Asli Cavusoglu
12
Jun 09
TIME-CHALLENGER
an exhibition about critical reconstruction
with
GÖKÇEN CABADAN, ANDRÉ CATALÃO, ASLI ÇAVUŞOĞLU, OLOF DREIJER, FELIX GMELIN, LAUREN VON GOGH, ROMEO GONGORA, SUSANNE KRIEMANN, MAKODE LINDE, CHRISTODOULOS PANAYIOTOU, RINUS VAN DE VELDE, VIRON VERT AND A VIDEO INTERVIEW WITH ULUS BAKER BY ARAS ÖZGÜN
CURATED BY ADNAN YILDIZ
OPENING ON SUNDAY 21.06.09
FROM 11:00 UNTIL 18:00
A TOUR BY THE CURATOR ADNAN YILDIZ AT 15:00
PERFORMANCE BY LAUREN VON GOGH AT 15:30
Time-Challenger was born as an exhibition proposal for the open call of the Curator Curator project, which is a collaborative organization between Enough Room for Space from Rotterdam and HISK, a post-graduate program currently located in Ghent. The original proposal was based on the idea of opening a space-time for a discussion of how artistic reconstruction has been operating today through diverse conceptual approaches and contextual references in relation to current image politics. Recently, there have been numerous exhibition projects addressing artistic re-enactments, remakes, reproductions, and reinterpretations …Time-Challenger takes into consideration the art historical and analytical framework of these projects while taking a different direction by connecting the discussion to Antonio Negri’s concept of the “reconstruction of hope.” Just after the proposal was selected by Enough Room for Space, I did a research visit to the exhibition space and engaged in discussion with the residents of the studios and post-graduate students there during the Open Studio Week. Finally, the proposal has been crystallized by these discussions and aspects of the artistic production at HISK and has now turned into an exhibition about critical reconstruction. The term “critical reconstruction” is borrowed from Gary Wolf (Venture Kapital, Wired Magazine, 1998) who writes about the reconstruction of Berlin following the fall of the Berlin Wall. Coincidentally, or perhaps as a sign of Zeitgeist, this proposal was completed in Berlin’s Kreuzberg neighbourhood, the site of much of the most dynamic reconstruction in Berlin since 1989.
In Seven Easy Pieces (2005), Marina Abramovic acts out select historical performance artworks from 1970’s artists (such as Vito Acconci, Joseph Beuys etc.) including two of her own. The series of performances at Guggenheim Museum (New York) sharpened the tendency of questioning the timing of re-enactments, remakes and reinterpretations etc. in the art world. In an interview in the New York Times in early November, 2005, Abramovic explained the impetus for her most recent performances, stating that she “felt a strong need to preserve the memory of performances that influenced [her] as an artist. ‘There’s nobody to keep the history straight ... I feel almost, like, obliged. I felt like I have this function to do it.’ And this sense only grew stronger when she began to see ideas behind many important performances borrowed with no credit given, or appropriated by advertising and fashion.”
Many artists today have been using similar approaches and strategies of reinterpreting ar t history as well as transforming world history and culture. Rather than framing the discussion as a form of artistic production through an art historical perspective, Time-Challenger aims to deal with the timing of these productions to relate these tendencies to the repositioning of contemporary politics, image culture and digital-visual capital. As an exhibition about critical reconstruction, Time-Challenger reformulates the critique as an open-ended process of personalizing the situation, performing artistic know into a synthesis of many perspectives. To make things public, there always needs to be a personal position. The process of making things public in contemporary art practice not only brings together art works but also makes dialogues visible in order to create a physical experience for potential interactions.
To deal with the monsterous experience of global capital, Antonio Negri proposes the term “reconstruction of hope” in his Time for Revolution (2005): “how can a revolutionary subjectivity form itself within the multitude of producers? How can this multitude make a decision of resistance and rebellion? How can it develop a strategy of re-appropriation? How can the multitude lead a struggle for the self-government of itself?” He responds to these questions through reconstructing hope: “In the biopolitical postmodern, in this phase that sees the transformation and productive enrichment of labour-power, but on the other hand sees the capitalist exploitation of society as a whole, we thus pose these questions. As for the answers, I certainly do not possess them. But ... probably a few bricks toward the reconstruction of hope (or better, as in Alma Venus, dystopia) have been laid. (144-45).” Time-Challenger shares a common conceptual ground with the exhibition project, There is no audience, an exhibition about public imagination (22.05.09-30.08.09, Montehermoso, Spain) and focuses on the same terms on a different level.* Here, Time-Challenger is more interested in the possibility of reformulating the discussion of artistic reconstruction in relation to the political atmosphere of our time and integrating the strategy of reconstructing hope into the process.
Through rethinking modernism, Time-Challenger will display some artistic reconstructions that challenge pre-given definitions and realities of our past and present time — related the problematic of timing. In the exhibition, Gökçen Cabadan displays paintings that depict contemporary visions of family and health and transform the ready-made images at an abstract level of reconstructive criticality. Developing a conceptual identity and an expressive quality, Viron Vert’s drawings and collages include elements of history and culture through personal memories and attachments. Aslı Çavuşoğlu’s video A Turkish Doctor: Ömer Ayhan ironically fictionalizes a success story reflecting the power of the media over content via an evening news program. Romeo Gongora’s Prison is composed of monologues from four prisoners and establishes a critical dialogue on society and models of justice (punitive/rehabilitative). By using a level of abstraction through ready-made images and painting, André Catalão’s installation is a reflection of the artist’s cultural memory. Olof Dreijer’s sound installation is composed of animal sounds and provides a fictional space through reconstructing the perception of nature and the elements of evolution.
As an unforgettable gesture, Felix Gmelin’s Farbtest II, Die Rote Fahne, Colour Test II, The Red Flag is composed of the original shot and the remake of Gerd Conradt’s tracking shot of students running through the streets of West Berlin from 1968. Gmelin’s father had been one of those waving the flag, and the two-channel video loop directly reflects on Negri’s point. Lauren von Gogh conceptualizes a personal story, and reconstructs an everyday experience for the audience in order to create a social critique. Susanne Kriemann’s publications presented on a table include different strategies of recontextualizing the form of images; they are unique examples of experimenting on the format of publication and reading images. Makode Linde’s silk screen prints stimulate a contemporary critique of the history of culture and identity: logos from global sport industry delicately installed into the illustrative portraits of African figures remind us of the exploitation of labour. Christodoulos Panayiotou works with archives and personal memories of sound and image, recreating new dimensions in the perceptive levels of the audience through his installation. Borrowing the images from the world of exploration and discovery (in this instance, National Geographic) Rinus Van de Velde performs his artistic research through his charcoal drawings. There is also a video interview with Ulus Baker by Aras Özgün, What is an opinion? presented in the exhibition that opens a channel to the audience regarding the social process behind the construction of any opinion.
This discussion will be linked to the question: “how does any form of artistic reconstruction develop a level of criticality through its production process, and how does this criticality embody a public challenge?” within the framework of the exhibition, which is designed on the basis of Paul Virilio’s strategic methodology: “Play at being a critic. Deconstruct the game in order to play with it. Instead of accepting the rules, challenge and modify them. Without the freedom to critique and reconstruct, there is no truly free game: we are addicts and nothing more.” (from the interview with Paul Virilio by Jérôme Sans).
by Adnan Yıldız
* Like Time-Challenger the proposal for the exhibition There Is No Audience was also produced for an open call. That one was selected from 370 proposals, sent from 35 countries as Montehermoso 2009 Curator Grant.
with
GÖKÇEN CABADAN, ANDRÉ CATALÃO, ASLI ÇAVUŞOĞLU, OLOF DREIJER, FELIX GMELIN, LAUREN VON GOGH, ROMEO GONGORA, SUSANNE KRIEMANN, MAKODE LINDE, CHRISTODOULOS PANAYIOTOU, RINUS VAN DE VELDE, VIRON VERT AND A VIDEO INTERVIEW WITH ULUS BAKER BY ARAS ÖZGÜN
CURATED BY ADNAN YILDIZ
OPENING ON SUNDAY 21.06.09
FROM 11:00 UNTIL 18:00
A TOUR BY THE CURATOR ADNAN YILDIZ AT 15:00
PERFORMANCE BY LAUREN VON GOGH AT 15:30
Time-Challenger was born as an exhibition proposal for the open call of the Curator Curator project, which is a collaborative organization between Enough Room for Space from Rotterdam and HISK, a post-graduate program currently located in Ghent. The original proposal was based on the idea of opening a space-time for a discussion of how artistic reconstruction has been operating today through diverse conceptual approaches and contextual references in relation to current image politics. Recently, there have been numerous exhibition projects addressing artistic re-enactments, remakes, reproductions, and reinterpretations …Time-Challenger takes into consideration the art historical and analytical framework of these projects while taking a different direction by connecting the discussion to Antonio Negri’s concept of the “reconstruction of hope.” Just after the proposal was selected by Enough Room for Space, I did a research visit to the exhibition space and engaged in discussion with the residents of the studios and post-graduate students there during the Open Studio Week. Finally, the proposal has been crystallized by these discussions and aspects of the artistic production at HISK and has now turned into an exhibition about critical reconstruction. The term “critical reconstruction” is borrowed from Gary Wolf (Venture Kapital, Wired Magazine, 1998) who writes about the reconstruction of Berlin following the fall of the Berlin Wall. Coincidentally, or perhaps as a sign of Zeitgeist, this proposal was completed in Berlin’s Kreuzberg neighbourhood, the site of much of the most dynamic reconstruction in Berlin since 1989.
In Seven Easy Pieces (2005), Marina Abramovic acts out select historical performance artworks from 1970’s artists (such as Vito Acconci, Joseph Beuys etc.) including two of her own. The series of performances at Guggenheim Museum (New York) sharpened the tendency of questioning the timing of re-enactments, remakes and reinterpretations etc. in the art world. In an interview in the New York Times in early November, 2005, Abramovic explained the impetus for her most recent performances, stating that she “felt a strong need to preserve the memory of performances that influenced [her] as an artist. ‘There’s nobody to keep the history straight ... I feel almost, like, obliged. I felt like I have this function to do it.’ And this sense only grew stronger when she began to see ideas behind many important performances borrowed with no credit given, or appropriated by advertising and fashion.”
Many artists today have been using similar approaches and strategies of reinterpreting ar t history as well as transforming world history and culture. Rather than framing the discussion as a form of artistic production through an art historical perspective, Time-Challenger aims to deal with the timing of these productions to relate these tendencies to the repositioning of contemporary politics, image culture and digital-visual capital. As an exhibition about critical reconstruction, Time-Challenger reformulates the critique as an open-ended process of personalizing the situation, performing artistic know into a synthesis of many perspectives. To make things public, there always needs to be a personal position. The process of making things public in contemporary art practice not only brings together art works but also makes dialogues visible in order to create a physical experience for potential interactions.
To deal with the monsterous experience of global capital, Antonio Negri proposes the term “reconstruction of hope” in his Time for Revolution (2005): “how can a revolutionary subjectivity form itself within the multitude of producers? How can this multitude make a decision of resistance and rebellion? How can it develop a strategy of re-appropriation? How can the multitude lead a struggle for the self-government of itself?” He responds to these questions through reconstructing hope: “In the biopolitical postmodern, in this phase that sees the transformation and productive enrichment of labour-power, but on the other hand sees the capitalist exploitation of society as a whole, we thus pose these questions. As for the answers, I certainly do not possess them. But ... probably a few bricks toward the reconstruction of hope (or better, as in Alma Venus, dystopia) have been laid. (144-45).” Time-Challenger shares a common conceptual ground with the exhibition project, There is no audience, an exhibition about public imagination (22.05.09-30.08.09, Montehermoso, Spain) and focuses on the same terms on a different level.* Here, Time-Challenger is more interested in the possibility of reformulating the discussion of artistic reconstruction in relation to the political atmosphere of our time and integrating the strategy of reconstructing hope into the process.
Through rethinking modernism, Time-Challenger will display some artistic reconstructions that challenge pre-given definitions and realities of our past and present time — related the problematic of timing. In the exhibition, Gökçen Cabadan displays paintings that depict contemporary visions of family and health and transform the ready-made images at an abstract level of reconstructive criticality. Developing a conceptual identity and an expressive quality, Viron Vert’s drawings and collages include elements of history and culture through personal memories and attachments. Aslı Çavuşoğlu’s video A Turkish Doctor: Ömer Ayhan ironically fictionalizes a success story reflecting the power of the media over content via an evening news program. Romeo Gongora’s Prison is composed of monologues from four prisoners and establishes a critical dialogue on society and models of justice (punitive/rehabilitative). By using a level of abstraction through ready-made images and painting, André Catalão’s installation is a reflection of the artist’s cultural memory. Olof Dreijer’s sound installation is composed of animal sounds and provides a fictional space through reconstructing the perception of nature and the elements of evolution.
As an unforgettable gesture, Felix Gmelin’s Farbtest II, Die Rote Fahne, Colour Test II, The Red Flag is composed of the original shot and the remake of Gerd Conradt’s tracking shot of students running through the streets of West Berlin from 1968. Gmelin’s father had been one of those waving the flag, and the two-channel video loop directly reflects on Negri’s point. Lauren von Gogh conceptualizes a personal story, and reconstructs an everyday experience for the audience in order to create a social critique. Susanne Kriemann’s publications presented on a table include different strategies of recontextualizing the form of images; they are unique examples of experimenting on the format of publication and reading images. Makode Linde’s silk screen prints stimulate a contemporary critique of the history of culture and identity: logos from global sport industry delicately installed into the illustrative portraits of African figures remind us of the exploitation of labour. Christodoulos Panayiotou works with archives and personal memories of sound and image, recreating new dimensions in the perceptive levels of the audience through his installation. Borrowing the images from the world of exploration and discovery (in this instance, National Geographic) Rinus Van de Velde performs his artistic research through his charcoal drawings. There is also a video interview with Ulus Baker by Aras Özgün, What is an opinion? presented in the exhibition that opens a channel to the audience regarding the social process behind the construction of any opinion.
This discussion will be linked to the question: “how does any form of artistic reconstruction develop a level of criticality through its production process, and how does this criticality embody a public challenge?” within the framework of the exhibition, which is designed on the basis of Paul Virilio’s strategic methodology: “Play at being a critic. Deconstruct the game in order to play with it. Instead of accepting the rules, challenge and modify them. Without the freedom to critique and reconstruct, there is no truly free game: we are addicts and nothing more.” (from the interview with Paul Virilio by Jérôme Sans).
by Adnan Yıldız
* Like Time-Challenger the proposal for the exhibition There Is No Audience was also produced for an open call. That one was selected from 370 proposals, sent from 35 countries as Montehermoso 2009 Curator Grant.
25
May 09
Asli Cavusoglu 2009-05-25 19:41:00
Interview. 2 years ago with Nisa Ari. Somewhere in Moda.
22
May 09
Pist Protta 63 is OUT NOW!
Pist Protta* is an art magazine based in Copenhagen, which has been publishing since 1981. Over 60 PP issues have been published so far. The format of the magazine is different from issue to issue: the typeface, the binding, the printing techniques – PP sometimes has handmade linocut covers, sometimes hand binding.
PP is a space for exhibiting work and invites people to make pieces specifically for its publication.
Recently I was invited to be the contributing editor for the upcoming edition of Pist Protta run by Åse Eg Jørgensen, Jesper Rasmussen, and Jesper Fabricius who is the founding director of the magazine who also runs an artists’ book publishing house named Space Poetry.
The idea of this of PP edition evolves out of an experience I once had. One day I bought a cheap martial arts magazine and as I began to unwrap its plastic cover, I saw there were other magazines inserted, which were totally irrelevant from each other. None of the excerpts of the magazines had nor endings or beginnings. Stemming from this experience, PP will be with a layout in which each participation/booklet interferes with the other.
Every booklet/book/magazine, which will be made by different artists/curators, would be an accomplished piece in itself.
The project could be considered as an alternative to page-limited collaborations and will consist of these independent/accomplished pieces. The participants will determine the number of the pages, the graphic design or the type of the paper for each booklet.
Aside from PP’s usual issue, there will be 5 booklets inserted in the last pages of PP. At the end of each booklet there will be another one starting. The group of individuals have been selected upon their experience working with the book format and ideas of edition. The results are expected to be manifold and heterogeneous in character.

Participants:
Jennifer Teets (Curator, US/Mexico City)
Perros Negros/Pazmaker (Artists Initiative, Mexico City)
Mark Aerial Waller (Artist, UK)
Aslı Çavuşoğlu (Artist, TR)
Mode/Selde (Artist Publication, Argentina)
*http://www.spacepoetry.dk/tids.php
21
May 09
INTERFERENCIA




Museum of Health Sciences, Carrera 9 N° 9 – 63, Bogota, Colombia
28 May - 7 June 2009
Open from Tuesday to Sunday from 10.00 am - 5.00 pm
Private view: Wednesday 27 May, from 6.00 pm
www.zonares.org/interferencia (under construction)
Curated by Irene Aristizábal
Interferencia is a group exhibition conceived translating the idea of silence as an allegory of cognitive processes. This exhibition brings together the work of three Colombian and six International artists using film, installation, drawing, text and sound.
Creating a distorted perception of visual images and time, the works presented in Interferencia unravel into a heterogenic and arrhythmic environment fluctuating between real and dreamlike situations.
Unnoticed, silenced, marginalised and invisible details or situations represent an indefinite landscape within which the participating artists explore the possibilities of the materiality of time. The exhibition space will be punctuated by ideas of cancellation, expansion, compression, superposition, cacophony, silence, and noise.
The artists participating in Interferencia are allsopp&weir (UK), Mauricio Bejarano (COL), Pia Borg (AU), Asli Cavusoglu (TR), Jose Filipe Costa (POR), Lamarche-Ovize (FR), Juan Sebastián Suanca (COL), Luis Carlos Tovar (COL) y Mark Aerial Waller (UK).
The Museum of Health Sciences is located in the headquarters of the Colombian Academy of History, in the heart of Bogota’s historic centre. The museum’s with a very curious collection, temporarily hosts the exhibition Interferencia, as hidden stage where historic memory appears renovated through the works on show.
more info here.
17
Mar 09
Kein Ding

ACC Weimar, Germany
4 April – 31 May, 2009
Aslı Çavuşoğlu (Türkei)
Muhammad Zeeshan (Pakistan)
Hagen Betzwieser (Deutschland)
Kein Ding means 'No Problem', but it literary means 'No thing'. The 14th international residency program (2008) which I participated was about On Indefiniteness.

Here are some works I showed there:
You are about to turn the lights off somewhere in the city

An electric button installed in one room can turn off/on the light of a lamppost in the street. Since the room doesn't have any window people cannot see the real act.
In Patagonia after Bruce Chatwin

The book was printed again for the show. both in English and German.
you can read it here.
I don't understand why there are people who are making the slogans illegible instead of just over-painting them

The slogans written on the street walls by left-wing people would usually be smudged by the right-wing ones right in the evening of the very day they were written. Instead of over-painting the slogans, they make the letters illegible by countless lines drawn over them. The afford they make seems very bizarre.

2 new artists' books I made in Argentina
The Man who wants nothing at all

The World Clock
8
Feb 09
The Recession Special in honor of Gray’s Papaya or what about seemingly nothing.
CCA / Curatorial Practice / seminar April 13-16 / Jennifer Teets
What does "nothing" matter, after all, in today's art making and curating? And if we propose dialectically that nothing matters, what tactics of invisibility-visibility (in both art and its integration into the public arena), structures of nothing, empty–sets, lightness, bankruptcy, voids, the tangible/spatial virtual exist to effectively produce "something"?
How is the transition from “nothing” to “something” executed in art practice and exhibition making today?
Seemingly nothingness will be illustrated via films, through artist contributions via images and texts, exhibition models and scientific, philosophical, and musical annotations. Practically, the end result will be an attempt to co-visualize an experience, event, situation, or “curatorial” structure that provides a feasible means for growth or manifestation from an apparatus of seemingly nothing. A strong emphasis will be placed on the interweaving of this in the public ground. Hypothetical proposals will be documented via the CCA website.
On the third day, a collective mediation experience will be held at a vaporous ruin, namely the Sutro Baths with solicited contributions by France Fiction (France), Darius Miksys (Lithuania), and Asli Cavusoglu (Turkey).
What does "nothing" matter, after all, in today's art making and curating? And if we propose dialectically that nothing matters, what tactics of invisibility-visibility (in both art and its integration into the public arena), structures of nothing, empty–sets, lightness, bankruptcy, voids, the tangible/spatial virtual exist to effectively produce "something"?
How is the transition from “nothing” to “something” executed in art practice and exhibition making today?
Seemingly nothingness will be illustrated via films, through artist contributions via images and texts, exhibition models and scientific, philosophical, and musical annotations. Practically, the end result will be an attempt to co-visualize an experience, event, situation, or “curatorial” structure that provides a feasible means for growth or manifestation from an apparatus of seemingly nothing. A strong emphasis will be placed on the interweaving of this in the public ground. Hypothetical proposals will be documented via the CCA website.
On the third day, a collective mediation experience will be held at a vaporous ruin, namely the Sutro Baths with solicited contributions by France Fiction (France), Darius Miksys (Lithuania), and Asli Cavusoglu (Turkey).
10
Jan 09
Asli Cavusoglu 2009-01-10 02:32:00
Avusturyali yazar Thomas Bernhard, su an adini hatirlayamadigim bir kitabinda soyle der: "Birazcik vicdani olan bir insan sabah uyandiginda kusma istegi duyar."
Israil´in Gazze katliamina basladigi gunden beri sabah-ogle-aksam baska birsey hissetmek mumkun degil.
Guillotining Gaza
Israil´in Gazze katliamina basladigi gunden beri sabah-ogle-aksam baska birsey hissetmek mumkun degil.
Guillotining Gaza




