Category Archives: International Alternative

Newsletter wonderland: Kan Kick – `From Artz Unknown`

cover

\\\READ
Format: CD, Album
Country: US
Released: 2001
Tags: Hip Hop, Underground, Old School, Producer, Instrumental
More info & tracklisting [click]

Definition of hip-hop! Hailing from deep within the underground of Oxnard, CA and chillin with with the likes of Madlib and Dr Oop, Kan Kick – the funky asthmatic – produces the dopest beats around. From Artz Unknown is his first album and it has been created mainly as a showcase for his productions, but with the help of some skilled MCs it became more than a compilation of beats, it turned into an underground hip-hop classic. It’s one of the few albums that has a perfect blend of beats and rapping and it feels as if it’s a complete expression of hip-hop. Some of the MCs rapping on Kan Kick’s beats include Medaphoar, Phil Da Agony, Dr. Oop, Planet Asia and Wildchild of Lootpack fame. Dusty, blunted, laid back, sick as hell, Kan Kick!

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Pentru a te abona la newsletter-ul Wonderland, mail la wonderland@planet34.org
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Vlad Nanca “Works”

SABOT is pleased to present “Works”, an assortment of “daily obstructions” by Romanian artist Vlad Nanca.
Vlad Nanca “Works” (08.10.2010 – 13.11.2010)
Opening Reception: Friday, October 8th, 7-10 pm

Vlad Nanca "Works"

For his show at Sabot, Nanca turns to reality and this time the reality he addresses is that of the last few years in Romania, characterized by sudden prosperity and exaggerations. Because of the total absence of references from art history, the show resembles a contemporary version of Dürer’s ‘Melencolia’. The space is enriched by a series of objects, each of them with a specific meaning and place (yes, like a rebus!): a large box, a collection of funnels, two pairs of wooden portals, a tripod, a cement bag and a mattress. The artist describes the deliberate assortment of odd things as “‘beautiful’ works. However un-political I might try to be, I think there is politics in everything and I think there is also a critical discourse in this exhibition.” Beauty is nothing without depth. At the same time, Nanca’s melancholia (he uses the word “poetic”) is an attempt to make something that elevates ordinary domestic life to an aesthetic Olympus: the common becomes precious. While many contemporary artists use such a strategy, Nanca envisions the life of such objects in space and their connection with the artistic genre of melancholia opens up new avenues and new channels for interpretations. (excerpt from Marcel Janco’s Two or three things I know about Vlad Nanca)

Vlad Nanca’s recent works disclose a distinct interest in objecthood of the exhibits and sculptural forms, sometimes with direct references to the minimalist legacy. Yet, this aestheticism does not convey a withdrawal from the social. The objects he employs and reconstructs are either modelled from objects of the quotidian life or taken in fully as ready-mades -a strategy, which allows Nanca to construct networks of meaning through the social codes these objects harbor. (from Erden Kosova’s Objects of possession)

With an immaculate design, simple and clean, almost precious in the precision of details, with neutral amorphous material qualities used for their painterly virtues, with an inner playful nerve that does not exclude functionality but dislocates it, these ingenious devices manage to turn the ordinary object into a singular object. (…) Nanca’s objects are deviated through manufactured malformations applied to containers, city’s functional cables, cement sacks or to interdiction barriers. (from Mica Gherghescu’s Pieces of Landscape)

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About SABOT:

SABOT was released at the beginning of 2009, by means of Dadaist spontaneity, as an attempt to verify the raison d’être of a gallery in the third millennium. Its initiators are Daria D. Pervain, former art critic and journalist and Marcel Janco, a Romanian-born, Turin-based art critic and curator (abstract inciter of Sabot and the gallery’s phantasmal comrade).

SABOT aims at having an elastic, almost unshaped format, able to take the form of our artist’s views. A project incubator, a generator, moreover an eccentric travesty of a gallery. We embrace curatorial and commercial models without solution of continuity. We will raise questions rather than spell predictable truths, by sabotaging the fundamental division between high and low culture, process and result, art making and curating.

By having no constitutional predisposition to things which may become certainties at a certain time, Sabot hopes to avoid all the conventional paths of generating common sense within the art world.

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SABOT
exhibition space: 59-61 Henri Barbusse street,
400616, Cluj-Napoca, Romania
mailing address: 12 Horea street, ap. 10,
400038, Cluj-Napoca, Romania
info(at)galeria-sabot.ro
www.galeria-sabot.ro
Join us on FACEBOOK:
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=59262086823

Opening hours:
Tue – Sat, 4 – 8 p.m.
Sun, Mon – closed

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Cristiana Palandri “Slipping Time”

We are pleased to further Cristiana Palandri’s latest installation work, a conclusion of the residency program she commenced three months ago in Cluj, within Bosisio-SABOT residency space.
Cristiana Palandri SLIPPING TIME (08.10.2010 – 22.10.2010)
Opening Reception: Friday, October 8th, 7-10 pm

Cristiana Palandri "SLIPPING TIME"The photograph (…) is one element of Cristiana Palandri’s exhibition “Slipping Time”, presented in the Bosisio-Sabot Residency Space in Cluj. By contrast, the installation “Stare” represents the other element which picks up the stair motif already appearing in the photo and translates it into the spatial. Here Cristiana Palandri (*1977, Florence) has built a fragile structure from woods, just barely recognisable as stairs, but completely unsuitable for use, one that dominates a large part of the room and finally, like a springboard, leads out of the window.

Both works, photography and installation, were created on site and for the site. Cristiana Palandri lived for three months in Cluj, worked in a studio in the “Fabrica de Pensule” and developed both of these works during her stay. “Outside”, the title of the photography, and “Stare” could in a certain sense be considered the ideal results of an artist’s residency. As Cristiana Palandri has used her stay in Romania to develop new works that, although bearing her own unmistakable artistic signature, also testify unambiguously to a direct and intensive engagement with the location and what was found there. The artist managed to let herself be stimulated by what was new in the, to her and until then, foreign reality, without losing herself and her own way. In my opinion that is exactly what should ideally happen in an artistic residency: the creation of a balance between old and new, an oscillation between the undreamt-of and the already present. (from “Becoming one with the unknown”/ Julia Trolp on Cristiana Palandri’s work)

Cristiana Palandri’s oeuvre is located in one of those indefinable intermediate spots between sculpture and performance. This is the corollary of the artist’s very broad conception of “creating sculpture”, making it hard to identify a preference for a means of expression in her works, which appear as an interchangeable evolution shifting between drawing, sculpture, performance and installation. (Francesco Scasciamacchia/ excerpt from “Sculpture. Not exactly.”)

Bosisio-SABOT residency space
59-61 Henri Barbusse street, 400616, Cluj-Napoca, Romania
(Paintbrush Factory, 4th floor)

Opening hours:
Tuesday – Saturday, only by appointment

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Wonderland newsletter

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Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue
Country: US
Released: 1971 [Originally recorded at 30th Street Studio,New York City, 1968]
Tags: Modern Classical, Minimal
More info & tracklisting [click]

[...]The idea behind the piece goes like this: In 1964 Riley composed 53 short phrases of music in (you guessed it) the key of C — not so much a score as a musical outline. An ensemble of musicians were instructed to go through each of the 53 phrases consecutively, placing their own rhythmic accents. They were also advised to hold and repeat each note/phrase for as long as they wanted, ultimately creang a living, thriving work of improvisation. The piece’s first recording, from 1968, highlights Riley’s modern ideas of spontaneity vs. structure. [continue reading]

The 20th issue of Wonderland pays respect to the venerable Terry Riley. In C is probably the single most influential piece which shaped the concept of minimalism in modern music. Enjoy :)

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PS. Pentru cei car vor sa se aboneze, un mail va rog la wonderland@planet34.org
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Practical lesson in urban ecology for the youth

“Practical lesson in urban ecology for the youth” by Stefan Tiron and Vadim Tiganas. A project in the frame of CHISINAU- Art, Research in the Public Sphere. Period: 16th of September/18th of September, 2010

Starting Point: the square of Gheorghe Asachi Liceum from Chisinau – Starting Time: 12.00. Project organizer: [KSA:K] – Center for Contemporary Art, Chisinau

In the frame of CHISINAU- Art, Research in the Public Sphere the artists Stefan Tiron and Vadim Tiganas initiated the project “Practical lesson in urban ecology for the youth”. Practical lessons will consist in a series of guided tours in URBAN ECOLOGY, which will take place on 16th of September and 18th of September. The itinerary of guided tours will be located on the axis: Center-Rascani District. Beside the core group of the participants any other is invited to know more living spices from the city, the environment of these spices and the leaving conditions of the extreme life from our surroundings. Those who are interested to take part in the guided tours should be prepared with the appropriate clothes (sport) for the exploration of the urban jungle, also do not forget the bottle of drinking water or Bio-defer for the decontamination of the body during the journey.

CHISINAU- Art, Research in the Public Sphere is a cross-disciplinary platform that investigates the connections between political and cultural symbols and propaganda and its impact on the urban environment, the interference between personal narratives and imported ideologies and cultural discourses in relation to the public sphere. The project aim is to explore the dominant institutional and political discourses that have shaped the society and the urban landscape of the city of Chisinau in the course of its recent history.

Project partners: E-cart.ro Association, Campina, Romania (www.e-cart.ro), MEEM- Rael Artel Gallery: Non-Profit Project, Tallinn, Estonia (www.publicpreparation.org)

Project partners in Moldova: Alliance Française de Moldavie, the Goethe Institute/Bucharest, the German Cultural Center ACCENTE/Chisinau, the Polish Cultural Institute/Bucharest, the Austrian Cultural Forum/Bucharest, the UNESCO Chair of South-East European Studies within the Faculty of History of the Moldova State University, National Museum of History and Archaeology, Directorate for Culture of the Municipality of Chisinau, Administration of Electric Transport of Chisinau Municipality. * *

Media partners: Public Media Group SRL, Revista la Plic, Radio Europa Libera, Publica TV.

CHISINAU- Art, Research in the Public Sphere is supported financially by Allianz Kulturstiftung/Germany, ERSTE Foundation/Austria, Mondriaan Foundation/Amsterdam, Alliance Française de Moldavie, Goethe Institute/Bucharest trough German Cultural Center ACCENTE/Chisinau, Polish Cultural Institute/Bucharest and Austrian Cultural Forum/Bucharest, Austrian Federal Ministry for Edication, Arts and Culture.

Center for Contemporary Art – [KSA:K] (www.art.md)

[KSA:K] Center is a non-profit, independent institution established in 2000. The new strategy of the Center is the development of cultural forms and art practices that reflect the dynamic of the social, political and economic transformations of the society. The Center supports advocacy activities in promoting cultural policies suitable for defining and strengthening the position of artists and contemporary art practices in society.

Stefan Rusu- Project Manager/Curator

Center for Contemporary Art-[KSA:K],
Str. Banulescu-Bodoni 5, ap-2, Post code 2012,
Chisinau, Republic of Moldova

tel: + 373 22 23 72 72
www.art.mdChisinau

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Carusella @ Belgrade

“Carusella” is a garage rock duo from Tel Aviv, formed in late 2007 as a collaboration between Tamar Aphek i Guy Shechter, and some sort of culmination of their presence on Israeli indie scene. Hutsmize – the first independent festival of alternative music in Israel that Tamar launched, Shechter’s tours and albums from “Monotonix”, “O.B.E.Y” and “Flying Baby”, and several years of performing together at “ED” preceded the creation of (besides Monotonix) one of the most important indie bands from their region.

Carusella

Complimenting that are also great reactions that their first album got (”Carusella” 2008), not only in their homeland but also in Europe, and over 200 concert that followed through several tours across the “Old Continent” and USA. It’s good to mention that they recently performed at cult “SXSW” festval in Texas, and with their non-stop touring life they had the honor to share the stage with bands like “Editors”, “Deerhoof”, “Torche”, “Kylesa”… Hard, energetic but at the same time filled with poppy sounds – their music, spiced with great chemistry in live performances, is something that is hard to listen with indifference.
www.myspace.com/carusella

18. September, 21h – SUPERSIZESHE presents: CARUSELLA (Tel Aviv, Israel).

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Cultural Flea Market – “Food”

Targ de VechituriOberliht association is organizing another Cultural Flea Market on September 11, 2010 with the theme of FOOD. The FLAT SPACE will be open from 4 to 8pm to share and exchange food and all sort of things related to food. You are also invited to FLAT SPACE to experiment some of your best recipes. So as everybody can enjoy and share food, you are invited to bring with you at least some ingredients to prepare simple dishes or drinks (for example fruits and vegetables for smoothies and cocktails) or already cooked dishes (feel free to cook your favorite cake) that you could share with the other participants.

Come together with your friends and make a proposal to cook something at FLAT SPACE. You can also make your own proposal about how would you like to participate in this Cultural Flea Market: if you have some material to cook or any kind of idea to improve the event, let us know.

We plan to have a barbecue so you are more than welcome to bring some meat, fish or whatever that can be grilled. We are also looking for someone who could provide a grill.

The Cultural Flea Market is a cultural event very similar to a flea market, but on this Cultural Flea Market you can only exchange or share, so no use of money. Every Cultural Flea Market has its own theme, and the things that will be exchanged or shared should stay within the proposed theme.

Please feel free to send us your proposals by email to voluntar@oberliht.org.md , or visit us at FLAT SPACE (68/1 str. Bucuresti, Chisinau) from Tuesday to Saturday from 2 pm to 6 pm, so that we can include them in the future Market.

This event receives support from European Cultural Foundation, Direction for Culture of the Chisinau Municipality and the Ministry of Youth and Sports of Republic of Moldova.

Media partners – POSTBOX magazine http://plic.oberliht.com/

http://oberliht.com

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Playing the City 2

Playing the city

The Schirn’s “Playing the City2″ project once again transforms central Frankfurt into a showplace for a range or actions and performances.

Playing the City 2
8-26 September 2010
Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt
60311 Frankfurt, Germany
(+49) 69-29 98 82-0
(+49) 69-29 98 82-240
welcome(at)schirn.de

www.schirn.de

Following last year’s success, the exhibition project “Playing the City” 2 once again presents a wide range of artistic activities in public space, involving the city and its inhabitants in a variety of ways. From 8 to 26 September 2010, central Frankfurt will see new actions taking place daily, from performances to installations to “guerrilla actions”. At the heart of the project lies an intense
debate about public space and the “participatory turn” within contemporary art. Around 20 collaborative and participatory works are planned, some specially conceived for the project, by Nina Beier, Clarina Bezzola, Julien Bismuth, Clegg & Guttmann, Cosalux, Christoph
Faulhaber, For Use / Numen, Swetlana Gerner, Josef Loretan, Jan Lotter, Annika Lundgren, Lee Mingwei, Ivan Moudov, Paola Pivi, Plural Art Collective feat, Junge Deutsche Philharmonie, Reactor,
Leonid Tishkov, Gavin Turk and Vanja Vukovic. In parallel a project office, the “Zentrale”, will be set up in the Schirn’s exhibition spaces, from where the project team will pursue its work in public, fine-tuning the website, answering questions on the exhibition, and organising and documenting all the activities. “Playing the City” 2 can
also be followed via the internet, in a digital extension of public space. The website developed for the project, http://www.playingthecity.de, assembles all the latest videos, texts and visual material, an exhibition calendar and a blog, and will also be networked beyond the physical venues via numerous social media networks. It is thus a
catalogue, exhibition forum and platform for discussion all in one.

“Playing the City” 2 opens up public space as a collective, free arena that can be moulded, that questions its boundaries, and that involves its inhabitants. The site-specific actions take place within a time-limited framework in which they are produced and can be experienced, and in which production and reception are closely connected. The traditional definitions of a work and of its authorship are negated: both terms that have been questioned since the 1960s, not least through action art. Many of the works developed for “Playing the City” 2 can only be realised through the involvement of the public; whether they are actions that provoke fortuitous street confrontations
or sculptures that invite use. But at the very least they are intended to create a confrontation and a dialogue with the – sometimes randomly generated – audience, and to transform public space into a playing field with rules that are tested collaboratively. Can the public space really be taken as a place of different opinions and voices? What constitutes public opinion? What do we understand by public space? These are some of the questions raised by the “Playing the City” 2 project.

The concept that Playing the City 2 realises, on various levels, is a continuation of the ideas of the major avant-garde movements of the twentieth century. In the early twentieth century, the Dada movement rejected “conventional” art and art forms as well as bourgeois ideals, taking to the street instead. It is also worth mentioning Guy Debord’s
Situationism, which 50 years later still has a strong influence on the contemporary art scene, notably on “Public Art”, and which has inspired theoreticians such as Michel de Certeau to define space as a “practised place” and to locate its significance in the activities taking place within it. The urban researcher Armando Silva argues similarly, differentiating the city into the architectural fact and a performance consisting of human interactions. For artists of so-called relational aesthetics, processes such as intersubjectivity and interaction are both the starting and endpoints of their artistic work. According to Nicolas Bourriaud, the utopian potential in developing artistic spaces in this way lies in being able to provide alternative forms of sociality, critique and happiness. They have all turned away from the transformative potential of grand narratives, and instead see opportunity for change in the direct encounter with people.

Playing the City 2 offers a look into the wide varieties of current participatory and collaborative art: one large-scale installation by the Austrian-Croatian design collective For Use / Numen fills the architecture of the Schirn with a walk-in cocoon of transparent adtape. Since the installation can be experienced and entered, it becomes a fixed component and can be used as such by the inhabitants of public space. The installation by artist duo Michael
Clegg & Martin Guttmann, “Open Debate Station, Frankfurt”, questions the structure and function of public debates. They design a discussion platform that, through fixed furniture and established rules of play, becomes a place for a public, structured and fair exchange of opinions. In this work, the two artists refer both to the tradition of
Talmudic interpretation and to the history of the Frankfurt School. The Italian artist Paola Pivi will engineer unexpected situations on Frankfurt public transport as part of her work: during rush hour, an individual actor first starts to sing a song, and then gradually – apparently at random – more musicians will join in, singing or playing instruments, thereby disrupting the everyday situation of a silent trip by bus or tram.

The title of Annika Lundgren’s project, “The Stock Is Rising”, is a historical reference to a 1967 action, in which a group of 20,000 peace demonstrators led by Abbie Hoffmann gathered before the Pentagon in Washington D.C. and sang loudly to drive evil spirits from the building, as part of a protest against the Vietnam War. The action planned by Lundgren for Playing the City 2 is a response to the international financial crisis and will start by publishing
information on the website www.stockisrising.com about the action, about Abbie Hoffman, about levitation as a form of parapsychological practice in which the pure force of thought overcomes the gravity of objects, and about the financial crisis. On 21 September 2010, between 15:00 and 17:35, participants in the action will gather in front of the Alte Börse (former stock exchange) in Frankfurt, and make the building hover. This action will be networked worldwide via the website.

DIRECTOR: Max Hollein

CURATOR: Matthias Ulrich

INFORMATION: http://www.playingthecity.de

PRESS CONTACT: Dorothea Apovnik, phone: (+49-69) 29 98 82-148, fax:
(+49-69) 29 98 82-240, e-mail: dorothea.apovnik@schirn.de,
www.schirn.de (texts, images, and films for download under PRESS)

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1st Ural Industrial Biennial

1st Ural International Biennal1st Ural Industrial Biennial Shockworkers of the Mobile Image

9 September – 10 October 2010. Opening days: 8 – 12 September 2010
Ekaterinburg, Russia. Curators: Cosmin Costinas, Ekaterina Degot, David Riff.

Ekaterinburg, formerly Sverdlovsk, is the capital of the Soviet Union’s industrial heartland, the Ural. When the USSR collapsed, the city’s many heavy industries fell prey to economic malaise. But today, Ekaterinburg has become one of the hubs of Russia’s resource economy, a site of accumulation following an era of shock privatization, a place where people dream with BRICs and awaken to the harsh realities of economic crisis. How should we understand all this new investor architecture, empty as of yet, all these new service industries, all that new imaginary “symbolic capital” produced by “creative professionals” and their underlings? What role does and can contemporary art play in such a place, when it comes to the half-operational spaces of Soviet industry? Can it be more than a shot in the dark, a fastmoving consumer commodity, a medium for gentrification, a plaything of the superrich? Can it be more than a reproduction?

The biennial’s title is “Shockworkers of the Mobile Image,” and its main venue is the Ural Worker Printing Press, a constructivist building in the center of Ekaterinburg. Built in 1929-1930, this space prompts a dialogue with the most contradictory period of Soviet history, when the party sent shock brigades to build heavy industries in the middle of nowhere. Their superproductive labor was supposedly voluntary, heroic, based on enthusiasm and affect, but overseen by a growing security apparatus. Foreign experts and internationalists participated, reproducing and implanting mobile images of Fordist modernity. Their engagement was genuine, but remained blind to the harsh reality of intensifying exploitation. In many ways, Russia’s transition to global post-Fordist capitalism is no less drastic, and today’s global artists, filmmakers, and architects are shockworkers, too, and internationalists, no doubt, capable of an affective solidarity much like that of the pre-fascist 1930s. They come to distant cities, working nights to build temporary factories on the sites abandoned by industry, factories that reproduce images, affects, and social relations, factories where free time takes on form and becomes a commodity. In Ekaterinburg, this temporary factory taps into a vast reservoir of amateur creativity, harkening back to an age when it seemed like all the shockwork was over… We want to ask: who is really the worker in this new factory? The artist? The curator? The audience? What happens when these workers leave? And what happens when they return?

Curated by Cosmin Costinas (Amsterdam/Utrecht), Ekaterina Degot (Moscow), and David Riff (Moscow/Berlin), “Shockworkers of the Mobile Image” draws together the work of more than 40 artists and filmmakers in a dense curatorial narrative.The exhibition consists almost entirely of copies, reproductions, rips, reconstituted objects and long-distance works, including contributions by: Yuri Albert, Tarsila do Amaral, Pablo Baen Santos, Yael Bartana, Bela Balazs Studio, Guy Ben-Ner, Blue Noses, Christian von Börries, Serguej Bratkov, Alex Buldakov, Cao Fei, Olga Chernysheva, Chto Delat, Evgenia Demina, Jimmie Durham, Harun Farocki, Daniel Faust, M.M. Fontenelle, Joris Ivens, Christian Jankowsky, Ilya & Emilia Kabakov, Nikita Kadan & Alexander Burlaka, Kolumne Links, Naroa Lizar, Roman Minin, Andrei Monastyrski, Rabih Mroue, Ciprian Muresan, Deimantas Narkevicius, Amshei Nuerenberg, Johannes Paul Raether, Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Andreas Siekmann & Alice Creisher & Max Jorge Hinderer, Sean Snyder, Praneet Soi, Hito Steyerl, Mladen Stilinovic, Taller E.P.S. Huayco, Avdey Ter-Oganyan, David Ter-Oganyan, Florin Tudor & Mona Vatamanu, V.M.Volovich, Lin Yilin, Vadim Zakharov, among others.

The exhibition at the biennial’s main venue is accompanied by a program of special projects, curated by Alisa Prudnikova, director of the National Center for Contemporary Art, Ekaterinburg branch. It inhabits the operational or defunct premises of some of Ekaterinburg’s largest industrial plants. Artists from Ekaterinburg and elsewhere in Russia and from abroad will turn these production sites into a heterogeneous territory for experiments in the industrial environment. Factory spaces themselves become objects of artistic production that pursues a diversity of aims, be they critical, poetic, or social.

The biennial’s opening will be accompanied by an international symposium.

On the occasion of the opening, the biennial will publish a catalogue in two volumes, one of them dedicated to the main venue, the other to the special projects program. Contributors include Oleg Aronson, Keti Chukhrov, Boris Groys, Hu Fang, Ben Seymour and Hito Steyerl.

Biennial venues:
Main venue: Ural Worker Printing Press (House of Print)
Special projects: Verkh Iset’ Metallurgical Factory, VIZ-Stal’, Ural Heavy Machines Plant, old Uralmash House of Culture, Colored Metals Factory (historical building), Sverdlovsk Worsted Factory

Intiator: National Center for Contemporary Art (NCCA)
Co-Initiators: Governor’s Office of the Sverdlovsk Region, the Sverdlovsk Regional Government with the official support of the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation
Organizer: National Center for Contemporary Art, Ekaterinburg branch
Co-organizers: City Administration of Ekaterinburg, “New Art” Regional Public Foundation in Support of Contemporary Art

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Ciprian Muresan at Wilkinson Gallery

Ciprian Muresan @ WilkinsonWilkinson Gallery is pleased to announce the first solo exhibition of Romanian artist, Ciprian Muresan in the UK.
Muresan’s work is an evocative response to his own politically tumultuous milieu; his art is rooted in a confrontation with this history and an artistic commitment to locate it within personal and collective experiences and the history of art itself. Whilst the immediate context of Muresan’s work is the turbulent years of post-communist Romania, his body of work is a delicate but ranging consideration of global socio-political issues creating a powerful and often unsettling artistic narrative. His has recently had work shown at the Centre Pompidou (Paris), the New Museum (New York) and The Renaissance Society at The University of Chicago (Chicago), and had two successful solo shows this year, at n.b.k – Neuer Berliner Kunstverein (Berlin) and Plan B (Berlin).

Muresan’s art is profoundly aware of the history of art; intelligently referencing and recontexualising art and literary
history. For example his work The End of the Five Year Plan, 2004, is a reinterpretation of Maurizio Cattelan’s controversial La Nona Ora, 1999. Muresan’s 2004 reinterpretation replaces Cattelan’s decrepit global icon, Pope John Paul II, with the Orthodox Patriarch. Locating the work within recent Romanian political history, Muresan’s reinterpretation transcends Cattelan’s initial connotations of contemporary iconography and the deconstruction of protective authority. Muresan forms an assault against the Orthodox Church’s relationship with Nicolae Ceausescu‘s brutal regime and the blurring of secular and religious distinction. This reinterpretation of existing art work is central to Muresan’s practice, as Nicolas Bourriaud has conceptualized, this method of production; whereby artists interpret and reclaim preexisting objects, is an art of ‘postproduction’. National identity is a further defining narrative within the work or Ciprian Muresan. Romanian Blood, 2004 sets a precedent for this opposition toward the ideological falsification of history and national identity. The very paradox of this image is the tricolor of red, yellow and blue which run from the wrist of this individual; seemingly the ‘blood’ of a true patriot, except this ignoble death is surely a renunciation of any patriotic responsibility. It is this incomprehensible construction or idea of national identity that Muresan challenges. Muresan strives to create a more personal, less reified identity, and champions a sincere and proudly ambiguous alternative. This alternative perspective is evident in Choose…, 2005, which documents Vlad Muresan mixing Pepsi and Coca-Cola in a glass. Whilst most overtly the act of defining these two indistinguishable, late capitalist products, appears to be a commentary on the invasive nature of corporate branding strategies, the work can equally be understood as a comment on the vacuity of false identities, which in essence all brands are.

Ciprian Muresan’s exhibition at Wilkinson is a culmination of those existing narratives that punctuate his work. 4’33”,
2008, which takes its title and dimensions from John Cage’s original 1952 composition, is an alternative view of post- industrialism. Like Cage’s original piece, the soundscape of Muresan’s 4’33” is governed by an eerie stillness, the frozen machines and echo of the departed work force are a somber memorial to a former epoch of productivity.

Muresan’s dispute is with a failed utopianism and subsequent social decay that leaves a factory in this languid state, neither communism nor subsequent privatization could prevent this erosion. Communist manifesto, pig latin translation, 2007 is an intriguing obfuscation of the Communist manifesto. The reduction of this text to mere playful jargon is an ironic statement, but also a remark upon the ever-complicated reading of communism. The culmination of the exhibition is the deeply unsettling Dog Luv, 2009. Visually, the film’s atmospheric, indeed chiaroscuro, use of light is mysterious and striking. Muresan re-interprets a text by Romanian playwright Saviana Stanescu and the narrative extends a powerful and brutal portrait of humanity’s history of torture and execution. This dark and theatrical vision of society presents a world where choice, security and authority are bought into question.

It is often the unknown or the unseen that forms the dialogue within Muresan’s art; meanings lie beneath metaphor and insinuation, yet once uncovered there is a frankness that disconcerts the viewer and demands reflection. Muresan’s view is not linear, his inquisition of life is complex and there are no direct answers, instead an unsettling question mark lies over society.

Ciprian Muresan lives and works in Cluj (Romania), he is the co-editor of VERSION and editor of IDEA art + society
magazine. Recent solo exhibitions include ‘Ciprian Muresan’ at n.b.k. – Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, Berlin, ‘How I Wonder What You Are’ at Plan B, Berlin. He has also exhibited in the Romanian Pavilion at the 2009 53 rd Venice Biennale. He is represented by Plan B, Cluj.

Ciprian Muresan at Wilkinson (50-58 Vyner Street, London) – 2.09.2010 – 3.10.2010.

For more info: www.wilkinsongallery.com

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