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Beirut and the Golden Sixties revisits a turbulent chapter in the
development of modernism in Beirut beginning with the 1958 Lebanon
crisis and ending with the 1975 outbreak of the Lebanese Civil War.
Through 230 works by 34 artists and more than 300 archival
documents, the exhibition examines this romanticised era of global
influence in Beirut to highlight how collisions between art,
culture and polarised political ideologies turned the Beirut art
scene into a microcosm for larger trans-regional tensions. As a
city that is arguably in and of itself a manifesto of fragility,
Beirut continues to evoke both vulnerability and determination –
or at least traces of it – and conjure forms of resistance,
called forth by the urgency of the moment and the desire to be
remembered. Artists: Shafic Abboud, Yvette Achkar, Etel Adnan,
Farid Aouad, Dia al-Azzawi, Alfred Basbous, Joseph Basbous, Michel
Basbous, Assadour Bezdikian, Huguette Caland, Rafic Charaf, Saloua
Raouda Choucair, Georges Doche, Simone Fattal, Laure Ghorayeb, Paul
Guiragossian, Farid Haddad, John Hadidian, Jumana Bayazid
El-Hussein, Dorothy Salhab Kazemi, Helen El-Khal, Jean Khalifé,
Simone Baltaxé Martayan, Ibrahim Marzouk, Jamil Molaeb, Fateh
al-Moudarres, Nicolas A. Moufarrege, Mehdi Moutashar, Aref El
Rayess, Mahmoud Said, Adel al-Saghir, Hashim Samarchi, Nadia
Saikali, Mona Saudi, Juliana Seraphim, Cici Sursock, Khalil Zgaib,
Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige
A World of Endless Promise assembles a host of creative practices
by 88 artists from 39 countries that are spread across 12 locations
spanning several centuries of Lyon’s rich history. Whether
through the issues they tackle, or the materials they use, these
artists’ diverse approaches represent varied understandings of
our current state of global uncertainty and has the potential to
inform our thinking about generative paths of resistance. In
recognising that artists, past and present, are often among the
most vulnerable voices in our societies, the exhibition also brings
together works of art and objects spanning millennia that bare
their scars and deformities, share forgotten accounts of turmoil,
and draw attention to the indelible traces of time. And it is
exactly there, at the heart of their fragility, that the promise of
a truly changed world begins.
In Collapsed Time, Christina Quarles (Chicago, 1985) shows an
installation that occupies the entire exhibition space and exhibits
her paintings alongside works from the Nationalgalerie collection.
Quarles confronts several decades of diverse forms of artistic
practices, from photography and sculpture to video and performance,
that have dealt with notions of physical and psychological
confinement, and their impact on the representation of the human
body. The formal language of Quarles’ paintings explores the
experience of living in a racialised, queer body. Her figures
contend with the boundaries of identity, as they intervene with
complex patterns and planes. The catalogue features a curatorial
essay by Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath, an extended interview
with Christina Quarles and a contribution by Jillian Hernandez,
Associate Professor at the Center for Gender, Sexualities, and
Women’s Studies Research, University of Florida, USA. Text in
English and German.
Passage is a site-specific, two-channel video installation, which
expands Nujoom Alghanem's experimentation with contemporary Arabic
poetry through the language of film. Taking her quintessential 2009
poem, The Passerby Collects the Moonlight, as a point of departure,
this installation explores the universal experience of
displacement. This Brechtian conflation of reality and fiction,
culminating in a scene that depicts Falak arriving at the pavilion
in Venice, prompts the viewers to consider the parallelism between
the film's three protagonists: the director, the actress and the
fictional character. These three women of a similar age share the
experience of similar dualities: the hidden and the revealed,
fragility and power, belonging and displacement. The experience of
passage and duality also permeates the design of the exhibition
space, where visitors can enter and exit from either side of the
pavilion. A large screen, diagonally positioned at the centre,
divides the space into two symmetrical halves. The viewers are
invited to engage both with Nujoom and Amal's real process of
creating the film and with the cinematographic portrayal of the
fictional character of Falak.
The publication The Architecture of Deception / Confinement /
Transformation accompanies the eponymously titled exhibition
trilogy at BNKR - current reflections on art and architecture in
Munich and showcases 18 diverse artistic standpoints at the
intersection of art and architecture. Each chapter directly
corresponds to the evolving history of the exhibition space, which
was originally constructed as a camouflaged air-raid bunker during
the Second World War, then used as a postwar internment camp, and
finally transformed into its current state as a mixed-use
residential and office building. The Architecture of Deception
explores notions of illusion and deception, the creation of new
realities, truth versus fiction; Confinement explores notions of
shelters and safety, captivity and freedom, 'outside' versus
'inside'; Transformation explores notions of gentrification, decay
and definition of living spaces. With contributions by the editors,
David Adjaye and Nikolaus Hirsch, Isabelle Doucet, and Madeleine
Freund. Artists: The Architecture of Deception: Hans Op de Beeck,
Emmanuelle Laine, Bettina Pousttchi, Gregor Sailer, Cortis &
Sonderegger, The Swan Collective; The Architecture of Confinement:
Ramzi Ben Sliman, Mona Hatoum, Nadia Kaabi-Linke, Annika Kahrs,
OEzgur Kar, Joanna Piotrovska; The Architecture of Transformation:
Dana Awartani, Olivier Goethals, Eva Nielsen, Jeremy Shaw, Hannah
Weinberger, Andrea Zittel.
The thematic exhibition Walking Through Walls presents a
contemporary panorama of the artistic responses made to the
detrimental effects of human-made barriers, divisions and walls,
showcasing works by Jose Davila, Mona Hatoum, Nadia Kaabi-Linke,
Christian Odzuck, Anri Sala, Regina Silveira, alongside many
others. Acknowledging the location of the Gropius Bau alongside the
former Berlin Wall, the exhibition offers a global perspective on
the physical and psychological repercussions of coexisting in
divided societies. On the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the
fall of the Wall, the exhibition is a timely exploration of how
barriers can articulate feelings of vulnerability and anxiety, and
represent individual and collective identities. Artists: Jose
Davila, Mona Hatoum, Nadia Kaabi-Linke, Christian Odzuck, Anri
Sala, Regina Silveira and others.
A selection of fifteen well-established artists from across the
Maghreb, Levant, and Gulf in conversations moderated by experts on
contemporary Middle Eastern art. Historically, artists have been
known for their ability to understand emerging trends of thought
and emotions before they become clear to the society at large. Yet,
outside the art world, artists have rarely enjoyed opportunity to
share their ideas. As revolutionary movements challenge decades of
authoritarian rule across Arab countries, Conversations with
Contemporary Arab Artists is the first book to give voice to
artists from across the region and makes their thoughts accessible
to a wide audience. Its purpose is to record for future generations
these artists' thoughts as they bear witness to revolutionary
currents sparking deep transformations in their political and
social landscapes. Rather than providing a comprehensive analysis
of the "Arab Spring," this book simply aims to provide readers with
snap shots of the states of mind of intellectually engaged Arab
artists. It is aimed at curators, art historians, artists,
sociologists, political scientists, citizens of the Arab world and
students of art, art history, and the Middle East.
The Many Lives and Deaths of Louise Brunet brings together several
hundred works of art, objects and archival documents, covering
diverse geographies over several millennia. From Cranach to 1960s
industrial design, and ancient funerary stele to 18th century
Japanese Samurai armour, the exhibition draws on the collections of
local and foreign institutions. It exhumes trans-historical
narratives of fragility and resistance and confronts them with a
diversity of works by the biennale's invited artists. Departing
from the context of Lyon, the exhibition is designed as a retelling
of the obscure 19th century story of Louise Brunet, a silk spinner
from the Drome, who after joining the revolution of the "Canuts"
(silk weavers) in 1834, embarked on an arduous journey of
self-reinvention, which ended in the Lyon-owned silk factories of
Mount Lebanon. Louise Brunet is portrayed as an elusive figure,
part real, part fictional, that appears in different guises, in
various places, at several moments in history.
Paul Guiragossian (1926-1993) is one of the most influential
artists to emerge from the Arab World in the 20th century. Paul
Guiragossian (1926-1993) is one of the most influential artists to
emerge from the Arab World in the 20th century. Born to Armenian
parents, survivors of the Armenian Genocide, he experienced the
consequences of exile, first as a child, and later on as a young
refugee from Jerusalem arriving to Beirut in the late 1940s. In the
'50s Paul started teaching art in several Armenian schools and
worked as an illustrator. He later started his own business with
his brother Antoine painting cinema banners, posters, and drawing
illustrations for books. Soon after he was discovered for his art
and introduced to his contemporaries after which he began
exhibiting his works in Beirut and eventually all over the world.
Passage is a site-specific, two-channel video installation, which
expands Nujoom Alghanem's experimentation with contemporary Arabic
poetry through the language of film. Taking her quintessential 2009
poem, The Passerby Collects the Moonlight, as a point of departure,
this installation explores the universal experience of
displacement. This Brechtian conflation of reality and fiction,
culminating in a scene that depicts Falak arriving at the pavilion
in Venice, prompts the viewers to consider the parallelism between
the film's three protagonists: the director, the actress and the
fictional character. These three women of a similar age share the
experience of similar dualities: the hidden and the revealed,
fragility and power, belonging and displacement. The experience of
passage and duality also permeates the design of the exhibition
space, where visitors can enter and exit from either side of the
pavilion. A large screen, diagonally positioned at the centre,
divides the space into two symmetrical halves. The viewers are
invited to engage both with Nujoom and Amal's real process of
creating the film and with the cinematographic portrayal of the
fictional character of Falak. Text in Arabic.
This title is centered around the theme of storytelling, new works
by twenty-three artists with roots in the Arab world. Twenty-three
both established and emerging artists have been commissioned to
produce a new work, ranging from painting, drawing and sculpture,
to photography, video and mixed-media installations. Through a
comparative analysis of these works, the curators highlight a
process of constant transmigration, resulting in a diversity of
cultural and aesthetic references.
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