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Tag Archives: Ali Kazma

Ali Kazma’dan ‘engellemeler’

Videolarından oluşan ‘Engellemeler’ sergisinde sanatçı Ali Kazma, “kaosla düzen, yaşamla ölüm arasındaki gergin dengeyi” irdeliyor ÇAĞDAŞ sanat sahnesinin bilindik isimlerinden, video işleriyle tanınan Ali Kazma’nın ‘Engellemeler/Obstructions‘ başlıklı kişisel sergisi, İstanbul’daki Yapı Kredi Kazım Taşkent Sanat Galerisi’nde sürüyor. Küratörlüğünü Emre Baykal’ın yaptığı sergide, sanatçının 2005 yılından bu yana yaptığı çalışmalardan oluşan bir video seçkisi sanatseverlerle buluşuyor.  Full Article…

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art-in-berlin


Nicht einfach, die Welt in 90 Tagen zu retten, TANAS Berlin

(Einspieldatum: 18.12.2009)

TANAS Berlin

Der Weg zur Tate Modern ist steinig. Der schmale Pfad führt durch karge Gebirgslandschaften, fernab von jeglicher Zivilisation, zwischen Bauern, Bächen und Felsen.

Sener Özmen und Erkan Özgen, zwei türkische Gegenwartskünstler, wandern in ihrem Film „Road to Tate Modern“ (2003) als Don Quijote und Sancho Pansa mit Stock und Esel durch den „wilden Balkan“. Ihr Ziel: Das bekannteste Museum für Moderne Kunst Europas.
Nicht die Tate Modern, aber der Projektraum „Tanas Berlin“ stellt derzeit Werke zeitgenössischer türkischer Künstler aus und beweist mit der Ausstellung „Nicht einfach, die Welt in 90 Tagen zu retten“, dass die Türkei keineswegs als künstlerisches Hinterland gelten kann. Mit dieser Einschätzung sind die Ausstellungsmacher nicht allein. Auch in der Akademie der Künste und im Gropius-Bau scheint die türkische Kunstszene Einzug gefunden zu haben. Mit dem großangelegten Projekt „Istanbul Next Wave“ wird gleich in drei Ausstellungen Istanbul als neue Kunstmetropole gefeiert. René Block, der die Ausstellung für „Tanas“ kuratiert hat, versucht hingegen den Blick über die Grenzen der Metropole auszuweiten und junge, international noch unbekannte Kunstszenen aus Izmir, Ankara, Eskisehir und Diyarbakir mit einzubeziehen.
Die Türkei auf Tate-Modern-Kurs?

TANAS Berlin

Die Spannung zwischen Tradition und Moderne erscheint dabei in vielen der Fotografien und Videoarbeiten als das grundlegende Thema. „Free Kick“ (2005) von Cengiz Tekin zeigt einen Fußballer vor dem Freistoß. Vor ihm bilden kopftuchtragende Frauen, schnurrbärtige Männer und Kinder eine „Mauer“. Die Familie als Wächter von Tradition wird zur Einschränkung, zum Hindernis.
Auch der Film „Mirage“ (2009) von Halil Altindere spielt mit Brüchen und kontrastierenden Lebenswelten, wenn ein hagerer, einfach gekleideter Mann mit einem Bodybuilder konfrontiert wird. Oder wenn sechs betende und wild gestikulierende Bauern auf einer Traktorschaufel wie Kinder in einem Leiterwagen durch die Ackerlandschaft gekarrt werden. Die Gebete-murmelnden Köpfe wippen im Takt der Erschütterungen und wirken lächerlich altmodisch, während die Ausrichtung nach Mekka durch die Bewegung des Traktors ad absurdum geführt wird. Klischees von türkischer Tradition, Familie und Religion werden in diesen Arbeiten angekratzt. Es entsteht ein bröckelndes, zerrissenes Bild einer Türkei – kurz vor dem Freistoß.
Gelangweilt, fast mechanisch scheinen auch die uniformierten Männer in Servet Kocyigits Videoarbeit „shake it ´til it drops“ (2007) an eingefahrenen Traditionen festzuhalten. Zu orientalischer Musik schütteln sie mit lustlosen Mienen eine Bauchtänzerin hin und her – wobei der im Titel angekündigte „Fall“ ausbleibt.

Bodybuilder und Bauer, Fußballstar und Kopftuch – findet man die Realität der Türkei zwischen diesen Polen? Manche Bilder lassen die Gegensätzlichkeiten auf den ersten Blick plakativ erscheinen. Und dennoch, gerade das provokative Spiel mit den Klischees und deren Verwandlung in Karikaturen ist es, was diese Positionen so erfrischend macht: „Everything you heard about turkish men is true“, so bekennt Servet Kocyigits ironischer Schriftzug aus zusammengesetzten Garnrollen. „Everything you heard about turkish art is true“ – so könnte man den Satz umwandeln und gleichzeitig entlarven, dass wir kaum etwas über türkische Kunst wissen. Die Türkei als Hinterland der Gegenwartskunst, das den Weg zur Tate Modern mit Packeseln beschreitet, gibt es nicht. Und so führt uns die viel versprechende „Road to Tate Modern“ nicht nach London, sondern vielmehr direkt nach Diyarbakir.

Abbildung:
- Servet Kocyigit, Motherland, 2007
Courtesy: The artist, Copyright: Tanas Berlin
- Cengiz Tekin, Normalizasyon
C-Print auf Dibond, 150 x 200 cm
Courtesy: The artist, Copyright: Tanas Berlin

Künstlerliste:
Halil Altindere, Fikret Atay, Köken Ergun, Ali Kazma, Servet Kocyigit, Ahmet Ögüt, Erkan Özgen, Sener Özmen, Cengiz Tekin, Nasan Tur

Öffnungszeiten:
Di-Sa 11-18 Uhr

TANAS Berlin
Heidestraße 50
10557 Berlin

tanasberlin.de

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İstanbul’un orta yeri çağdaş sanat

Yeni yılda ‘kültür başkenti’ sıfatını taşımaya başlayacak olan İstanbul çağdaş sanatın farklı örneklerini sunan sergilere ev sehipliği yapacak

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Not easy to save the world in 90 days

image: Halil Altindere Mirage, 2008, C-Print auf Alu-Dibond, 80 x 120 cm
Not easy to save the world in 90 days
14/12/ – 13/3/2010
Opening:
December 12, 5 – 9 pm
Curator: René Block
Halil Altindere, Fikret Atay, Köken Ergun, Ali Kazma, Servet Kocyigit, Ahmet Ögüt, Erkan Özgen, Sener Özmen, Cengiz Tekin, Nasan Tur

Tanas
Heidestraße 50
10557 Berlin

http://www.tanasberlin.de/index.php

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In The Between

In The Between
From 9/10/2009 to 10/10/2009
Curated by Suzanne Egeran
Artists:
Hüseyin Alptekin, Peter Coffin, Martin Creed, Martha Friedman, Tom Friedman, Diana Al-Hadid, Ali Kazma, Christian Marclay, Iván Navarro, Ahmet Ögüt, Cerith Wyn Evans

First Floor, Passage Petit Champs
Istanbul
The exhibition will take place in the Beyoğlu District of Istanbul, on the first floor of a 19th century art nouveau building, and will coincide with the Istanbul Biennial. The space has been generously provided by Tabanlioğlu Architects

http://www.inthebetween.egeran.com/

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The National

Bridge over troubled water
Last Updated: October 02. 2008 2:57PM UAE / October 2. 2008 10:57AM GMT
Detail from Cindy Sherman’s Untitled FIlm Still #17, currently on display at Istanbul Modern’s Held Together With Water. Courtesy Cindy Sherman / Metro Pictures
As Istanbul Modern prepares to turn four, a new show finds it coming into its own. Kaelen Wilson-Goldie reports.
A city of 15 million people splayed over the joint between Europe and Asia, Istanbul boasts a thriving art scene replete with commercial galleries, public institutions, private museums, studios, residency programs, project spaces and a handful of serious art stars such as Kutlug Ataman and Haluk Akakçe. The international art world has deigned to recognise the city since 1987, when the Istanbul Biennial was born. Nonetheless and however absurd, Istanbul is still regarded as peripheral to the art world’s centres in Europe and North America. Among artists and curators, anxieties over occidental versus oriental influence persist. The exhibition Held Together with Water, on view at the Istanbul Museum of Modern Art until January 11, features two videos that confront these anxieties head on.
The first piece is Nil Yalter’s 1974 video La Femme sans tete ou la danse du Ventre (The Headless Woman or the Belly Dance). A groundbreaking work by a Turkish artist who was born in Cairo and has been based in Paris since the 1960s (a columnist for Turkey’s Today’s Zaman newspaper recently likened her art to a national treasure fit for the official archives), the piece frames the artist’s bare midriff as she uses a felt-tip pen to write passages from a text on eroticism in winding circles around her navel. When her skin is all but covered in ink, she begins to dance, oriental style, cleverly collapsing a set of competing clichés about the drive for women’s sexual liberation (in the West) and the desire for old-school exotic seduction (in the East).
The second piece is Sener Özmen and Cengiz Tekin’s uproarious 2004 video The Meeting or Bonjour Monsieur Courbet. Deliciously irreverent, the work presents three men who meet in a wasted rural landscape, insult one another and, in a final crescendo, exchange blows over ludicrous claims about realism, revolutionaries and the bourgeoisie. While Yalter’s piece skewers the feminine mystique, Özmen and Tekin’s playfully ridicules masculinity. Yet both works strike an important chord that situates the exhibition in a specific place and time.
Detail from Francesca Woodman’s Untitled (Providence, Rhode Island, 1975-1976/1997-2000). Courtesy George and Betty Woodman
Istanbul Modern, as the museum is widely known, turns four in December. It opened its doors to much fanfare in late 2004, when its inauguration was politically fast-tracked to coincide with the announcement that summit talks would soon take place on Turkey’s European Union membership bid. (Recip Tayyip Erdogan, the country’s prime minister, addressed the press amid the white walls of the newly minted museum.) Istanbul Modern is in many ways regarded today as a showcase for Turkey’s European ambitions, though it is notably not a state institution.
Many of Istanbul’s museums and art spaces are private initiatives backed by major banks – such as the Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Center and the Yapi Kredi Kazim Taskent Sanat Galerisi. Others are financed by corporations, holding companies or the estates of business tycoons – such as the Pera Museum (funded by the Koç family) and the Sakip Sabanci Museum (which organised Picasso in Istanbul, a 2005 exhibition billed as the first of its kind for a western artist in Turkey, and is currently hosting a blockbuster show on Salvador Dalí).
Istanbul Modern is inextricably linked to the Eczacibasi family, industrialists and cultural philanthropists who in 1973 established the Istanbul Foundational for Culture and Arts. In addition to Istanbul Modern, the foundation oversees the Istanbul Biennial, several jazz, film and theatre festivals and a series of smaller, more intimate cultural events. The Eczacibasi family prised Istanbul Modern’s venue from the state – a boxy, 8,000 square metre space in a former customs warehouse that edges the bustling Bosporus. But it financed thebuilding’s $5 million (Dh18.3m) renovation alone.
Though Istanbul’s relationship to other cities in the Middle East is far from straightforward, the museum is an interesting case study for arts initiatives emerging elsewhere in the region. The current exhibition – which is bolstered by an enjoyable if fairly lightweight photography show (Human Conditions, featuring the Turkish artists Sitki Kösemen, Süreyya Yilmaz Dernek and Ergün Turan), a weightier video program (The City Rises, pairing the Turkish video artists Ali Kazma and Fikret Atay with vintage works by the Polish artist Zbig Rybczynski) and a film series dedicated to Tilda Swinton – is an opportunity to assess its achievements.
Held Together with Water features 116 works by 39 artists and retrieves much of its material from the vault that was 1970s feminism. There are examples of body art, performance art, video art and a slew of gender-bending experiments in which women photograph themselves as men and vice versa. There are rarely-shown works by well-known artists such as Cindy Sherman, Valie Export, Suzy Lake and Eleanor Antin alongside masterpieces by less-known artists such as Birgit Jürgenssen and Francesca Woodman.
Held Together with Water offers a glimpse of Cindy Sherman’s early efforts, such as the 16-milometer silent film Doll Clothes and several photographic series made before the artist’s landmark Untitled Film Stills. It sets feminist art in context rather than considering it in isolation. Named for a floor sculpture by Lawrence Weiner that is skillfully installed at the entrance to the show, Held Together with Water balances a certain intellectual austerity (Bernd and Hilla Becher, Gordon Matta-Clark, Fred Sandback) with a lightness of touch (a nine-channel video of Francis Alÿs tumbling over a stray dog in Mexico City) and subversive street cred (Nan Goldin’s gritty imagery, David Wojnarowicz’s Arthur Rimbaud in New York series).
The exhibition ponders the ways in which feminists, conceptualists and urban interventionists all broke with traditional methods of art-making such as painting and sculpting. It considers how these cracks and fractures extend from the 1970s to the present day. And it explores the critical turns that photography in particular has taken over nearly four decades.
Still, it is worth noting that Held Together with Water is as much a corporate merger as an artistic enterprise. All of the works in the show come from a collection that was established by Austria’s leading electricity company, Verbund, in 2004 (Philipp Kaiser of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles and Marc-Olivier Wahler from Paris’ Palais de Tokyo sit on the Verbund collection’s board of advisors). Last year, Verbund entered into a joint venture with Turkey’s Sabanci Holding, and each company now holds a 50 per cent stake in EnerjiSA, which aims to acquire a ten per cent share in the Turkish electricity sector and hopes to be a player in a privatization process. So Held Together with Water, which represents the first public presentation of the Verbund collection outside of Austria, may be most cynically viewed as a signing bonus. This could be seen as cause for lamentation over the insidious intermingling of commerce and culture, but the collection is too strong for that. More generously, the exhibition might be a model for private sector involvement in the arts.
Levent Çalikoglu, Istanbul Modern’s chief curator, writes rather passionately in the exhibition catalogue about how Held Together with Water epitomises the museum’s mission, which is to promote Turkish modern art, introduce Turkey to contemporary international art and forge meaningful links between the two. Istanbul Modern’s previous exhibitions, eclectic to say the least, haven’t always been so effective. But it seems that the museum is somehow, somewhat, on the right track.
Recent changes in the creative and administrative staff, however, raise a few red flags. When Istanbul Modern first opened, Rosa Martinez was the museum’s chief curator. She organised 16 exhibitions in three years. A Spanish curator with considerable art world clout – she has organised countless high-profile biennials from Sao Paulo to Venice – Martinez has been heavily involved in Istanbul’s contemporary art scene since the late 1990s. In 2007, David Elliott, a British curator who held previous posts at Modern Art Oxford and the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo – joined her as Istanbul Modern’s new director. In interviews, he outlined a vision for the museum over a three-year tenure. But by the end of last year, both Martinez and Elliott were gone. Elliott reportedly resigned over a dispute with Oya Eczacibasi regarding the permanent collection (Oya Eczacibasi chairs Istanbul Modern’s board of directors, and a substantial portion of the museum’s permanent collection was donated, of course, by the Eczacibasi family). Now Elliott is on deck to curate the next Sydney Biennale. Istanbul Modern, meanwhile, has no director.
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Ali Kazma



Ali Kazma,
sunum&söyleşi presentation&talk
12 Nisan Cumartesi On Saturday 12 April
14:00 at 2:00 p.m

5533
IMC 5. Blok
no:5533
Unkapani / Istanbul

ALI KAZMA
“dexterity of mind/hand/eye
creates highly refined finished products”
.

Born in 1971 in Istanbul, Ali Kazma graduated from Robert College in 1989. In 1993, he completed his undergraduate studies in the United States. After briefly studying photography in London, in 1995 he returned to the United States to study film. He received his MA from the The New School in New York City where he worked between 1995 and 1998 as a teaching assistant. In 2000 he returned to Istanbul, opened a film production company, and between 2001 and 2003 taught part time at Bilgi University. After settling in Istanbul, he has produced not only art films, but also commercial products and a full-length documentary. Among others, he has exhibited his work in 7th International Istanbul Biennial (2001), Tokyo Opera City (2001), Platform Garanti Center for Contemporary Art (Istanbul, 2003), Cetinje Biennial (2004), Istanbul Modern (2004), 2nd Istanbul Pedestrian Exhibition (2005), 9th Havana Biennial (Cuba, 2006), San Francisco Art Institute (2006), 10th International Istanbul Biennial (2007), and has opened a solo exhibition at the Francesca Minini Via Massimiano (Italy, 2008). Presently, three of his videos are being shown on Istiklal Caddesi, Beyoglu, in a group show, “Oditoryumda Sanat” sponsored by the Vehbi Koc Foundation.

During the 10th International Istanbul Biennial, Kazma presented an installation consisting of four videos, Ceramist Studio (2007), Clock Master (2006), Brain Surgeon (2006), and Slaughterhouse (2007), projected simultaneously side by side in the bottom floor of IMC. Unlike most of the other video work shown in IMC as a part of the “World Factory”, Kazma’s videos were optimistic. In contrast to many of the other films shown, he did not choose work places using informal labor. He did not show exploitation or poor working conditions.
At the “Oditoryumda Sanat” exhibition he is exhibiting again Brain Surgeon (2006) and Slaughterhouse (2007) while showing Jean Factory (2008) for the first time in Istanbul. Jean Factory emphasizes the detail and craftsmanship used to produce the seemingly simple jean hanging in shops around the world. Every crease, every wrinkle, every gradation of color is highly thought out and calculated. In his seemingly obsessive exploration of contemporary human production and activity, he also made Rolling Mills (2007), showing a steel factory and Household Goods Factory (2008), a film about a factory in Italy owned by Alessi . This series of films cannot be seen as documentary and socioeconomic issues surface only indirectly. The films consist of a series of close-ups, fragments, and glances at sophisticated use of skills. While highly sophisticated technology is present, the skilled hand is still important. In his videos, the gruesome becomes beautiful and the mundane becomes complicated. While viewing highly skilled workers in different contemporary environments, we are reminded of the subtle aesthetic and technical skills required to produce a contemporary high quality work of art. All require dexterity of mind/hand/eye, and ability for cutting/sewing/reshaping, to make a highly refined finished product, a masterpiece. All the places and activities chosen share almost allusive similarities even though they are totally unique.
Marcus Graf, Volkan Aslan, and Nancy Atakan are pleased to have Ali Kazma as a guest on April 12 at 2:00 p.m. at 5533. We find it significant for him to return to IMC and make a presentation about his artistic viewpoint, discuss his artistic practice, and explain the direction his most recent work is taking.

Nancy Atakan
April, 2008

Ali Kazma
5533 te Sunum
‘Zihin, göz ve el becerisiyle
yaratılan sofistike üretim’

1971 İstanbul doğumlu Ali Kazma, 1989 yılında Robert Lisesi’nden mezun oldu. 1993 yılında ABD’de lisans eğitimini tamamladı. Londra’da kısa bir süre fotoğraf eğitim aldıktan sonra 1995 yılında tekrar ABD’ye film eğitimi almak için döndü. 1995-1998 yılları arasında New York’ta The New School’da master programıyla eş zamanlı öğretim elemanı olarak görev yaptı. 2000 Yılında İstanbul’a dönerek film yapım şirketini kurdu. 2001-2003 yılları arasında misafir öğretim görevlisi olarak Bilgi Üniversitesi’nde ders verdi. İstanbul’a yerleştikten sonra sanatsal filmlerinin yanı sıra kendi kurduğu yapım şirketinde belgeseller ve reklam filmleri çekti. 7. Uluslar arası İstanbul Bienali (2001), Tokyo Opera Şehir (2001) Platform Garanti Çağdaş Sanat Merkezi (2003), Cetinje Bienali (2004), İstanbul Modern (2004), 2. İstanbul Yaya Sergileri (2005), 90. Havana Bienali (2006), San Francisco Sanat Enstitüsü (2006), 10. İstanbul Bienali (2007) ve kişisel sergi Francesca Mimini Via Massimiano İtalya (2008) Ali Kazma’nın katıldığı sergilerden bazıları. Bu ay içerisinde İstanbul’da Vehbi Koç Vakfı’nın desteklediği “Oditoryumda Sanat” başlıklı projede üç çalışması gösterilmektedir.

10.Uluslararası İstanbul Bienali’e Ali Kazma İMÇ’de Seramik Atölyesi (2007), Saat Tamircisi (2006), Beyin Cerrahı (2006) ve Mezbaha (2007) isimli dört video yerleştirmesi ile katılmıştır. “Oditoryumda Sanat” başlıklı sergiye ise Beyin Cerrahı, BlueJean Fabrikası (2008) ve Mezbaha ile katılmıştır. Ali Kazma videolarında çağdaş insanın üretim ve aktivitelerini tutkulu bir şekilde ve derinlemesine araştırır. Bu araştırma serisi bir belgesel değildir. Toplumsal ve ekonomik konuları dolaylı bir şekilde ele alır. 10. İstanbul Bienali sırasında İMÇ’ de “Dünya Fabrikası” başlığı altında sunulan çoğu eserin tersine, Ali Kazma’nın video eserleri iyimser olup, sunduğu dört film kötü çalışma koşulları ve sömürü ile ilişkili değildir.

Filmlerinde yakın çekimler, parçalanmış sahneler, ani geçişler ve sofistike beceriler görülür. İleri teknolojinin imkanları ve el becerisi Ali Kazma filmlerinde yan yanadır. İtici, iğrenç ve korkunç sahneleri güzelleştirdiği gibi basit olanın da çok karmaşık olduğunu gösterir. Ali Kazma’nın filmlerinde insan, el becerisi ve teknolojinin yardımıyla güzel bir ürün yaratırken eş zamanlı olarak sanatçı da aynı yöntemle sofistike filmlerini ortaya çıkarır. Hem sanatçı hem de filmlerinde bulunan figurler zihin, göz ve el becerilerini kullanarak keser, birleştirir ve bitirir. Sonuç olarak her ikisi de ortaya bir eser çıkartır. Filmlerde seçilen mekan ve eylemler eşsiz olmalarına rağmen derin bir benzerlik ve birlikteliği içerirler.

5533 adına sanat mekaninda, Marcus Graf, Volkan Aslan ve Nancy Atakan, 12 Nisan Cumartesi saat 14:00’te sanatçı Ali Kazma’yı ağırlamaktan mutluluk duyar. 10. İstanbul Bienali sırasında da İMÇ’de bulunan Ali Kazma’nın bu mekana geri dönerek yeni projelerinden bahsedecek ve video sunumu yapacak olmasını 5533 olarak anlamlı buluyoruz.

Nancy Atakan
Nisan, 2008

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