Mit «Check den Kontext» zeigen Studierende von Cast / Audiovisual Media ihre Sicht auf die No-Billag-Debatte. Sie wollen wissen, wie sehr die Schweizer Musikindustrie, Filmszene und der Journalismus von der SRG und somit von Gebühren abhängig sind und was die Folgen wären, wenn die Gelder ausbleiben würden.
In der 7-teilige Webserie kommen prominente Vertreter aus der Medienbranche, Kulturindustrie sowie der Politik zu Wort. Bis zur Abstimmung am 4. März 2018 werden weitere Inhalte auf sozialen Medien erscheinen.
Dieses Projekt ist im Rahmen des Crossmedia Moduls im 5. Semester entstanden unter der Leitung von Marc Lepetit (Dozent bei Cast / Audiovisual Media) und Eric Andreae (Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter bei Cast / Audiovisual Media).
Mit dem rasanten Fortschritt der künstlichen Intelligenz wächst deren Einfluss auf das Leben und die Denkprozesse des Menschen. Aktuelle Smart-Technologien verfolgen unsere Aktionen und setzen diese in Computeralgorithmen um, so dass eine hybride Entität zwischen Mensch und Technologie entsteht.
Chimaera erforscht im Rahmen einer zweiteiligen künstlerischen Performance und mithilfe von zeitverzögerten Feedbacksystemen jene Elemente, die dazu beitragen, dass eine hybride Entität als autonom wahrgenommen werden kann, wie sie in Interaktion mit Menschen tritt und wie sie Menschen inspiriert und beeinflusst.
Der erste Teil von Chimaera besteht aus der audiovisuellen Komposition Mreža und der zweite Teil aus der Tanzperformance Schatten. Beide Setups haben ihren individuellen Interaktionscharakter, die zur Entstehung einer hybriden Entität beitragen. Im ersten Teil der Aufführung wird die Interaktion eines Performers mit einem speziell für diesen Zweck entwickelten Instrument namens Pauk beobachtet. Im zweiten Teil wird die Interaktion einer Performerin und ihres Avatars beobachtet.
YGRG16X: Death by Landscape is an ambitious and extended serial project that started in Autumn 2019. It stems from the ongoing YOUNG GIRL READING GROUP (YGRG) research taking from it a serial and fragmented form and collective reading as narrative trigger. This new work is a sensual architecture of bodies, spaces, images, light, sound and objects that serves as a base structure for a poetic essay extended through time, location and media. YGRG16X: Death by Landscape will take many forms — from experimental video, to cinematographic performances; teleplay recorded in front of a live audience and within the exhibition setting; disparate sculptural objects, props and costume exhibited independently or in empty sets - all contributing to a fragmented and dispersed work that will be on display until Autumn 2020.
According to Donna Haraway, embodiment is not about fixed location in a reified body, but about nodes in fields, inflections in orientations, and responsibility for difference in material-semiotic fields of meaning. YGRG16X: Death by Landscape will be looking deeply into embodiment, place, sexuality, temporality, integrity and breakdown - the topics that are continuously explore by YGRG. This project contextualises the instability of boundaries that renders the reading and performing body and its surroundings as the site of an active and ongoing set of relations, positing the interdependence of the text, the body, the movement, the environment and the technology.
Fragmented in its form, YGRG16X: Death by Landscape is a hybrid project resisting an integrity expected of an artwork, striving for a fragmentariness rather than holism. Aesthetically, it is rooted in the low budget b-horror and experimental film from Eastern Europe, and explores the format of a teleplay horror-mocumentary superimposed onto the gallery space. Conceptually the project explores the horror that is attributed to being outside (of norm, society, etc.), which is inherently part of queer experience. Beginning with the Gothic novel, horror allowed the writer to express her desires under the guise of fiction, yet riddled with anxiety of being separated from society. Developing the ideas for this project the artists have been influenced by such writers as U. K. Le Guin, A. Richter, D. Haraway, O. Tokarczuk, O.Butler, J. Kristeva, M. Mendes and T. Morton, and their non-binary understanding of the world. In view of the contemporary ecological anxiety, Gaweda and Kulbokaitė strongly believe that thinking through the queer experience can offer ways to renegotiate our complex relationshipto ‘Nature’, which has historically been defined as separate to ourselves - as outside.
With YGRG16X: Death by Landscape the artists are interested in evoking the eerie which itself is a haunting presence of a monstrosity that doesn’t amount to a single identifiable moment of fear or source of horror, but rather is a prolonged experience of dread.
The production of the film was initiated in January 2019 during a residency at NKDale in Norway, including the preliminary writing of the script and planning of the storyboard. A significant portion of the video material was also collected there - including shots of the winter landscape, forrest scenes, both shots of detail and atmospheric scenes - all using a 360° camera.
In its presentation at the OnCurating project space in Zurich in May and June 2020, YGRG16X: Death by Landscape will take shape of a choreographic performance and a four week exhibition. The performance will be executed by dancers and will be created in collaboration with a choreographer. This will add yet another layer to the multi-facetted work of YOUNG GIRL READING GROUP emphasising movement of the mind and the body and facilitating the idea of reding through movement and dance. This opening performance will take place in an installation of probs and costumes previously used for the videos of YGRG16X: Death by Landscape. The performance will be filmed and the performance video will be on display over the course of the exhibition. This way the artists emphasise the dichotomy between presence and absence.
PROGRAM:
Saturday 19 October, 15:00 – 18:30
PERFORMANCE | Abissi (Abysses) by Virginia Zanetti
Saturday 19 October, 18:30
VISIT AND ARTISTS TALK | with Filippo Berta and Virginia Zanetti
Video projection: Legarsi alla montagna (1981) by Maria Lai
At the KUNSTRAUM (5. K12), ZHdK Zürcher Hochschule der Künste, TONI-AREAL,
Zürich, Entrance Förrlibuckstrasse, 5th floor
A project of: IIC – Istituto Italiano di Cultura, Zurich for 15 Giornata del Contemporaneo IT.
In collaboration with: Migration Museum – Zurich (CH), Traffic Gallery – Bergamo (IT), Nomas Foundation – Rome (IT), Illisso Casa Editrice – Nuoro (IT), OnCurating Space – Zurich (CH).
Chi avrà più filo tesserà reflects on the subject of participation in art through the performative practices of three Italian artists of different generations: Virginia Zanetti (1981) and Filippo Berta (1977) together with Maria Lai (1919 – 2013), one of the most significant artistic personalities in the Italian recent past.
The event’s prime focuses are artistic practices that weave historical and social context with traditions and new rituals. In such circumstances, Virginia Zanetti will present her participative performance Abissi (Abysses). Filippo Berta, with the help of the images, will narrate to the public the story behind One by One, an art project which was selected as the winner of the last edition (2019) of the Italian Council Award (MIBAC – Ministero per i beni e le attività culturali). Both artists will discuss their works alongside with the screening of the video Legarsi alla Montagna (1981), which documents the homonymous performance staged by Maria Lai with the residents of Ulassai (Sardinia – IT).
The selected works share the common intent to generate acts which imply participation as means of self-definition. They entail public activation as a necessary condition for exploitation of new meanings and interpretations of the complexity of human relationships.
Virginia Zanetti’s performance, Abysses, will take place on October 19th from 15:00 to 19:00. This will involve residents and migrants living in Zurich, in the attempt to create a collective work by means of an embroidery practice on an ultramarine blue fabric.
This color symbolizes the sea, the ecosystem from which living beings originate, a trajectory often used by individuals to move from one place to another on our planet.
In the course of performative action, the artist invites participants to embroider a star with a precious golden thread. This star’s shape looks like those already painted by Giotto in the vault of the Scrovegni Chapel in Padua (IT) at the beginning of the 14th century.
Embroidery gives opportunity to share and collect memories related to the sea. This practice becomes a projection of desires and memories. It composes constellations made of today’s dreams.
At the end of the performance the fabric becomes the subject of a symbolic action: raised towards the sky, the blue abyss becomes sky itself. A sky full of new meanings in a delicate balance between space and time.
Filippo Berta’s ongoing project, One by One, will be discussed for the first time. The artist himself will narrate the impossible attempt to count all the thorns of the metal wire fences which still create geopolitical and cultural divisions as well as polarizations in different countries around the world: Slovenia, Croatia, Hungary, Serbia, Macedonia, Greece, Turkey, Korea, Mexico and United States. Recently built or still under construction, barbed wire walls stand as analogical presences within the society of digital control, revealing the conceptual contradictions of culturally fragile and socially divisive political choices.
In One by One, the artist involves the communities living close to such borders: each resident becomes a performer invited to count aloud, in his own language, each single thorn. The simple gesture of counting unmasks the social disharmonies induced by the logic of confinement, where ideological frontiers that prevent the natural human sociality exist.
The video document Legare Collegare by Tonino Casula, is the only video documentation testifying Maria Lai’s performance Legarsi alla Montagna (1981), a relational experiment dedicated to Ulassai, the artist’s birthplace in the mountains in Sardinia (IT).
Starting from the reinterpretation of an ancient, almost forgotten local legend – it narrates of a little girl found and rescued after a landslide in a cave where she took shelter during a thunderstorm while she tried to chase a light blue ribbon that appeared from nowhere – Maria Lai conceived a performative action reinterpreting the symbolic significance of the story. She involved women, men, children, young, and elderly people from Ulassai by provoking the action of tying houses, doors, balconies to one another. Each of them was asked to use for the purpose a different knot, according to their relationship: friendship, love, or conflict. A collective act based on the concept of union and transformation, in a region which already suffered from a progressive deurbanization.
This propitiatory ritual made everyone an interpreter of a new reality, designed to sew places to people and people to each other through infinite threads, by means of which the inseparable link between art and life was clearly expressed.
FILIPPO BERTA (1977)
The social strains generated by the relationship between individuals and the society to which they belong, constitute the subject of Filippo Berta’s artistic research. The boundaries marking this dialectical condition, quite often conflictual and problematic, are subject of analysis in his work. His attention to these social disharmonies translates into pieces which celebrate the daily gestures. The latter are so represented as to unmask their differences, tensions or contradictions. His work develops through collective performances, which are later synthetized in a single iconographic image and minimalistic videos.
Filippo Berta’s works have been exhibited or directly realized in different museums, biennials and cultural institutions all over the world. In 2019 his project, One by One, was selected among the winners of the Italian Council, an international call held by the MIBAC (Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali).
VIRGINIA ZANETTI (1981)
The work of Virginia Zanetti attempts to identify and consequently break down the boundaries that divide the work of art from its fruitors. She obtains results by using simple and already acquired devices. She overcomes the conceptual gaps that lay at the most basic and archetypal level of knowledge, in the relational dynamics or within the codes shared by a community. Her works become an integral part of the environment in which they are conceived and produced; they function as collectors of human dynamics rather than simple objects of contemplation.
Virginia has several works exhibited or performed in Italian museums and abroad. In 2019 she won the photography award at Bologna Arte Fiera.
MARIA LAI (1919-2013)
Maria Lai was the only woman to attend the Sculpture Class at the Academy of Fine Arts from 1943 to 1945, under the guidance of Arturo Martini.
Considered one of the most influential Italian artist of the twentieth century, her work was marked by the unconventional use of techniques and materials stolen from everyday life and related to domestic and typical female work: bread and looms, embroidery and sewn books, ceramics and terracotta. Inspired by fairy tales and traditions of her native island, Sardinia, at the beginning of the 80s she turned her artistic research towards interventions that were directly connected with landscape. One of the most influential works remains the performance act Legarsi alla Montagna (1981). In a strongly symbolical act, all the houses of the small village of Ulassai were tied to the surrounding mountains with a blue ribbon over ten kilometres long.
The village of Ulassai hosts today a contemporary art museum La Stazione dell’Arte, which has collected over 100 works of Maria Lai, thanks to donors worldwide.
Artist: Ekin Bernay
Curated by: Gözde Filinta and Camille Regli
PROGRAM:
Friday 8 November: 19.00 – 22.00 | Vernissage and performance
Saturday 9 November: 14.00 – 16.30 | Participatory work with the artist
In an environment that recalls ‘home,’ an ongoing cacophony of voices resonates in the space. It is the recording of multiple people answering ‘where is home?’ and what it means to them. The question was raised by artist Ekin Bernay when she started questioning the feeling of distance establishing itself between herself and ‘home’. In times of exponential moves and trajectories around the globe, our sense of belonging is redefined; is home what remains physically, or symbolically close to our hearts? The feeling of vulnerability to spaces is explored through intense, yet fragile movements. ‘Where is home?’ is an invitation to explore our inner feelings of ‘home’ and its sensitive position.
The work is a new adaptation of ‘Where is home?’ (2018) by Ekin Bernay, presented in London by Naz Balkaya and co-organized by Performistanbul.
Ekin Bernay (*1987, Ankara, Turkey) is a performance artist, dance & movement psychotherapist and director living in London. She has 19 years of active dance, movement experience, including performances at important stages such as Sadlers Wells, Royal Academy of Arts, Tate Modern. Ekin’s work focuses on the healing qualities of performance and movements, often using the audience as part of her work, for instance by directing the audience through text or sound in order to create choreographing situations. Her work comes from personal experiences as well as existential questions in relation to everything that surrounds us.
The Entropy Gardens by DEPART, is an artistic VR experience exploring the nature of post-digital reality. There is perhaps no cultural artifact more fundamental and archetypal than a garden. It represents an applied confrontation with entropy and the threat of nature through it’s formal principles, symbols, and mythical charge. In an open simulation, a hermetic world – in the form of a virtual garden – is constructed by creating a multisensory and spatio-temporal experience. A virtual landscape invites us to leave behind the gate of physical reality and be guided by the garden. Deeply rooted in our culture and often conceived of on the basis of often given ideals, it determines the visitor’s behavior. At the same time, The Entropy Gardens requires the visitor’s active participation. Virtual narration only exists and develops through the visitor’s immersion and interaction with the garden. Garden and visitor enter into a conversation based on a semiotic system. Through sounds, images and algorithms, a virtual immanence is generated, which exists parallel to the visitor.
DEPART’s The Entropy Gardens manifests the changing relationship between artwork and viewer. The passive observer becomes an active protagonist, indispensable for the progression of narration and the completion of the work. In addition to the participative engagement of the VR visitor, new technologies and the paradigm shift towards digitalization are artistically experienced. The artist no longer produces a physical artifact, but creates the framework for an immaterial and data-based experience. Only through the synthesis of algorithms and VR visitors can the virtual work unfold completely.
DEPART
The Austrian duo DEPART (1999) consists of Leonhard Lass (1978) and Gregor Ladenhauf (1978). Deeply rooted in the digital, their access to multimedia creates unique moments characterized by a formally rigorous and profound aesthetic. They combine precision and emotion into a multifaceted and abstract whole, reflecting fragments of the audience’s experience. DEPART’s works are sometimes mysterious, often deliberately dark and dazzling. They contain a highly concentrated mixture of virtual mechanics, poetic moments and hermetic symbolism. Their work moves in the field of tension between text, image and sound and spans from interactive installations and net-based applications to expansive performances and A/V live shows.
Choreographing the Public
The curatorial project Choreographing the Public is a multi-formatted program featuring exhibitions, performances, interventions, and screenings taking place from October 2019 to June 2020 at the OnCurating Project Space and other collaborating venues in Zurich. It seeks to reconfigure the relationship between the creator and its audience, creating new forms of storytelling. Receding from the traditional experiences of art, the curatorial project sheds light on the possibilities of participation to generate new and multi-faceted narratives. By means of metaphorical and invisible arrows, visitors are invited to take experimental routes, navigate, move around, interact and freely engage with the environment, while at the same time, becoming the choreographers of the works.
In collaboration with: OnCurating Project Space, Österreichisches Kulturforum Bern, Amos Gärten GmbH
Commissioned by: sound:frame
sound:frame realizes commissioned artworks at the interface of art and technology and networks international artists*, theoreticians* and experts* in the field of immersive media and post-digital art.
Event #4: 22 November and 23 November 2019, Comunio, performance by Cesare Pietroiusti, ZHdK
Artist: Cesare Pietroiusti
Curated by: Domenico Ermanno Roberti
PROGRAM:
Friday 22 November: 18.00 | Hörsaal ZT 5.T07 ZHdK | Talk
Saturday 23 November: 17.00 | Hörsaal 1 (3.K01) ZHdK | Performance
Cesare Pietroiusti’s art practice focuses on problematic and paradoxical situations hidden in common relationships and ordinary acts – thoughts that come to mind without a reason, small worries, quasi-obsessions that are usually considered too insignificant to become a matter of discussion, or of self-representation.
In 1994 Pietroiusti was available to do ‚useful‘ things for anyone of the audience who would make a request: he walked dogs, gave shots, cleaned out cellars, and more. In 1997 he published Non Functional Thoughts (ed. Morra, Napoli), a small book containing approximately one hundred useless, parasite or incongruous ideas to be realized as art projects by anyone. Some of these ideas have been executed by artists and curators, such as for the exhibition „Democracy!“ (London, 2000).
In more recent years Pietroiusti mostly concentrated on the topic of the exchange, and on the paradoxes that arise in the folds of economic systems and rules. Starting from 2004 his work focused on some aspects of the economic system and on its paradoxes: he irreversibly transformed banknotes given to him by other people; distributed thousands of drawings (always unique pieces, individually numbered and signed) for free; sold stories; swallowed banknotes at the end of an auction and subsequently given them back to the successful bidder after their defecation; opened a shop where the goods for sale are banknotes and the currency used to purchase them is the customer’s gaze; set up shows where the artworks are for sale not in exchange of money, but of the best visitors’ ideas, comments, or proposals.
www.nonfunctionalthoughts.net
Event #9: 22 to 23 February 2020, How the Wild Flowers Grow, Tobias Guttman
Artist: Tobias Gutmann
Curated by: Gözde Filinta
Friday, 21 February 2020, 19.00 | Vernissage
Saturday, 22 February 2020, 16.00 | Meditation & Drawing Session
(Flower Kombucha served by Sonmas)
Flowers are given to loved ones, in un-ordinary days carrying love, affection, sorrow, apology, and empathy. Associated with various emotions, alongside their constant use for human desires, flowers are turned into mere consumption objects, that conquered all homes, streets, parks and public spaces. Trapped into endless connotations, flowers are rarely considered beyond these aesthetical fictional meanings.
How the Wild Flowers Grow is a brief moment for pausing in an artist-made garden to think about flowers, their self-sufficient existence, and harmony. It wishes to remind the cycle of nature, by asking ‘how it grows’ that recalls the shared nature between all living beings. It tries to reflect the infinite forms of flowers in nature, as it takes shape in four million different species on earth. The imaginary drawings of wildflowers illustrate the untameable wilderness within each flower, with their crooked looks and unexpected twists. This totally imagined flower garden invites us to enter a meditative state where we, for a moment, open ourselves to the teaching of flowers; in their wise being, surrendered nature and harmony in plurality, as they cover all the mountains, hills and valleys.
Tobias Gutmann was born in Wewak, Papua New Guinea in 1987 and lives in Zürich, Switzerland. His MFA studies in Fine Arts at Zürich University of Arts broadened his interdisciplinary artistic practice. Gutmann enters playful spaces of flow, thinks with his hands and infinitely continues to draw repetitive variations of things to discover the beauty between normal. He uses his own visual language to give meaning, character, and atmosphere to a variety of formats such as installations, music-videos, publications, and workshops. Performing such formats both nationally and around the world, his art always hopes to affect people in a positive way and to communicate an incentive for participation.
Event #5: 12 to 22 December 2019, Puck Schot, how many can kill your love
12 – 21 December 2019
Puck Schot | how many can kill your love
Vernissage: Thursday 12 Dec, 19.00
Artist: Puck Schot
Curated by: Anastasia Chaguidouline
PROGRAM:
Thursday 12 December: 19.00 | Vernissage and performance
Monday 16 December: 16.00 | Guided tour with the curator
Thursday 19 December: 16.00 | Guided tour with the curator
Sunday 22 December: 19.00 | Finissage and reading
Opening hours: Monday, Wednesday and Thursday 14.00 until 17.00 and Saturday and Sunday by appointment.
how many can kill your love is Puck Schot’s first solo exhibition in Switzerland. The presentation is part of the collaborative curated program Choreographing the Public at the OnCurating Project Space in Zurich. Puck Schot’s work profoundly questions the boundaries between private and public, and the ownership of stories and storytelling in the age of digital. Her playful yet at times boldly serious performative and visual language includes for example footage of furries, a group of people with the mutual interest of dressing up as anthropomorphic animals in their free time, creating childlike alter-egos for themselves. This multi-media installation mixes cardboard and deteriorating plants, curtains and pillows, while confronting the viewer textually and directly with wrestling, spamming and bullying in different paces of the two video works.
The works tip over the edge of being autobiographical, inspired by hardships, driven by own fascinations in the time of digital and existential confusion. However the poetry, the tactically orchestrated distance between the artist and the viewer, allows space for fantasy and longing. The curated solo exhibition is the result of a close hands-on collaboration between Puck Schot and Anastasia Chaguidouline. The questions that addressed by the two central video works are autobiographical for both the artist and the curator. This exhibition addresses questions of privacy in the age of digital judging, vulnerability and identification. The textual work presented is based on spam e-mails, cyber-mobbing and personal dialogues. The footage for both videos has been recorded by the artist during her research travel to the USA during the summer of 2019.
Puck Schot was born in 1994 in Rotterdam (NL). Schot explores different realities and mind-states. Defining a modern desire remains key to her poetic work. In art, but also in for example through any social media-profile, we, individuals, constantly search for a perfect representation of our thoughts. With that search for ideal positivity and acknowledgement, there comes a disacknowledgement of lack, boredom, violence: darker needs caused by dissatisfaction. Through impulsively writing thoughts fragmentarily and by visually reflecting on that, narratives of fictive characters and alter egos start existing. Her work results in confessional texts, essays, audio and video(-installations). Often she also runs self-written and found texts through an algorithm that mixes the text into a new one. In video work, she often pays actors from online gig websites for a few dollars. Thus, a stranger performs a quite violent, confessional and fragmented script
(sometimes run through an algorithm) on their webcams for her.
This exhibition is part of the Choreographing the Public program, a multi-formatted programme featuring exhibitions, performances, interventions and screenings taking place from October 2019 to June 2020 at the OnCurating Project Space and other collaborating venues in Zurich. By shaping a “choreography”, the exhibitions invite visitors to take experimental routes, navigate, move around, and engage with the works. Receding from the traditional and passive experience of art, Choreographing the Public sheds light on the virtues of participation in redefining our relationship to art and power structure.
Choreographing the Public has received support from: Stadt Zürich Kultur; Dr. Georg und Josi Guggenheim Stiftung; Migros Kulturprozent; Cassinelli-Vogel Stiftung.
Ein mehrteiliges kuratorisches Projekt, das mit Öffentlichkeit agiert.
Veranstaltung #1: Samstag, 19. Oktober 2019, CHI AVRÀ PIÙ FILO TESSERÀ,
in der ZHdK (Kunstraum 5.K12)
Beteiligte Künstler*innen: Ekin Bernay, Filippo Berta, Depart (Leonhard Lass und Gregor Ladenhauf), Dorota Gawęda und Eglé Kulbokaité (YGRG), Tobias Gutmann, Maria Lai, Nico Sebastian Meyer, Hilla Toony Navok, Angi Nend, Yoshinori Niwa, Cesare Pietroiusti, Puck Schot, Dmitry Vilensky (Chto Delat), Virginia Zanetti und andere.
Kuratorische Arbeit von: Maya Bamberger, Anastasia Chaguidouline, Francesca Ceccherini, Gözde Filinta, Beatrice Fontana, Ronald Kolb, Ronny Koren, Eveline Mathis, Courtney Meier, Camille Regli, Domenico Ermanno Roberti und Noriko Yamakoshi.
PROGRAMM:
Event #1: Samstag, 19. Oktober 2019, Virginia Zanetti, Filippo Berta mit einer Videoprojektion von Maria Lai
Event #2: 8.–9. November 2019, Ekin Bernay
Event #3: 21.–23. November 2019, VR Projekt von Depart
Event #4: 22.–23. November 2019 (Performance), Cesare Pietroiusti
Event #5: 12.–22. Dezember 2019, Puck Schot
Event #6: 13. December 2019, Konversation mit Dmitry Vilensky (Chto Delat)
Event #7: 15. Januar –15. Februar 2020, Hilla Toony Navok
Event #8: 17. Januar 2020, Out of Hands, screening program
Event #9: 21.–22. February 2020, Tobias Gutmann
Event #10: 15. Mai –12. Juni 2020, Dorota Gawęda & Eglė Kulbokaitė (YGRG)
Für weitere Infos können Sie @choreo.the.public auf Instagram, OnCurating.org auf Facebook folgen
Das kuratorische Projekt Choreographing the Public ist ein vielseitiges Programm mit Ausstellungen, Performances, Interventionen und Screenings, das von Oktober 2019 bis Juni 2020 im OnCurating Project Space und anderen kooperierenden Orten in Zürich stattfindet.
Seit Beginn des 20. Jahrhunderts liegt ein ständiger Fokus darauf, die traditionelle Beziehung zwischen Kunst und ihrem Publikum zu überdenken und sich von der statischen und passiven Kontemplation der Kunst zu einer engagierteren und sozialeren Erfahrung zu bewegen. Bereits in den 1920er Jahren sprachen die Futuristen und Dadaisten ihr Publikum an, indem sie performative Techniken einsetzten, um die bürgerliche Selbstgefälligkeit zu erschüttern. Im weiteren Verlauf des Jahrhunderts nutzten die Happenings der 1950er und 60er Jahre auch das Publikum als integralen Bestandteil ihrer Veranstaltungen, indem sie die Autorschaft und andere Paradigmen in Frage stellten und versuchten, das ästhetische Feld zu radikalisieren und zu demokratisieren. Seit den 90er Jahren sind eine Reihe neuer Praktiken entstanden, die größtenteils unter dem Sammelbegriff von partizipativer Kunst zusammengefasst sind. Diese performativen, integrativen und gemeinschafts-basierten Praktiken, die auf eine aktivere Zuschauerschaft abzielen, ermöglichen es dem Publikum, intellektuell, emotional und physisch mit dem Raum und der Arbeit zu interagieren und gleichzeitig Fragen nach der Souveränität zu stellen, die durch Machtstrukturen im Kunstbereich hervorgerufen wird.
Vor dem Hintergrund dieses kunsthistorischen Kontextes recherchiert das kuratorische Kollektiv aus 12 Mitgliedern unterschiedlicher Herkunft und Praxis seit über einem Jahr Strategien zur gemeinsamen Auseinandersetzung mit der Öffentlichkeit, um eine „Choreographie“ zu gestalten. Ausgehend von den griechischen Wörtern khoreia (Kreistanz) und γράψιμο (Schreiben) definiert das Wort „Choreographie“ die Praxis der Gestaltung von Bewegungsabläufen. Mit anderen Worten, eine Choreographie orchestriert Bewegungen und leitet Bewegungen, um eine fließende Beziehung zwischen den Elementen – in diesem Fall zwischen dem Publikum und der Arbeit – herzustellen, die Austausch und Reaktionen sowie eine potentielle Kollektivität hervorruft. Wie die britische Forscherin Claire Bishop feststellte, geht es in der Kunst heute nicht mehr darum, das Werk auf eine persönliche Beziehung zu beschränken, sondern viele Menschen einzubeziehen und kollektives Denken zu schaffen, bei dem „der Mensch das zentrale künstlerische Medium und Material“ darstellt (Artificial Hells; 2018). Genau dann findet eine Choreographie zwischen dem Werk und dem Publikum statt, wenn die Besucher*innen zu Protagonist*innen des künstlerischen Prozesses werden.
Ausgehend von dieser Idee von Impuls und Bewegung, die im Ausstellungsraum stattfindet, versuchen alle Interventionen des Gesamtprojekts Choreographing the Public die Rollen der/des Künstler*s und des Publikums neu zu gestalten und neue Formen des Geschichtenerzählens zu schaffen. Ausgehend von traditionellen Erfahrungen der Kunst beleuchtet das kuratorische Projekt die Tugenden der Partizipation durch dier Erzeugung neuer und facettenreicher Narrative. Mit metaphorischen und unsichtbaren Pfeilen werden die Besucher*innen eingeladen, experimentelle Wege zu gehen, sich zu bewegen, zu interagieren und sich frei mit der Umgebung auseinanderzusetzen und gleichzeitig Choreographen der Werke zu werden.
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Das kuratorische Projekt wurde mit Unterstützung des Kurators Sergio Edelsztein und des OnCurating Project Space unter der Leitung von Dorothee Richter und Ronald Kolb entwickelt.
Event #6: 13 December 2019, Dmitry Vilensky (Chto Delat), When emotions become form, lecture and screening, Cabaret Voltaire
13 December 2019, 17.30
Chto Delat | When Emotions become Form
Event #6 - Choreographing the Public
Talk and screening: Friday 13 December, 17.30
Artist: Chto Delat
Curated by: Anastasia Chaguidouline
Screening and participatory conversation [Screening starts at 17.45]
PROGRAM:
Friday 13 December: Curatorial Talks of the MAS in Curating at the ZHdK.
A screening of Chto Delat’s newest film production „One Night“ and a conversation with Dmitry Vilensky, a founding member of the St. Petersburg collective Chto Delat. „One Night“ deals with topics of emotionality, (mis-)judgement, saturation via social media and fake news. The conversation that will start between Dmitry Vilensky and Anastasia Chaguidouline will organically and directly address and involve the audience as it evolves. The conversation touches, among others, upon emotion, current political climate(s) and smileys.
Dmitry Vilensky (born 1964) is a Russian artist, writer and activist. He is a founding member of the platform Chto Delat / What is to be done. Chto Delat is a collective of philosophers, writers, curators, artists, critics, among others that merge art, activism and political theory. Vilensky is also an editor of the Chto Delat newspaper. The collective Chto Delat / What is to be done was founded in early 2003 in St. Petersburg, Russia. The members of the collective strongly position themselves as internationalists, demanding the recognition of equality of all people; and feminists, positioned against all forms of gender inequality, homophobia and patriarchy.