIA: Today and Yesterday by Gustav Metzger, will involve the public more directly, aiming to stimulate reflection about the media and the impact they have on our perception of society.
Taking the form of an exhibition within an exhibition, in the space especially designed by Uglycute, will be four screening programs curated by: Antonia Alampi (Italy / Egypt), Jude Anogwih (Nigeria), Sergio Edelsztein (Israel) and Katerina Gregos (Greece / Belgium), all correlated thematically to the question of the engagement of / through art, and art’s ability to deal with issues of history, memory, and identity raised in the moments and places in which ideological and religious convictions, or economic and political interests collided. Recent history has been marked by numerous real and symbolic “points of collision” which, recalling Beuys' words, remain as a wound on the tissue of humanity. Arena is thus devoted to exploring how art relates to the fragile social texture of the contemporary world in all its complexity and contradictions. It aims to review the ways in which art can open channels of communication or representation alternative to those of the mainstream media, and how it can narrate a personal side of events that marked historical or cultural ruptures, as well as, if and how it can trigger, not only mechanisms of critical thinking and social awareness, but also processes of sublimation. This dimension, which marks the shift from particular to universal and from current to timeless, includes the work of the well-known Israeli Michal Rovner, who will present the video installation Cracks in Time, especially edited for this occasion. This monumental digital fresco recalls images of migration, displacement and forced eradication, which seem to be pervading the histories of different populations. In correlation with this visually involving metaphor of collective history, there is a new work by the renowned Polish artist, Mirosław Bałka, which has also been specially prepared for this exhibition. Knocking is a sculptural / spacial intervention which places its focus on inner space, on the interior dimension of an individual (or an artist) and on personal narrative which can be transposed to a more universal plane.
Arena, as an exhibition which tends to have a more open, performative and discursive character, will function as a platform for lectures and screenings, interventions, discussions and insights on-line at: http://arena.csw.torun.pl, as well as smaller-scale exhibitions which will be curated by Piotr Lisowski and include solo-presentations of four Polish artists. Departing from one of Beuys’ seminal works, The Silence of Marcel Duchamp Is Overrated, this series of exhibitions / interventions / performances will deal with issues of exclusion, diagnosis, manipulation, radicalism, anarchism, relation, survival and its variations of presence and engagement through the works of: Justyna Scheuring, Łukasz Surowiec, Zbyszko Trzeciakowski and Andrzej Wasilewski.
Screening programs: Four renowned international curators; Antonia Alampi, Jude Anogwih, Sergio Edelsztein and Katerina Gregos, have contributed to create an “exhibition within an exhibition” through screening programs that offer a multi-layered and kaleidoscopic view on the world and on some of its most critical points, depicted through a wide range of video works. Humorous and poignant, but also shrewd and touching, these films are like a polyphony of voices speaking about the dramas of our times.
/ Stand and Stare: the Real World They Promised Is not There – curated by: Antonia Alampi / artists: Oliver Laric (Austria / Germany), Maha Maamoun (USA / Egypt), Jumana Manna (Palestine / USA) & Sille Storihle (Norway), Jasmina Metwaly (Poland / Egypt), Ciprian Mureşan & Gianina Cărbunariu (Romania)
This screening-program includes the work of artists that, in different ways and by looking at a variety of situations and contexts, relate to and challenge the entire machinery of representation, and its social / political use and role. The presented artworks do not necessarily engage with the direct political event as such, but they reflect on what remains of the event, what that event is transformed into, or is used for, when interpreted, and re-presented within different narratives and in infinite variations.
/ Contrasting Characters: Video Art of a Nation – curated by: Jude Anogwih / artists: Aderemi Adegbite, Victor Ehikhamenor, Ima-Abasi Okon, Adejoke Tugbiyele
This screening-program presents a diversity of videos from Nigerian artists who, from dynamic perspectives, engage prevalent topics and speak eloquently of the complexities of life in and outside the continent and particularly in Nigeria. They raise very pertinent questions and discourse on themes that define multiple specificities, trajectories and conditions in a world characterized by precarity and unpredictability, thus reaching and engaging a wider audience with their more prolific visual dialogue.
/ Identity Wars through the Artist's Lens – curated by: Sergio Edelsztein / artists: Guy Ben-Ner, Dor Guez, Avi Mograbi, Itamar Rose, Roee Rosen, Ruti Sela & Maayan Amir
Extremely heterogeneous and modern, Israeli society is struggling to find common denominators. But the deep fragmentation and diverse existential realities of sectors seem to enhance rather the irreconcilable extremes breeding constant conflict and entrenchment. This atmosphere of conflict was elaborated by Israeli video artists in the last decade through events such as: wars, demonstrations, documentation of daily events in the Occupied Territories – but also through parody and fiction. The works presented in this selection are good examples of this divisive and conflicted reality that, apparently, is tearing apart Israeli society rather than making it more homogeneous.
/ Performative Resistance – curated by: Katerina Gregos / artists: Manolis Anastasakos & Alexandros Vasmoulakis (Greece), Ninar Esber (Lebanon / France), Edy Ferguson (USA), Chaja Hertog (Holland) & Nir Nadler (Israel), Cristina Lucas (Spain), Anna Moreno (Spain / Holland), Marinella Senatore (Italy), Wooloo (Denmark / USA) and Zafos Xagoraris (Grece)
Taking Beuys’ belief of art’s potential to transform society, his interrogation of the social role of the artist, and his commitment to political engagement, environmental concerns, and performance, the screening program Performative Resistance features a selection of single channel videos where the artists deploy different performative actions to create situations of rupture and which respond to various current crisis situations, or political and social issues of a contested nature.