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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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First solo exhibition of Gheorghe Ilea in Germany

Gheorghe IleaGaleria Plan B is pleased to announce the first solo exhibition in Germany of the Romanian artist Gheorghe Ilea (born 1958, lives and works in Zalau, Romania).

Gheorghe Ilea “10 Paintings”

Opening: March 12/18 – 22h
March 12 – 31, 2010

Tuesday – Saturday, 12 – 18 h
Heidestrasse 50 . 10557 Berlin

Among the long-term projects of Plan B, one strand of research and exhibition engages and seeks to revaluate a group of remarkable painters active in Romania between 1970–2000. We believe the works these artists produced can contribute to a more nuanced understanding of the period when they were made, and that they have not lost any of their poignancy in the intervening years. These works visualize a double removal: they were made at a distance from the official artistic establishment of the ’70s and ’80s, and have not succumbed, like many of their contemporaries, to a mimetic rehearsal of international models after ’89. In the majority of cases, the paintings never left the studio, and were undervalued, both culturally and economically, after 1989. We are proposing them as possible landmarks in a yet-unwritten history of the Romanian art scene, but also as models of artistic and social behavior.

The exhibition brings together paintings made by Gheorghe Ilea between 1987–2007. Seen together, and removed from the vicious circles of national culture, with its identitary obsessions, empty hierarchies and artificial market, the works return to their immediate context: Ilea’s investigation into the seductiveness of images. He persistently explores the boundary between consistency and a certain hypnotic density in his images. Although a shapeshifter, with effects and solutions ranging from the heavily gestural to the hyperrealist, Ilea has been assimilated to the mystical, neo-Orthodox dogma in Romanian painting through the ’90s. Yet it has to be noted that the most interesting painters of that group are the ones least burdened by religious symbols, those in whose work painting wins over pious search and monastic predisposition. With Ilea, the neo-orthodox doctrine does not prevail over painting, and the latter manifests a sustained interest in the world around, with its smaller and greater things, an interest for which there can be no single rhetorical encoding. There is an intellectual exuberance fueling the works, with paintings as medium of research, rather than safe aesthetic bet or mystical springboard. The result is remarkable, in both its power of observation and seduction.

For further information please contact the gallery at
+49.172.3210711 or contact(at)plan- b.ro.

Galeria Plan B

Germany:
Heidestrasse 50
10557 Berlin
Tel. +49.172.3210711

Romania:
Str. Henri Barbusse 59-61
400616 Cluj
Tel +40.742.504901

www.plan-b.ro | contact(at)plan- b.ro

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4th Vukovar Film Festival

From August 23rd to 29th, 2010 the 4th Vukovar Film Festival will be held. In the competition part, all the professional film in three categories (long feature, short feature and documentary) from the Danube river countries can participate.

The countries included in this competition are, in the alphabetical order: Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, Germany, Hungary, Moldova, Romania, Slovakia, Serbia and Ucraine.

Every author participating can only have one film registered in the official competition. Only those films produced after January 1st 2008, are permitted to take part in the competition. The films must contain
subtitles in English language. Films sent to the selectors must explicitly be in DVD format.

We kindly ask all authors that only copies are sent for the selection, as we as for the actual competition. Every dvd must be properly marked with “stickers” containing the following information: title of the film, first
and last name of the author, duration of the film, b/w or colour and type of sound.

The application form for the film, along with the DVD of the film must contain the following: a legible, completed application form a biography and complete film history (filmography) of the director,
including the list of awards;

The films for the selection, with a completed registration form, must be sent by July 1st 2010 deadline. All costs, including the potential risk involved in sending the recordings, are paid for by the sender. DVD copies
of the films selected for the competition will remain in the archives of the organizer. The organization guarantees that the copies of the films will not be used for commercial purposes. The organizer reserves the right to use segments from the films for representation and marketing of the festival on the Internet and on television.

Awards are listed:
Best feature film- will be bought out for distribution.
Best Short film- will be awarded with 500 EUR.
Best Documentary film- will be awarded with 1 000 EUR.

place: Vukovar, Croatia
organiser: Vukovar Film Festival
url: http://www.vukovarfilmfestival.com/

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Generation ’89

Generation '89 Proiectul “Generation ‘89″ isi propune sa aniverseze caderea sistemelor totalitare din Europa oferindu-le celor nascuti in anul 1989 o platforma de comunicare. Acesti tineri din 9 state europene – Austria, Belgia, Bulgaria, Cehia, Germania, Marea Britanie, Polonia, Romania, Ungaria – vor avea ocazia sa vorbeasca atat despre experientele trecute, cat si despre asteptarile pe care le au ca actuali cetateni ai Uniunii Europene. Participantii selectati de juriile nationale vor participa intre 25 si 28 aprilie 2010 la intalnirile simultane din Bucuresti, Bruxelles, Praga si Varsovia. Cu un trecut national diferit in legatura cu anul nasterii lor, 1989, si avand experiente si evolutii distincte din perspectiva cetateniei europene, tinerii implicati in proiect isi vor imagina viitorul lor si viitorul Uniunii Europene intr-o declaratie comuna pe care o vor redacta in timpul intalnirilor internationale. O delegatie a lor va prezenta Declaratia „Generation ’89” reprezentantilor Uniunii Europene la Bruxelles, pe 7 iunie 2010.

Detalii despre proiect se gasesc pe site-ul proiectului: www.generation89.eu.

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Studying Theory at the Art University

Theory is booming … along the final frontiers of the art field, across the flight lines of social conflicts, on the glossy surfaces of the creative industries. All the same, an ever-widening gulf is opening up between the mere desire for theory and an actual relationship of exchange between cultural practices and knowledge production.

Unique in Europe, the courses offered by the Theory major address these gaps and fractures by establishing an interplay between advanced theory and the free space of the art school. Surpassing the boundaries of academic convention, the systematic course structure provides students with a substantiated overview and opportunities to try out new forms of text and theory production, of aesthetic and political intervention.

The specialisation offers an introduction to the topical drift of aesthetic, political and cultural studies, and aims to lay the foundations for critical and theoretically versed authorship. Specific to this major is the focus on artistic practice and popular and everyday culture, as well as the examination of their social and political dimensions. In the course of this preoccupation with contemporary discourses, students develop textual, conceptual, and organizational skills enabling them to analyze, shape and reinvent cultural practices.

Courses mainly in german language.

Zurich: Studying Theory at the Art University19 February 2010: Deadline for applications (autumn term 2010)

At http://vth.zhdk.ch you find information about Studying Theory at the Art University as well as announcements about our current events, projects and publications.

Deadline for applications (autumn term 2010): 19 February 2010

Forms (German language):  http://www.zhdk.ch/fileadmin/data_zhdk/studium/Anmeldeformulare_2010/BMK_Theorie.pdf

Leitung Vertiefung Theorie
BA-Studiengang Medien und Kunst
Departement Kunst und Medien
Zürcher Hochschule der Künste ZHdK
http://vth.zhdk.ch

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Migrantas – a visual language of migration

Migrants Working with public urban spaces as its platform, migrantas aims to make visible the thoughts and feelings of those who have left their own country and now live in a new one.

Mobility, migration and transculturality are not the exception in our world, but are instead becoming the rule. Nevertheless, migrant women and their experiences remain often invisible to the majority of our society.

Migrantas works with issues of migration, identity and intercultural dialogue. Their work incorporates tools from the visual arts, graphic design and social sciences.

Members of the collective, mostly women who have themselves immigrated to Germany, develop the projects with other migrant women in a horizontal dialogue.

+ info: www.migrantas.org

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