The artists discussed on these pages were all born or
currently reside in Turkey, and have been brought together
for an upcoming exhibition in Seoul. However, although they
originate from the same nation, their work neither forms
a whole nor constitutes a unified and meaningful context.
Rather, it distorts expectations by not clinging to the idea
of national identity. What the artists have in common is that
their approach to art communicates different insights or
communicates insights differently. An artistic intervention
can be political by modifying the visible – the ways of perceiving
and expressing it (see Jacques Rancière, The Politics
of Aesthetics, New York 2004) – and in this sense their work
aims not only to reveal the palpable and visible political
aspects, but also the more subtle and invisible ones.
Taking man’s relationship with architecture and nature,
industrialisation, modernity and the discontents of modernity
as his point of departure, Emre Hüner utilises drawing,
animation and video as his medium. His critique of modernity
is preoccupied with the linear progression of history. An
array of source material is drawn from the Internet, found
photographs and books. Panoptikon, 2005,
an 11-minute video animation, consists of
an archive of objects drawn separately on
paper and brought together in a digital
environment by applying two-dimensional
animation techniques. When images unfold
with little linear logic in a dream-like association,
the viewer is invited to study the socalled
developments of rationalist modern
society, thus also the evolution of modern
science, the modern military machine or the
aesthetics of modern architecture. Panoptikon’s rich and
cryptic imagery and visual texture are inspired by Ottoman
miniatures and medieval anatomical drawings as well as the
work of experimental filmmakers. The work borrows its title
from Michel Foucault’s appropriation of a model prison to
describe the theory of surveillance in modern society.
While Hüner focuses on the discontents of modernity,
Ali Kazma’s video works monitor man’s need for order. This
need, as reproduced in the artist’s work, can be found in
manual labour as well as in the arts and sciences. The juxtaposition
of creative labour with unskilled manual labour
reconfigures the practices. Obstructions, 2005-2008, is an
ongoing video series in which the artist films diverse sites
of production, creation, repairs and maintenance, such
as a household goods factory, a clockmaker’s workshop
and an artist’s studio. Kazma foregrounds the need for
order by obsessively following a process, and in doing so
resembles the meticulous observation of process typically displayed by 1960s’ conceptual artists. In Kazma’s work
this is transformed into the aesthetical analysis of labour:
formal aspects direct the content. An everyday household
object and the excessive effort involved in its production is
made explicit in Kazma’s videos. The different combinations
of the videos, such as the household goods factory
with the clockmaker’s workshop, unveil a set of different
meanings.
Banu Cennetoglu’s interest in uncertainty and the
ambiguity of images leads her to photograph spaces that
are relatively transitory and unstable, and to question the
potential of their inherent uncertainty. The sense of ambiguity
is amplified by the installations themselves: because
the viewer cannot grasp them in their totality, the viewing
experience is automatically made more conscious. Are
there any palm trees in Grozny?, 2005, is a series of photographs
in video format set in locations that include a beach
club, the Turkish State Railways Recreation Camp and an
army barracks. The piece records uncertain and ambiguous
developments solely by observing this very peculiar juxtaposition.
The effect of surveillance predominates since
most of the photographs are taken from a distance. There
is a latent restlessness because everything looks quite
normal. Cennetoglu introduces a subtle but deep sense of
tension into the video by collecting and editing her material
without prioritising any of the sites.
Asli Cavusoglu’s work, on the other
hand, explores the disinformation that
is merged into the information of everyday
life. The fictitious sphere she creates
becomes a critical playground for
investigating commonly accepted notions
surrounding the fast circulation of information.
Using humour as a key strategy
in much of her work, she blurs the line
between fiction and fact, favouring fiction
as a more imaginative and creative way to
encourage thinking about her subject matter. Steve, Macy,
Gabriel, Michael, Donna, Ally and the Others, 2006, is an
installation consisting of 48 images borrowed from a databank
normally used for printing and advertising. She classifies
these images into three categories: beauty and health,
business, and relationships. After re-painting these generic
images, Cavusoglu juxtaposes them with bizarre individual
stories that bear no relation to their original premise. The
work deconstructs images that have long been instrumental
in seducing consumers with simple solutions of eternal
beauty, youth and success, and questions their usual
associations.
Disinformation in everyday life is also an interest of
Isil Egrikavuk, who recently graduated in performing arts.
Her practice is based on deconstructing, questioning and
reconstructing information linguistically and visually on
an everyday basis via performance, video and writing. She
also blurs the border between fiction and reality. Snapshot, 2007, for instance, was a performative project which investigated
reality, the reporting of reality and thus the making
of history. The artist turned a Chicago gallery into a
newsroom where selected headlines from the US press were
removed from their proper historical and geographical context
and re-situated. The audience was asked to choose a
headline and complete the news story for themselves, being
as fictional as they liked. The collected stories were then
read by two real-life Chicago anchors. The project aimed to
challenge the reporting methods of the mainstream media
and “democratise” the reporting function through audience
participation.
Egrikavuk’s performative gestures are closely related
to the work of artist collective Ha za vu zu. Here, the artists
craft their mode of expression by constructing situations
with individuals and groups of individuals with whom they
forge convivial relations – much in the way of situational
aesthetics. The interdisciplinary nature of their practice
is not only revealed in their oscillation between performance,
music and video; it also extends to these collaborative
situations, which necessarily demand they constantly
switch roles between the creator, director and performer,
thereby constantly negotiating power relationships. In the
performance Our Teeth Will Be Snow White, 2007, fragmented
words and sentences were projected onto a collage
of media images. The sound of the deconstructed words was
used to prioritise the basic act of communication, liquidating
the discursive element of language. Orchestrated by Ha
za vu zu, the performances were highly rehearsed, leaving
no room for improvisation. There was thus an incongruity
between the cacophonic, quasi-connotative, accessible
sounds and exclamations, and the amount of preparation
involved in the performances.
All art begins with a critique: a critique of the self, the
self as a reflection of society. In this context, Asli Sungu’s
video works are a subtle comment on the projected expectations
of others on the individual. In order to reflect on
this weighty burden, the artist starts from the inner self.
She is usually the protagonist of her videos, for which she
braves disappointing experiences. Her double video installation
Just Like Mother, Just Like Father, 2006, illustrates
her parents’ projections of their desires of how she should
be. The artist asks both parents, individually, to dress her,
make her up and do her hair as they would wish. The disparity
between the artist’s own style and the two different
styles chosen by her parents is striking. By highlighting
the projected expectations within a family milieu, she comments
on diverse projections on the individual in the social
context.
Investigations into socio-behavioural patterns are also
a recurring feature of Nasan Tur’s works, which utilise photography,
video, installations, performance and interventions.
Tur’s interventions, which he or other protagonists
perform, concentrate on planned but unusual acts. They
usually take place in a public space and need the viewer’s
active participation to generate meaning. His work can be
seen as a proposition to imagine and realise the implausible,
when the daily routine of things becomes interrupted or
expanded endlessly. Backpacks, 2007, is a work composed
of several backpacks, each filled with tools appropriate for
public speaking, cooking, demonstrations, sabotage and for
fans as the artist classifies them. Tur puts the materials at
the audience’s disposal and allows them to decide by themselves
how to use the backpacks. While the packs stand as
objects in the exhibition space, it is their utilisation by the
audience that brings them to life.
Deferring the habitual
The visions of eight Turkish artists, featuring in an exhibition in Seoul, portray a multifaceted reality that strays from the usual canons of their national identity. Text Pelin Uran.
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- 04 December 2008