THE PUBLIC SCHOOL: 'Communisms' Afterlifes' at PA/PER VIEW, Saturday 2nd of April from 2 to 7pm, WIELS, Centre d'Art Contemporain, Bruxelles
Par La Rédaction, dans L'Agenda -# 109 - Fil RSS
A conference curated by Elena Sorokina and Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez, assisted by Agata Jastrząbek. With contributions by Keti Chukhrov, Dessislava Dimova, Charles Esche, Suman Gupta, Vivian Rehberg, Nicoline van Harskamp, Mona Vatamanu & Florin Tudor.
Through a series of polemic dialogues, we would like to trace different
generations of intellectuals (artists, curators, philosophers, art
historians) from the former East and West of Europe that deal with
"shades of red", the afterlives of Communism and its (un)expected
turning points in its most recent philosophical and artistic reception.
After the collapse of the Soviet block, communism as idea, image or
problem has been regarded as "outmoded, absurd, deplorable or criminal,
depending on the case". Today, it is often presented by the mainstream
media as a parenthesis of history, an aberration of the 20th century, as
"a completely forgotten word, only to be identified with a lost
experience". Although the communist hypotheses of previous eras may no
longer be valid, their histories, narratives and key notions have never
ceased to spark attention and inform recent discussions such as the
communal versus the common, and material versus immaterial property, to
name just a few. Perceived from a greater distance today, communism has
re-emerged as a topic for investigation in artistic and exhibition
production, that reflects it in diverse ways, addressing the relevance
of the term today or inviting provocative comparisons with the present.
This seminar aims at presenting various works that recast ideas related
to communism and revisit it as a complex and diverse arena of political
and aesthetic attitudes, which varied between nations, communities and
historical periods. By no means does the seminar intends to take a
nostalgic tour through the past decades, but rather seeks to address the
topic through concrete art and exhibition projects realized recently.
All of them are trying to deconstruct the idea of monolith, still very
present in today's reception, and to recuperate various episodes,
stories and notably, the "communist apocrypha" - texts, music, visual
production - which have never been part of the established ideological
canon, and whose intellectual patterns shed new light on what the
contemporary uses of the notion of communism might be. Instead of
treating communism as pure political abstraction, the projects presented
by the seminar deal with concepts, events and/or particular
personalities related to communism and its history which have survived
the Bildersturm of the recent past and can be artistically reactivated.
Speakers
Keti Chukhrov is an art theorist and philosopher, PhD in comparative
literature, post-doctoral fellow of Moscow Philosophy Institute of
Academy of Sciences, writer for Moscow Art Magazine, and author of
numerous publications, most recently in the catalogs of the Istanbul
Biennial 2009, ''Gender Check. Femininity and Masculinity in the Art of
Eastern Europe, 2009 and the ongoing Former West'' project.
Dessislava Dimova is an art historian and curator. She is a PhD fellow
at the Institute for Art Studies, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia.
Recent projects include School for Revolution (Kultura weekly, 1
Magazine, 2008 – ongoing), the 2nd Antakya Biennial, 2010; Dimova is a
founding member of Art Affairs and Documents Foundation, Sofia and
founding editor of blistermagazine.com.
Charles Esche is a curator and writer. Since 2004, he has been
Director of the Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, Netherlands. He is co-founder
and co-editor of Afterall Journal and Afterall Books.
Suman Gupta is Professor of Literature and Cultural History, The Open
University, UK. His Recent books include: ''The Theory and Reality of
Democracy (2006), Social Constructionist Identity Politics'' (2007),
Globalization and Literature (2008) and ''Imagining Iraq: Literature in
English and the Iraq Invasion'', 2011.
Vivian Rehberg is Chair of Critical Studies at Parsons Paris School of
Art + Design, Paris. She obtained her Ph.D. in 2000 with the
dissertation ''The Rhetoric of Realism: Painting, Politics, and Commitment
in France, 1940–56. A founding editor of Journal of Visual Culture'', she
is a contributing editor of frieze, and has also written for, among
others, Art in America, Artforum, Artpress, and Modern Painters.
Nicoline van Harskamp is artist based in Rotterdam. Among other
places, she has exhibited her work at Casco Projects, Utrecht (2007),
Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven (2008), Witte de With, Rotterdam (2010), and
the Bucharest Biennale, Romania (2010). In 2009, she was the first-prize
winner of the Prix de Rome.
Mona Vatamanu and Florin Tudor are artists working together since 2000. Their projects have been included in the exhibitions (selection): Blind Spots, Akademie der bildenden Künste Wien, Vienna, 2009; 5th Berlin Biennial, Kunst-Werke Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin, 2008; Low-Budget Monuments, 52nd Venice Biennial, Romanian Pavilion, Venice, 2007. Vatamanu and Tudor live and work in Bucharest; they are currently residents at DAAD in Berlin.
Moderators
Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez is a curator and critic based in Paris and Ljubljana. She is a Ph.D. candidate at the EHESS in Paris where she also runs a seminar on contemporary artistic practices with Patricia Falguieres, Elisabeth Lebovici, and Hans Ulrich Obrist. She recently worked as an associate curator at the Centre Pompidou on the exhibition Promises of the Past, and is co-director of Les Laboratoires d'Aubervilliers.
Elena Sorokina is Paris/Brussels based curator and critic. Her recent
projects include (selection) "Laws of Relativity" at the Fondazione
Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin, Italy; "On Traders' Dilemmas" at YBCA,
San Francisco, 2008, Etats de l'Artifice at the Musee d'Art Moderne de
la Ville de Paris 2010. She is a contributing editor of the ''Moscow Art
Magazine and has also written for Artforum, Flash Art, Manifesta Journal''
and other publications.
A conference produced by Komplot with the support of the Communauté
française Wallonie-Bruxelles
Saturday 2nd of April from 2 to 7pm
WIELS, Centre d'Art Contemporain
Av. Van Volxemlaan 354
1190 Bruxelles - Brussel
Free entrance
Read more and subscribe on: http://brussels.thepublicschool.org
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