Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Synthetic Performances by 010010110101101.org


Driven by the conviction that the Internet is an antidote to the inalienable paradigms of modern art, namely authenticity, originality and novelty, Eva and Franco Mattes reenact historical performances in Second Life, an online virtual world created in 2003. As known as 010010110101101.org, the artist collaboration questions the limits of the performance art.

Rather than pursuing a mnemonic function, the performances lead the audience to ponder upon the immediate expectations from the performance art such as immediacy, spontaneity and unmediated interaction. As the objects and actions of the performances are coded in advance in the virtual world, Synthetic Performances leave no room for improvisation. Also, the absence of physical feelings in the performance reiterates the statement that performative body loses its significance. Eva and Franco Mattes investigate the communication tactics in art through replication and manipulation in a public arena where “culture is plagiarism.”

Since January 2007, the Mattes duo have been working on Synthetic Performances, that included the reenactment of Chris Burden’s Shoot, Vito Acconci’s Seedbed, Valie Export’s Tapp und Tastkino, and Joseph Beuys’ 7000 Oaks. In collaboration with PERFORMA07, Artists Space invites the audience to attend the projection of three live performances in which the interaction is mediated through avatars, the residents of Second Life.

November 13, 2007
6:30pm-8pm
Artists Space, 38 Greene St 3rd Fl New York, NY 10013

See PERFORMA07 website for further information.

Monday, October 29, 2007

Istanbul 10B

“The very idea of the international survey exhibition is now questioned at its most fundamental level. However progressive the political or economic intentions behind them, international survey exhibitions still invite a presumption that the curators have access to an illusionary world view, and that spectators may follow in their wake. But a more specific and sustained engagement with communities and audiences, creating meanings beyond the spectacular and mere festivalizing of such occasions, may produce a new genre of exhibition. It seems that in order to accommodate both artists’ needs and audience demands, the new exhibition must have reciprocity and dialogue built into its structure. How successfully this is accomplished will determine international exhibition maps of the future.”

Bruce W. Ferguson, Reesa Greenberg, and Sandy Nairne, "On Taking a Normal Situation and Retranslating It into Overlapping and Multiple Readings of Conditions Past and Present" (Antwerp: E. Antonis, 1993)

In the light of this remark, what does the 10th International Biennial suggest? Although I have heard many negative comments from a number of art professionals, I always tend to underline that I liked the dialogue between the works and the venues in which they are exhibited. Instead of creating a local exoticism, the 10B leads to an uncanny interaction through the spaces that Hou Hanru has chosen, especially Ataturk Cultural Centre and Istanbul Textile Traders' Market--significant examples of 'modern' Turkish urban architecture, which share the fate to be torn down in the near future-- as well as santralistanbul that has been transformed from the first electric thermal plant of the Republic of Turkey into a culture and arts center. With a focus of an inquiry of modernization in developing countries, I believe the 10B offers a new expansion in Turkey where the art production is predominantly understood as a part of the national identity. As the art merges with urbanism and architecture, the artworks encounter an innovative reception and offer social intervention in a 'peripheral' city, suggesting a negotiation and reciprocity between the global and local. Thus, the 10B eventually fosters an intellectual debate, which is proved to be quite controversial in regards to Kemalism and republican ideals. Therefore, I believe, the structure of the 10th Istanbul Biennial engenders dialogue, which is produced both in an implicit and explicit fashion.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Intellectual Property Rights

"Various initiatives, like the Navdanya seed bank, the Gutenberg Project, open source software, etc., are attempts to resist the expanding regime of intellectual property rights. Intellectual property rights deal with copyright and related rights; geographical indications; industrial designs; integrated circuit layout-designs; patents; trademarks; and undisclosed or confidential information. Since the signature of the Trade Related aspects of Intellectual Property rights (TRIPS) agreement, a part of the WTO GATT agreement, in 1994, about 147 countries around the world agreed to implement the same intellectual property rights as default. Examples of recent inclusions of intellectual property rights are the patenting of genemanipulated living organisms, indigenous knowledges and sofware, the registration of three-dimensional forms, melodies, smells, and colors as trademarks and the copyrighting of databases, choreography, and architecture. In the context of this book, we would like to highlight one particular example: the copyrighting of exhibitions and collections.

During the last century, Marcel Duchamp claimed that the act of exhibiting or collecting an object, was enough to turn that object into an artwork by exhibited a readymade urinal as a work of art. Marcel Broodthaers installed his collection of eagles and about eagles, that were marked "this is not an art object", itself as a work of art. Such artworks posed problems for the copyright regulations and had legal consequences.

For about a decade now, the makers of exhibitions and museum collections have succeeded in obtaining legal protection for their work authorized under copyright law. In current jurisprudence, judges have decided that exhibitions and museum collections may reflect the personality of their makers. From a legal point of view, exhibitions and museum collections are considered intangible realizations of the mind. So just like any other creative oeuvre, they fall under the same regime of
intellectual property rights.

(No rights reserved. This text may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, used, modified, or otherwise exploited.)"

- Agentschap (Agency), an agency for temporary interdisiplinary and international collaborations

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Play. . . as a four-letter word (A.K.)


"PERFORMA07, the second biennial of new visual art performance, will take place in New York City from November 1-20, 2007. As with PERFORMA05, New York’s first performance biennial, PERFORMA07 will bring together more than twenty of the city’s leading cultural institutions to present live work in all disciplines by visual artists from around the world. Performance has always been an important catalyst in the history of twentieth-century art, and the PERFORMA Biennial recognizes its vital and ongoing impact on contemporary art and culture and provides opportunities for both established and emerging artists to present new performance for the twenty-first century."

PERFORMA website!

Sunday, October 21, 2007

TM Sisters at AS


Reflecting the dynamics of the digital age, the artist collective TM Sisters fuse performance and video art flirting with energized imageries. Born in Gainesville, Florida, Tasha and Monica López De Victoria produce a new energy using engaging video game installations.

Artists Space, in collaboration with PERFORMA07, hosts TM Sister’s video performance titled 'Things Will End Before They Start' (2005), which will involve two artists performing before a digitally-simulated backdrop that is inspired by their “flat works”, i.e. collages. TM Sisters’ work reveals a do-it-yourself aesthetic that relates to their home-school education and previous body of work, such as musical happenings, fanzines and sewing clothing. With an emphasis on stimulating interaction, the performance presents a play with postures and expressions, which paves the way for a discovery of spiritual energy and emotions.

November 2-3, 2007
6 pm-8pm
Artists Space, 38 Greene St 3rd Fl New York, NY 10013