Monday, July 30, 2007

Documenta as a Fiction Workshop at Wyspa IS


Fiction touches on invented stories, fantasies and literary conventions. It sits on the side of creativity, arbitrariness and doubt. Its power belongs to the speaking subject… but also to the listening one, flickering in the instantaneous and capricious relation between the two (or more) of them. In this framework, Documenta as a Fiction is foreseen as both an event and a theoretical figure based on an actual story. Resonating the ontological dissonance between the traditional notions of document and fiction, the workshop seeks for the plots and narratives of contemporary art as well as its institutional visions, giving a space for the performative encounters of individuals.

The participants will investigate the stories and their tellers with reference to the set of narratives grown over Documenta as a discursive engine. Especially over the current Documenta that outsources a part of its intellectual power to the network of art magazines and amplifies interconnections within the institutionalised art world, opening up a broad field of criticality over the predominant language in which art is being conveyed to the public. What is story? What is narrative? What is document and what is fiction? Whose is credibility? Which languages relate to or mediate reality – those of theory or of practice? How does vision turn into visibility? How does artistic action turn into actuality?

Students of art, art history and philosophy from the Academy of Fine Arts in Gdansk, Gdansk University, the Royal College of Art in London and Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, none of whom has yet visited this year’s Documenta in Kassel, will analyse public and personal representations of this event. They will examine the languages in which art is being communicated, observe intellectual and institutional frames and create their own narratives through drawings, confessions, interviews, video, photo and textual documentations that will be frequently posted on the web at http://documentaasafiction.blospot.com. Grounded in the performativity of the group, Documenta as a Fiction is aimed at the collaborative process without conclusion. The group will reunite in Kassel on September 18-22 to confront the real and the fictions.

Participants: Maks Bochenek, Igor Duszynski, Ola Grzonkowska, Anne Hoffmann, Hiwa K., Kordian Lewandowski, Zuzanna Malicka, Ulrich Mauer, Mathias Pelda, Roma Piotrowska, Konrad Pustola.

Workshop moderators: Aneta Szylak and Magda Pustola.

Special guest: Artur Zmijewski.

Special project “Ungeklappte Arbeiten” by Hiwa K.

Conceived by Wyspa Institute of Art as a part of the workshops organised by the Brussels-based A Prior Magazine www.aprior.org participating in the Documenta 12 Magazine Platform, Documenta as a Fiction is being additionally supported by the Schwerpunkt Polen at Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, the Academy of Fine Arts in Gdansk, Kunsthochschule Kassel and 3City.pl. Documenta as a Fiction logo was designed by LOWBUDGET www.lowbudget.pl.


When: August 2-4, 2007

Where:

Wyspa Institute of Art in Gdansk

1 Doki Street, building #145B

80-958 Gdansk, Poland

Tel./fax: +48 58 320 44 46

www.wyspa.art.pl

http://documentaasafiction.blogspot.com

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Peter Fuss - For the laugh of God.

"We must buy the diamond skull for Britain" - this proclamation was made tohis countrymen by Jonathan Jones, a journalist of the Guardian to keep the"most amazing artefacts ever made in this country".Jones thus encourages the British to purchase this "work of art", made by"the treasure of Great Britain" Damien Hirst, which is currently on themarket for 50 million pounds.Our British friends, we are coming to rescue you!Like the cheap Polish labour well known to you, Polish artist Peter Fusswishes to relieve the British nation from such a great expense."For the laugh of God" by Peter Fuss will be available in the Polish car onART CAR BOOT FAIR at a competitive price of 1000 pounds. In addition, youmay also buy a limited (1000 copies) edition of signed and numbered graphicsfor only 1 pound each. You will not have to wait for tickets anymore to seea skull set with diamonds, and the time of watching Fuss's skull willcertainly not be limited to 5 minutes!To make his work, Peter Fuss used about 9870 pieces of glass polished andcut to look like diamonds, worth 250 pounds and spent 18 hours to completethe piece. Income from sale of Fuss's skull and its accompanying graphics issupposed to amount to 2000 pounds - this is eight times as much as theinvested amount!Before the skull goes to the trade fairs to London, it can be seen inPoland, during the Modelator event in Modelarnia, which will take place on28 June.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Polish art in London / PL ART 2007

“Modelator” has instigated a PL ART 2007 project. In cooperation with Polish Cultural Institute we will take part in Art Car Boot Fair http://www.artcarbootfair.com/ 2007 in London. This event is especially important as it is the first time that Polish artists have been invited to join this fair in which the public can not only buy , but also meet with the artists and view their works of art in a relaxed atmosphere. The idea behind this particular venture is to promote a new way of thinking about Poland. We will travel from Gdansk to London in a Big Van filled with commissioned limited editions of works of art created by the crème de la crème of the Polish art scene. The journey will continue through various sites in Europe stopping at galleries in such cities as: Berlin, Dusseldorf , Antwerpia, Dunkierka, and London – Art Car Boot Fair 2007. We want to leave traces of Polish art in all visited cities, to show everyone that Poles have more to offer then the ever present stereotypes of Poles. For a small price one can become a proud owner of objects created by Magda Bielesz
Bogna Burska , Mirella von Chrupek, Peter Fuss, Artur Gogołkiewicz, Galeria Rusz
Hakobo, Low Budget, Prot Haładaj, Grzegorz Klaman, Zoya Łucewicz, Magazyn Modeli
Magda Marciniec, Honorata Martin, Dorota Nieznalska, Agata Nowosielska, Ania Orbaczewska, Lukrecja Plusz, Maciek Salamon, Malina Tomaszewska, Mariusz Waras, Ania Witkowska, Adam Witkowski, Wolny, Iwona Zając, Martyna Zdanowicz.
Music in London by Villa Rosa.

more...

7080: Worldchat/Intercultural Dialogue: The future of money



Worldchat which will take place at Wyspa IS on 22th of June is a part of project Generation 7080 ( http://www.generatie7080.nl/ ) a programme serial made by Menno van der Veen (programme maker de Balie) and held in cultural-political centre De Balie, Amsterdam http://www.debalie.nl/, examines the moral standpoints of people born between 1970 and 1989 (7080). What kind of labels indicates the generation 7080? ‘Patat’generation, Generation discharge, Generation Zero, Generation X, back seat generation? And how does the generation 7080 thinks from his perspective about problems of the present time.

Hiwa K. , Cooking with Mama

The event is accessible for everyone in the host country and contains elements of the ‘state of the art’ underground (dance) music and performances (like vj’s, poetry, stand up comedian, sing and song writers, folk music, spoken word). The idea behind this is that various groups of people meet each other. During the event people have access to ‘chat’ with cultural elite about various upfront-defined issues. On 22th of June we will discuss “The future of money”.


Program:


Performance by Hiwa K.


Performance by Honorata Martin


Initial presentation of the book “Alternative Economies Alternative Societies” by Oliver Ressler


music with visualisation by Bartosz H_12 Hervy


Efektvol


cocktail bar




June 22nd, 2007, 19.00- 00.30 hrs

Wyspa & Revolver = Books


At Revolver, contemporary art publications become an art form. By emphsizingand foregrounding the art rather than focusing on the methods and techniquesof book production we seek to redefine and question the meaning ofpublishing. The result is a decisive yet diverse program with many differentfaces: each book is unique. For us, visionary contemporary publishing thatcreates a possible definition of contemporary art as publication can onlyresult by opening new spaces and establishing positions.
Today, we are happy to announce another step taken in this direction: toincrease our impact on contemporary art, we want to create new places forour books. This will, like our publications, happen through collaboration.
We are therefore pleased to announce Wyspa & Revolver.
The launch of Wyspa & Revolver will happen on June 22nd at 7pm along withtwo other important events at Wyspa: Chat project on the World without Moneyin collaboration with De Balie http://www.debalie.nl/ <http://www.debalie.nl/> andopening of free wirelless internet access for Wyspa visitors incollaboration with D-Link program "Wireless Culture" [Kulturalnie bezKabli]. Wyspa & Revolver happens in collaboration with private enterprise3City.pl http://www.3city.pl/ <http://www.3city.pl/> . Please get to our websitehttp://www.wyspa.art.pl/ <http://www.wyspa.art.pl/> and http://www.revolver-books.de/<http://www.revolver-books.de/> for detailed information aboutpublications, access and directions.
Begining Friday June 23rd the bookstore will be open at our regularexhibition hours Thursday - Sunday 12am-6pm.

YOU WON'T FEEL A THING: On Panic, Obsession, Rituality and Anesthesia

Bogna Burska, Arachne



States of uncertainty, undefined fears, rapid perceptual cracks, irrational behaviours, unshaped longings for the relief that never comes or does not come on time. Self-aggressions, medications, meditations and anaesthetic replacements. The rituals with no reason, needs with no desires. Obsessions of unclear origin and panic attacks impossible to cure. You won’t feel the thing captures the state of mind of the individual under the pressure of contemporary reality. Shaped by success and its weak foundations, post-therapeutic, globalised and medialised, this reality enforces a rational approach to life and privileges the so-called “social” and “professional” behaviour. This is the reality of fraudulent, stimulated, collective reactions, of false prophets and failed social projects, marked by crises of both rationality and spirituality. Personal feelings are channelled and manipulated by social, psychological and economic pressures. The systems of knowledge production let us have it to a certain degree under control.
In reaction to this situation, overwhelmed by panic, obsession or the desire for anaesthesia, individuals perform personal rituals that extend, suspend or freeze time to allow themselves to experience their private selves. Ignoring the all-pervasive social relations that generally frame and inform the self, this exhibition looks inward to focus on internal and personal reality. It tracks the uncertain sensations, perceptual gaps and slight cracks in reality. It approaches fear on the level on which it might pass unnoticed. It is heading toward the places where satisfaction, success and pleasurable addictions and consumption are no longer able to cure the unbearable disintegration of self.
Paweł Althamer, Kardynał

The emotions of the individual are informed and stimulated by spatial relations. The way we observe space and our own situation is necessarily emotionally coded. Interiors and exteriors impact our physical selves and mediate the expression and experience of our emotions. The small amount of space occupied by our bodies is a very special place – the nest, the womb, the shelter, the chapel, the prison. You won’t feel the thing will reveal our ability both to embody and emotionalise this space.
In the labyrinth of forking paths that is the Kunsthaus Dresden building itself, amplified by the spatial, astonishing and unpredictable works and objects, the spectator will discover numerous video works presenting an individual engaged in repetitive activities or private rituals. All the works will show the individual in heightened borderline states – in extreme situations of cold, pleasure, loneliness or pain. These works create a kind of subjective time that has nothing to do with linearity or story-telling. Looped or warped, the works suspend time, creating an individualised, unbalanced space in which extremes of emotion are anaesthetised through repetition. By tracking the ritual containment of emotional extremes in art today, this exhibition hopes to provoke a similar irrational, cathartic experience in the viewer and, thereby, both to reveal and to examine those strategies of containment that are available to us today.
Artists:Pawel Althamer, Bogna Burska, Ursula Doebereiner, Lili Dujourie, Angelika Fojtuch, Steffen Geisler, Lise Harlev, Ellen Harvey, Hiwa K., Agnieszka Kalinowska, Grzegorz Klaman, Piotr Kopik, Jill Mercedes, Sebastian Meschenmoser, Dominika Skutnik, Pawel Kruk, Dominik Lejman, Yvette Mattern, Ivan Moudov, Anne Olofsson, Dominik Pabis, Susanne Weirich, Monika Weiss, Artur Zmijewski

Curated by Aneta Szylak



2 June- 15 August 2007

Wyspa Institute of Art is open from tuesday to sunday from 12.00-18.00.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

TRANSVIZUALIA : MEDIASCREAM007

TRANSVIZUALIA 007: MEDIASCREAM!

FESTIVAL OF AUDIO-VISUAL AND MULTIMEDIA FORMS

18th-21st OCTOBER 2007 // GDYNIA, WAREHOUSE AT POLSKA STREET, 30

A KuKu Sztuka Association, supported by the City Hall of Gdynia presents an interdisciplinary artistic event entitled TRANSVIZUALIA. Festival of Audio-Visual and Multimedia Forms, that inscribes itself into a group of innovative Polish festivals.

TV-IDEA:

TRANSVIZUALIA: Festival of Audiovisual and Multimedia Forms is an interactive visual and musical experiment dealing with issues of interrelation between and coexistence of arts as well as multimedia synthesis of contemporary art and technology. It generates a space of media accumulation in order to discover their energetic and emotional potential. Transvisualia is based on presenting a close mutual relationship between visuality and sound and creating a balance between suggestive lasting of an image and firm influence of different musical forms.

The festival is well inscribed into the series of internationally recognizable events that mirror and shape the consciousness of the contemporary highly technological and information-based society. It presents progressive media dynamics in search of new perspectives, contexts and interpretations.

TRANSVIZUALIA 007: MEDIASCREAM!

[STIMULATION-SIMULATION]

The current edition of Transvisualia: Mediascream! (re)constructs polyphony of narration that stratifies images and sounds with a high amplitude of emotions. We are living in a fascinating multimedia world in which directly, with no distance at all, we experience the repeated amplification of a signal and the omnipresence of screens and technology.

At the point of intersection of many views and forms, a s(t)imulated place of brief interactions comes into being. It allows for freeing the energy and emotions. The Screamof multimedia will be at the same time seductive and irritating, physiological and strange, compact and cathartic. The alternative reality of facts and media artefacts will subtly affect the audience leaving long term changes in their perception. The process will be initiated of simulating sensations, liberating the meanings, provoking and manipulating. Our own emotions and the strange ones; the primary and the fabricated ones; the individual and those common to all of us. The transfer of data, images and sounds; the circulation of energy, the attack and passion. It's the process of our false self-identification; a kind of entering and exiting different worlds; an approval of quick transformations and unexpected (re)actions. The festival is also a formation of self-identity through absorption of fast messages, liberation of views, submission of oneself to a multimedia revolution – be it simulated or authentic. It is a confrontation of one’s body, thoughts and personality with a vivid tissue, a synergy of arts and multiplicity of interpretations.

The current edition of Mediascream! deals with the unpredictable, bodily and emotional experience of multimedia and with the (im)possibility of real dialogue and exchange.

Lena Dula / Director TV 007

PROGRAMM CONCEPT:

During the four days of projections, performances, concerts and other music-related events the Warehouse at 30, Polska Str. [4500 m2] will transform into an alternative, multimedia reality. During the Transvizualia festival we will present works inspired by the slogan: MEDIASCREAM! [Stimulation-Simulation]. Call for artists will be sent round the world. The works shown in the particular festival sections will be selected by the festival programme committee. All of the festival coordinators will invite selected artists to participate in the festival and they will chose workshops and projects as accompaning events. The festival will be promoted through different local and nationwidel media and supported by PR professionals.

Transvizualia will also adopt various additional public spaces (street-art events). A wide range of accompanying events is planned at the festival club organized within the space of the Warehouse.

The educational character of the festival is underlined by a series of workshops entitled „Transmedia Form Laboratory“, which aim at confronting and familiarizing the audience with new technologies.

The whole event is organized with the help of well-experienced cultural managers, curators, artists, art critics and other professionals.

CONTEST SECTION:

There are two contest sections within TRANSVIZUALIA Festival: MEDIACREAM! - the main contest module and MODELATOR Young People's Section – contest directed to students of fine arts academies. There will be one main prize awarded in both contest sections. Additionally, the artistic and programme directors will award a special prize to a selected festival event that reflects the character of Transvizualia MEDIACREAM! Edition most accurately.

The contest regulations give a detailed description of entry submission and selection procedure. It is available on www.transvizualia.com.

PROGRAMME MODULES:

The idea of the festival is based on a hybrid combination of many complementary sections whose role is to stimulate artistic events as well as activate reception of diverse audiences.

Basic sections:

Mediascream!: multimedia exhibition of works sent to the festival and inspired by its theme. It will be held throughout the whole festival;

TV-Liveacts: a rich programme of evening and night artistic events, which provide a symbiotic combination of visuality, music, performance and other media – depending on the project. Part of it will be live music performed by acknowledged Polish and foreign artists who explore new musical horizonts;

Transmedia Form Laboratory: a series of workshops on audio-visuality and usage of new techniques/technologies, e.g. video/digital camera – high definition / innovative graphic software / music videos / vj / animation / video-art / multimedia workshop of imagination;

Videodrom: platform of video-art – a review of Polish and international video-art [presentation of resources, e.g. Electronic Arts Intermix, Tank TV etc.];

Cinema:rotations – a diverse programme of film reviews: film retrospect – Masters-Visioners / Screening of avant-garde films: Avant-garde Revolutions with a unique music setting / Experimental short-films from around the world – TV Shortcuts];

Visioncreations: graphic battles and VJ +DJ presentations – visualisations as a means of artistic expression, wide presentation of well-known and celebrated VJs and Djs invited to confront each other in the image and sound battles;

„Modelator“ Young People Section: section for young people and debutants, a review of selected projects of Fine Arts Academy students;

Additional sections:

Trans-telepanel: a moderated discussion with the use of multimedia.

Street-Art: artistic actions in the city space inspired by the theme of the festival;

Festival club + Pink Flamingo – arranged in the Warehouse, with a complex programme of various interdisciplinary events;

Mediascream! artistic open-air project – a possibility to organise summer open-air workshops for students entitled Mediascream!, whose effects will be presented during the festival;

Transvizualia Magazine: published on a CD and accompanied by artzine dedicated to new media /art /synthesis of art / innovative music, and distributed throughout Poland [publishing date: December 2007];

www.transvizualia.com – the festival web site will gradually transform into a detailed data base and service devoted to the synergy of media and experimental art.

FESTIVAL PRODUCER:

A KuKu Sztuka Association is a group of people who have been active in the field of culture, art and cultural education for many years. We cooperate with various distinct personalities of cultural life of the Tricity and the rest of Poland. Our main aim is to stimulate the creative activity through establishing places for gathering and exchanging ideas; enabling an effective dialogue and the process of shaping the Tricity culture.

Until now, the association organised open-air screenings entitled Film od Morza (Film off the Sea) within the 31. Polish Film Festival in Gdynia and a multimedia exhibition Lech Majewski – Artist of Image. Image of Artist, that promoted the founding of the Pomeranian Science and Technology Park. The Association was nominated to the „Sztorm Roku 2006 (Storm of the year)“ award by „Gazeta Wyborcza“ local newspaper and to Mayor of Gdynia City Hall.

The Association plans for 2007 are: Transvizualia 007 Festival of Audio-Visual Forms, The Planet of Creativity literary workshops, Days of Oliwa Park, Midsummer Night of Miracles: WonderWreaths, the 4th edition of Planete Doc Review, next edition of open-air Film off the Sea, Lemoniada. In Memoriam Stanislaw Lem film-review, Areas of Freedom – review of films and symposium in cooperation with the European Solidarity Centre. We are also planning to initiate the A KuKu Sztuka publishing house.

We are permanently supported by Gdynia City Hall, Gdansk City Council, Pomeranian Film Foundation, University of Gdansk, as well as many local and nationwide media partners.

www.akukusztuka.eu // info@akukusztuka.eu

MAIN ORGANISERS:

Director TV 007: Lena Dula

Art Director: Maciej Szupica

Creative Coordinators: Adam Witkowski (mixed media) // Adam Kamiński (graphics) // Natalia Cyrzan (music) // Paulina Neugebauer (Film) // Piotr Szwabe (street-art) // Łukasz Gronowski (video-art) // Modelator Group: Maks Bochenek, Ola Grzonkowska, Roma Piotrowska (Modelator Section)

PR//Marketing specialist: Emilia Orzechowska

CONTACT:

www.transvizualia.com

www.myspace.com/transvizualia

www.transv.blogspot.com

e-mail: info@transvizualia.com

DIRECTORS:

Lena Dula // len@transvizualia.com

Maciej Szupica // zupika@transvizualia.com

COORDINATORS:

Adam Witkowski // media@transvizualia.com

Natalia Cyrzan // music@transvizualia.com

Paulina Neugebauer // kinorot@transvizualia.com

Sekcja Modelator// modelator@transvizualia.com

PUBLIC RELATIONS/MARKETING:

Emilia Orzechowska // pr@transvizualia.com

ARTZIN // Editor-in-Chief:

Lena Dula // artzin@transvizualia.com

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

How to do exhibitions?’ Student workshop by Photomonth in Krakow together with universities of Gdansk, Krakow and Warsaw.


Modelator will take part in `How to do exhibitions?’ Student workshop by Photomonth in
Krakow together with universities of Gdansk, Krakow and Warsaw.
This workshop will bring to light the different view points of people – artists, organizer/institution, curator, staff – engaged in the preparation of art shows. Example is the show ‘Failed Hope’, a group show with 16 artists from Germany. The curator of the show, Dr. Andrea Domesle, and some participating artists are in discussion with young colleagues and students from Universities of Gdansk, Krakow and Warsaw. The goal is to present each stepp in the production process of exhibitions: from the initial idea, through the research phase to the realisation, including external fundraising, communication and installation.

Time: Monday, 7th of May, 10:00 – 13:00

Place: In the exhibition ‘Failed Hope - New Romanticism in Contemporary Photography in Germany ’, The Goetz Palace, Old Okocim Brewery, Lubicz 17 str, Krakow, Poland.

Language: English

Open to students

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

world chat: debalie | centre for politics and culture

Fighting for tolerance!

7080: Worldchat | Liteside festival

De Balie | Kleine-Gartmanplantsoen 10 Amsterdam
20 april | 21.30 - 00.30 hrs. | language: English

The 7080: Worldchat fights for global tolerance. On April 20 the greater
theme of the 7080: Worldchat will be the difficulties that an individual
who was born in a different culture than in the one in which he or she lives
experiences, not to be judged by the prejudices that exist about that
culture. Sometimes it's almost as if every Arab has to defend himself for
the fundamental points of view of some imams. Many other examples exist.

Will generation7080 be more tolerant than its parents? What is the role of
art to overcome cultural prejudices? What is the relationship of the media
to these prejudices: can they fight them? Do they shape them? How do young
activists in Lebanon, Iraq, or Israel fight for freedom, tolerance and
emancipation?

7080: Worldchat brings together in the Balie and on the internet writers,
artists, politicians, philosophers and activists. In the Balie will be
present: Bojana K. Grabas (sociologist), Sameena Khan (designer, creator
of theatre), Rodhan Al Galidi (poet, writer), Susan Youssef (director of
films)
and Fatemeh Fattahi (artist). Many others will be present on the chat.

To join the 7080: Worldchat : visit the Balie at April 20 or log in from
9.30pm. Send an email to 7080@balie.nl receive a log in password.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Grzegorz Klaman: Fear and Trembling at the University Galleries, Florida Atlantic University


Grzegorz Klaman,
Fear and Trembling, 2007
installation view, mixed media, dimensions variable


A new environmental sculpture, Fear and Trembling, by visiting artist Grzegorz Klaman will be presented from April 20 through May 25, 2007 by the University Galleries and the Department of Visual Arts and Art History, School of the Arts, Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters, Florida Atlantic University (FAU), Boca Raton. The artist will give a public lecture followed by a reception on Thursday, April 26 at 6 p.m. in the lecture hall next to the Schmidt Center Gallery. Klaman is visiting FAU as a Fulbright Scholar in the Department of Visual Arts and Art History from the Academy of Fine Arts, Gdansk, Poland where he has taught since 1984.

In Fear and Trembling, Grzegorz Klaman’s project for FAU, several kneeling human figures, cloaked in amorphous black robes, slowly and repeatedly hit their heads against the wall. Their behavior recalls states of trance or hysteria. A black, sticky substance has spilled down the wall from the large, horizontal windows located high above the floor and the figures, imposing its blackness on the space, the figures, and the viewer. The title, Fear and Trembling, is borrowed from the Danish Philosopher Soren Kierkegaard’s writing on religious devotion and the boundaries of individual sacrifice and internal conflict.

Grzegorz Klaman is one of Poland’s best-known contemporary artists perhaps best known for works that comment on the current politics in Poland through large-scale sculptural installations. He often employs or refers to existing objects rather than creating new forms. His recent POL END installation proposed a new flag for Poland by adding a black stripe to the country’s red and white flag. His work has been exhibited extensively throughout Europe in both group and solo exhibitions. In 1996 he won grants from both the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, Inc. and the Polish Ministry of Art and Culture.

Klaman’s project for FAU will be presented in the Schmidt Center Gallery Public Space, a 150 foot long by 22 foot high space that has hosted site specific and large-scale temporary works by Peggy Diggs (1999), Arturo Herrera (2000), Michael Zansky (2002) and most recently Allison Smith (2007).


Sebastian Cichocki, a young Polish art critic discusses Klaman’s work in this excerpt from a 2005 essay on the artist:
Klaman’s actions in the last few years locate him in the area between political interventions and site-specific land-art. The artist’s works in the public space, beginning with such works as “Tower and Gate” (1990, The Ujazdowski Castle Centre for Contemporary Art, Warsaw) never constituted an easy or neutral addition to the urban landscape. They did not decorate, they agitated. They did not ease tensions, they inflamed historical problems. They did not provide simple solutions, they forced people to adopt an unambiguous stance and thus to defend their own territory.

Grzegorz Klaman is following the trail of political and social illusion, tracking the mistakes, weaknesses and cracks in the pyramid of civilization’s self-satisfaction. His activities in the public space include within themselves an element of laboratory objectivity and arise from the rational drives of a “social artist.” Klaman, with full consciousness of the consequences of his decision, ruthlessly introduces a new artistic commandment: Kunst macht frei!, (Freedom through art), without obligations to the nation which takes delight in stigmatizing and marginalizing any behaviour which is alien to itself.


The University Galleries, FAU are open and free to the public Tuesday through Friday 1 – 4 pm, Saturday 1 – 5 pm, and closed Sunday and Monday. Tours can be scheduled by appointment. For further information on FAU’s University Galleries, visit www.fau.edu/galleries.

Exhibition programs in the University Galleries are made possible in part through support from the Florida Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs, Florida Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Arts; The Palm Beach County Cultural Council; FAU Student Government through student activity fees; and individual contributors to the University Galleries.

Schmidt Center Gallery Public Space
April 26 – May 25, 2007

Public lecture by Grzegorz Klaman
Thursday, April 26, 6 pm followed by a reception



Thursday, March 22, 2007

When we do workshop - we do performance - interview with Angelika Fojtuch and BBB Johannes Deimling





Modelator: You have made the first edition of the PORT PERFORMANCE workshops in Gdańsk, where the second edition took place?

Angelika Fojtuch: The second edition took place in Estonia from the 5th to the 15th of January in two port cities: in Tallinn and Pärnu. We started in Tallinn, spend there five days and after we went to Pärnu .

M: You change cities of your worhops. Why the idea of traveling is so important for you?

A.F: Each place has another taste of culture and history and it is important for us to offer this varieties to our participants. The cultural and historical context pave the way for exchange and meetings with people from other countries. Also with our travelings we want to create an international net of Performance port cities.

BBB Johannes Deimling: The idea of traveling is also connected with the nature of performance art, which is art in motion. It is not like an image on the wall. It is alive in time, in space and it creates ephermal images and situations with the body. So we took this topics and created - a traveling workshop to underline that art is in motion.



photo: Vicky Papailiou
M: Why you choose port cities? How is it connected with the idea of PORT PERFORMANCE?

A.F: For me it is quit natural, because I come from Gdynia a typical polish port city. My Father was sailor, so I grow up with the border between sea and land. We as PORT PERFORMANCE saw similarities between the port city and the performance art. Both are “places” of exchange and the port became a metaphor for this.

M: The Workshop in Gdańsk was very intensive, you managed for the participants a lot of interesting activities like eating bread and fish on the beach in the early morning, meditating, cooking together, learn polish history etc. You made participants to explore their personal borders. We have read on your website, that one of participants said about the workshop in Estonia: “Everything that happened in Estonia in 10 days could have been enough to experience in one year”. What did you made with them this time (laugh)?

BBB: In Estonia it was more intensively than in Gdańsk. In gerneral we could make for sure much more easier workshops with more spare time, but for us it is important to have that intense work, because performance is also an intense moment. Intensive situations offers a lot of possibilities for to get known about yourself and your personal borders. This to discover and to realize is a good research for to devolope your personal peformative art. We create such a tension with living in contrasts, like a quite comfortable accommodation in Tallinn and in Pärnu a poor and pure living situation where the participants have to find ways to solve thier needs.

M: Can you tell us something more about this place where you lived?

BBB: It was the place of Non Grata, an international performance art group, that is quite known in the international performance art scene. This place has only a fire heating and no shower… We had only one room for everybody and our sleeping bags on the floor to sleep.

A.F: We took the low conditions of this place as a possibility to make investigations that prepares to performance. If I don’t have a shower - it is a great situation to find out HOW can I solve this problem. This is the first step to understand the wide field of improvisation, that is a ground of live art; extreme situations are very often present in art world and during the time of creating an art piece.

BBB: Imagine a situation like that - you have an idea for an art piece that you want to develope and you come to the place, and suddenly the place is not like you supposed, and then you have to change ideas to handle that situation.

A.F: You have to be very open and flexible. We could observe different ways of handling this pure and poor living situation, some found a shower in a sink in a kitchen, which also wasn’t a real kitchen. One of the participants wanted to make a shower outside of the building, so he collected pipes and all needed stuff, but finally the girls who needed a shower at most, decided that it is to cold to have a shower outside.

BBB: This moment was fantastic because that guy really understood our task! We told the students in Tallinn that in Pärnu everything would be more pure, but nobody expected that what they saw. When we entered the new place everybody was really surprised!

A.F: The contrast between a hostel with a great view on the harbour in Tallinn and the pure place in Pärnu was very big!



photo: Angelika Fojtuch
M: So… in two words - extreme experiences!

BBB: The days that we spended there, were like an adventure. We ate together on a ping pong table, which was improvised as our dining table. It was also our discussion table and our office. We didn’t have had another table. So in general we had to deal those things. All the time we had to improvise. That was at the first moment for sure something like a shock, but after a while it became to normality. For me is was nice living in dadaistic situations.

A.F: Sharing accommodation is one of our main ideas to put participants together, that creates by itself an inspiring field for research on Performance Art. In Gdańsk and in Estonia accommodation wasn’t just an accommodation. It was more than a task, living together is a social situation that creates an own society, own ways of rules and atmosphere. Another very important thing in the estonian workshop was, that it took place during the winter time, because the coldness is by itself another field that confrontates your ego with another border. Living together you could use also for to warm up eachother.

M: But you didn’t have had snow!

A.F: Oh yes, we were very surprised!

BBB: Our estonian friends felt really ashamed that there wasn’t any snow for us (laugh)! And after our leaving the big snow came, and there was minus 18 degrees! - all that what we have expected.

M: What is the meaning of coldness in your workshop? Just to experience something?

BBB: For sure, that what we are speaking about you can experience during a surviving camp. But we are not interested in to make a surviving camp! The idea of coldness and intensively experiences we connect also with the hard situation in the free art market. We give our participants intense situations that they have to solve. This shows the possibility for improvisation and than to find ways to survive in hard moments: in real life and in the process of making art.

photo: BBB Johannes Deimling
A.F: Coldness brings humans to their physical borders, and performance art is an art of exploring our personal borders. Performers have all the time to learn about thier personal borders, and coldness gives them one clear feelable knowledge about it. In our workshops we are interested in kind of “dangerous”, uncomfortable situations, because this is that what can kick you, push you and wake you up. Your condition or possibilities to handle difficult situations is depending on that what you bring with you. All participants of the workshop came with another expectations, experiences, problems, needs, and all these things cause various reactions in extreme situations.

BBB: For me performance art is like jumping into cold water. Even I have made a lot of performances in my life, every time it is that jump into cold water, where I can improve my personal borders everytime new. So for sure coldness is a metaphor.

M: In the second edition some people from the first edition took part. Do you see any differences between them and the new ones?

BBB: For everybody the workshop situations we’ve created was equal. Even for us it was a new way of making this workshop and even we knew this country before, the workshop gave us and the particpants new challanges. This was very good, because each workshop, even we do it in the same city should be connected with new ideas and experiences.

A.F: We offer during our workshop our point of view, our understanding of performance, which is based on privacy. A student who decide to come the second time for our workshop knows what he has choosen and what he can expect. In this situation we know that he accept our way of thinking and he likes it, and what is more important - he wants to follow this way. For those participants, who came the second time, the workshop in Tallinn was a next step. They were a little bit more sensitive for the meaning of places that we offered and what we wanted to do.

BBB: For some of our new students was that what we were doing not so clear. Some have had a lot of questions, similar like it was during our first edition. I mean e.g. when you go to Pärnu, and you don`t have a shower and you have to improvise this need – for sure you ask yourself: For what is this good? There were also some of the new students directly riding on the Port Performance wave with us, what was fantastic to see! For us it was a value to see that you can make steps in performance art. We saw people who were on our first trip in Gdansk, that they really learned something and that they could use what they have learned. Some took everything what they could get during this time. And this is also an important thing, because we offer a lot, and people who are attentive, who see our strategy – they can have 100%. For those who have questions connected mostly with themselves – they will stick to find answers while the others fill up thier pockets. Of course we work with questions, because without questions you don’t have progress.

A.F: Sometimes in questions are hidden expectations. If you expect something, you wait for it, and if it will not happen you are disappionted, and you are close for this what happens, and that what happens could be interesting for you, but you will not receive it, because you expect something else. When somebody decide to come for our workshops he should come with a lot of questions and open for different answers.

M: What topics did you prepare this time?

BBB: We focused on culture of Estonia, also on history of this country, and especially on two cities – Tallinn and Pärnu. In whole Estonia are as many people as in Warsaw living. Pärnu, which is for many of us a small village for Estonians it is a big city. And they have there even an airport! We wanted to show our students also an art society, energy and culture of Estonia, that is unique in europe. The second topic was for sure personality and privacy, the two legs on which we put the creation of performance art. And for to give an idea about this subjects, one day we went to the wood carver Endel Saarepuu. It was so amazing to see his personal world! It was very similar like when we went to Kuba Bielawski`s artplace KLOSZ.ART in Gdańsk. A touch of personality, persons totally involved in their subjects and with a passion of art! One of our best “lectures”.


photo: Angelika Fojtuch
M: What a wood carver can give for a performance artist?

BBB: At first we were also thinking about what can connect this two kinds of art forms. In most of all artist you can find something special, like a passion of art, craziness, continuing own ideas like a maniac and many others more. These things are important when you make an object, a picture, a sculpture and for sure a performance.

A.F: Important for us was also to make our students thinking about their own motivations, why they want to create art, and what can give them the power to do it.

M: Lets change a topic of our conversation. Why do you make a performance art?

BBB: In Performance art the creative act is the center of the meaning. After there is nothing left, that somebody can buy or own. An ephermal moment that I share.... and because of that undiscribeable good feeling after a made performance.

A.F: Performance is a live form of art where it is possible to communicate directly with people without words on different levels – even sometimes more understandable and precicely. And this is a great possibility.

M: Which performance artists are inspiring for you?

A.F: To look for inspiration on other artists works is not my way of creating my art and in a way I don’t like to look for this kind of inspiration. The motivation to do something needs a reason. For to have a reason you need to be involved. Involved you are the most in your private life. So if something inspire me it is: my life, or my family, or my feelings, and things that happened to and around me during my life. A better inspiration I don’t see.

M: Human beings can`t just say – o.k. “I`m closed for all world and I look just inside me.“ There must be something what provoke you to do something.

A.F: I am not closed when I don’t know the works of Marina Abramovic. I am closed when I colse my eyes for that what is around me, Marina Abramovic became important, because she took her life as a motor of her art. I am fascinated by my grandmother, my dog, my surounding… For sure there are artists who I like and I feel respect to them and thier works, but this is not that what I look for to get inspiration. I look for areas which “are not discovered yet” and my grandmother is not discovered yet.

BBB: The banality of the daily life is a ressort for ideas, a treasure for art. If you look on art history you can observe that artists use this field, because they know about what they are speaking. They speak about privacy, culture, politics, education, developement, economics, history, and so on... elements of life that they face with thier private experiences.

Dionis Damman, The last one, performance on Cuma, photo: Angelika Fojtuch
M: Why do you make performance workshop, and how this idea came to your mind?

BBB: The idea of PORT PERFORMANCE appeared here in Gdynia, in Café Monika. We were sitting there together in may 2006 and we were thinking what we can do?

M: After 3 months you made the first edition of PORT PERFORMANCE…

BBB: Yes, we did! Performance art is such a huge field that there are plenty of possiblities that you can offer to interested people. For example: how to “act” or react with your body. To discover what is your body and how you can use your body as a tool in communication, how to read body language, how to use your body language, how you can communicate with people using gestures or actions, how you can say something personal with the tools of your body and it becomes a unique readable sign. Suddenly you will see that you can share topics of your life with other peoples, you can communicate on another level. The art level is very nice level for communication, almost a free space for expressions. Also we see there is a need and a wish in our virtual society to discover the body as something real. We are interested in giving the possibilities of performance art, even the students don’t want to be a performance artist. The processes of performance art you can use for a lot of other fields in art and in daily life, like for example in a job interview. In Germany there has already started a discussion about how to use the strategies of performative art for teachings in schools and for studies in general. The focus is not the theatralic aspect of presentation, the focus is on the privat statement. Teaching and doing performance is very close together: When we do workshop - we do performance.

M: So what can workshops give to you as artists?

A.F: It is named workshop, it is named teaching but for me a much more better word to characterize what we are doing is the word and term – forum. It is more like meeting people who are interested in the same subject and who give each other inspiration. For me as an artist it is important that I can also exchange my experiences with the participants. So during our workshops we don`t teach in a traditional meaning of this word we create together an open field where performative art can take place.

M: We are interested in the party which closed the workshop in Estonia, and took place in a sauna!

BBB: As you know we didn`t have a shower in Pärnu, so during the workshop we were going to sauna, but not only for having a sauna...



photo: Vicky Papailiou
A.F: ... Sauna is specific for estonian culture and we took this opportunity for to discover the cultural meaning and also to discover hygienic aspects of the body.

BBB: After our intensive time we wanted for sure to do something special at the end. And everybody liked sauna so we decided to make there our final party! The “Sauna-task” is a good example to show how PORT PERFORMANCE use the circumstances or the context. In northern countries everybody knows that sauna is not only a washing place. Erik and Neeme, two real estonian sauna professionals spoke about the sauna as an important cultural place. For example, when you have big business to do – you go together to sauna, you come closer, you feel the sweat of eachother, you share that small room, you are naked, a way to show that you turst your buisness partner.

M: Do you think that from this people who took part in your workshop there are any prepared to start their individual creation of performance?

A.F: In our two final performance art events, that we call CUMA (Hawser) we could observe a lot of interesting and strong performative actions. For sure they are in the beginning to develope a handwriting. But like a hawser in CUMA we could observe that the students was absolutly able to fix thier own ideas on the challange of an open public art event.

BBB: To help the people during the workshoptime to develope an own performance art piece is our aim and we can say and we see that there is a huges potential.

conversed: Roma Piotrowska and Maks Bochenek

Links:

Workshop documentation Gdansk www.portperformance.net/workshop_gdansk.htm

Workshop documentation Tallinn & Pärnu www.portperformance.net/workshop_tallinn.htm



Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Fotorelation from the opening of the exhibition "On Tectonics of History"

"On Tectonics of History" in Wyspa Instytute of Art



How and where can the influence of history be made tangible? On which intentions and politics of the image are the different ways of dealing with the past based?
The exhibition „Zur Tektonik der Geschichte [On Tectonics of History], curated by Andrea Domesle and Martin Krenn, is trying to expose the historical traces of the nineteen-thirties and nineteen-forties that can be still seen in the present and to reflect on how we deal with Nazi times. The exhibits show to which extent photography and film – oscillating between construction and representation – are able to contribute to finding the truth in history and to formulate images of history that are not yet consistent with our society. The exhibition focuses on contemporary works of art in the fields of photography, film and video. According to Aleida and Jan Assmann, documentary photography and film act as image storage for our cultural memory.

Joachim Seinfeld, When Germans are Merry
Especially since the nineteen-thirties, the technological achievements have permitted to make use of these two media and allowed for the steady increase of their distribution. The image of history in the minds of those who were born too late is based on those source images that convey illusory authenticity. Pictures of historical places, people and events have been reproduced unscrutinized in schoolbooks, television documentaries, historical museums or magazines. Not infrequently even propaganda and perpetrator photos of the Nazis have been drawn on as “image evidence” without ever putting up for discussion their history of origins. Contrary to this, the approaches of artists, for the most part, aim at trying to learn to understand the original documents as tools enabling us to construct history. In doing so they work, on the one hand, with historical facticity and, on the other, with photography, video or film and the images of history communicated by these media respectively. This approach can either be based on historical documents or on original locations that you visit and where the view communicated by the media comes under scrutiny. Control mechanisms and points of view of the original documents are made visible. Confronting them with a different meaning within the frame of the same medium, the artists extend and adjust the cultural memory. This exhibition attempts to point out by means of which different methods and stylistic approaches this can be done.
The Exhibition in  Wyspa Institute of Art, Gdansk is co-curated by Aneta Szylak.

Grzegorz Klaman Memory Monument 1999, installation, model, video

Artists:

Klub Zwei (Simone Bader & Jo Schmeiser) Grzegorz Klaman Zdena Kolečková Anna
Konik Anna Kowalska Martin Krenn Susanne Kriemann Hans-Werner Kroesinger
Robert Kuśmirowski Pia Lanzinger Lisl Ponger Joachim Seinfeld Tim
Sharp Michaela Thelenová Maciej Toporowicz Arye Wachsmuth Peter Weibel Piotr
Uklański Artur Żmijewski

exhibition works-  18.03.2007 - 29.04.2007
tuesday, thursday, saturday and sunday 14.00-18.00