Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Bufferzone: Checkpoint


Bufferzone: Checkpoint exhibition is hosted at Depo, Istanbul



http://www.depoistanbul.net/en/activites_detail.asp?ac=96

pick nick projects
pick nick projects featuring Hüseyin Yilmaz
Hüseyin Yilmaz
Sümer Sayın 


       



Hasan Aksaygin
pick nick projects featuring Hüseyin Yilmaz

Thursday, August 8, 2013


http://www.publicmirage.de

Philipp Rupp
Panayiotis Michael and Philipp Rupp

Philipp Rupp, Anna Heidenhain and Panayiotis Michael



Fata Morgana am Sonntag 11.08.2013 -Zelten mit Anna Heidenhain und Philipp Rupp auf dem Tempelhofer Feld und ein Spaziergang mit Pick Nick durch das gentrifizierte Nikosia.
Ab 16.00 gehts los!



Mirage: on Sunday 11.08.2013. Camping with Anna Heidenhain and Philip Rupp, and a walk through the gentrified zone with pick nick projects, Nicosia, on the Tempelhof field.
Starts from 16.00!

Saturday, October 13, 2012

the "U-A-W?" project

PICK NICK PROJECTS


A PHYSICAL PARTICIPATION          

THE "U-A-W?" TEMPORAL EVENT





Alkis Hadjiandreou, Panayiotis Michael, Maria Petrides

Urban event

pick nick projects as ‘wild greens’ (an urban event focusing on natural and urban surroundings which encompass the city’s inhabitants).
 notes on ‘wild greens’ -
 - tour walks along a selected path in the city where a horticulturist/botanist speaks about any trees/plants/flowers found on the way. A degree of serendipity is part of this tour’s theme so ‘stumbling’ upon nature, rather than following the order of a park’s path, liberates other experiences otherwise neglected.
-  a horticulturist/botanist from the Department of Environmental Science and Technology, or the Department of Agricultural Sciences, Biotechnology and Food Science will act as a guide for this walking tour. Emphasis will be placed on the social and cultural aspects of the life and history of plants/trees/flowers, etc, and on how the inhabitants in this tour respond to them, or not.

-     walking tours will occur twice for a single day


-    conceptual  framework: a kind of zooming into details that we don’t usually pay attention to while walking in the street, or, as a matter of fact, while driving. The idea here is about reclaiming the street by presenting these kinds of existing lives, which actively but silently take part in the natural, social and cultural history of the city. The tour will walk along these different kinds of urban layers. Practicing human awareness on an everyday level by way of the simple act of walking down the street, noticing and smelling flowers and plants, and learning about their history, can lead to other forms of becoming aware on the street, as for example, being inclusive of other people’s backgrounds, especially when foreign to our own experiences.

An outline of a location and time schedule will be sent to you in the following days.

REMOTE PARTICIPATION  The "U-A-W?" XS Installation


Microscape

A high definition small microphone will be placed in the “U-A-W?” baggage. The empty space inside the box – revealed by the lights of the exhibition room entering the baggage from the existing side holes – will be video projected on a larger screen. The microphone will collect all sounds, without any filtering, produced by people and activities during the exhibition. This soundscape, titled Microscape, will function as the soundtrack of the video and will be listened to via a pair of headphones (2 pairs will be available). In this sense, the strictly defined space of the box is treated as a canvas invested with multi-rhythmical sounds, noises, talking voices, body movements, suggesting that the city’s principal quality is the place – par excellence – of potential and unexpected encounters.


PICK NICK PROJECTS

For more information, please visit the website: www.urban-a-where.com

The opening of the exhibition is on Wednesday 17 October 2012, at 19:30, Kastelliotissa, Paphos Gate, Nicosia, Cyprus

Monday, July 23, 2012

Between critical times of “not knowing what to do”: (Spontaneous Storytelling) interventions and re-evaluations




One month after the obscure Tuesday morning of 9/11, John Berger writes in, ‘To Try and Understand’, the foreword to novelist, essayist and activist, Arundhati Roy’s, the algebra of infinite justice.I’m tempted to say that the world has never been more confused. Yet this would be untrue. The world has never had to face such a global confusion. Only in facing it can we make sense of what we have to do. And this is precisely what Arundhati Roy does in the pages which follow. She makes sense of what we have to do. Thereby offering an example. An example of what? Of being fully alive in our world, such as it is, and of getting close to listening to those for whom this world has become intolerable.’[1]  

Talking of her native India, Arundhati Roy makes a very strikingly vital and humane observation that seems to escape all realities where opportunist governments aim to keep citizens under hardhearted control. Following the order in 1998 of India’s then Prime Minister, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, to go ahead with the nuclear tests due to a ‘deteriorating security environment,’[2] Arundhati Roy brings crucial reminders from India to our attention. ‘We are a nation of a billion people… More than 400 million of our people are illiterate and live in absolute poverty, over 600 million lack even basic sanitation and over 200 million have no drinking water’[3], she tells us. Given these inhumane conditions, how can any consumption of destructive nuclear power or exorbitant bombs not amount to a criminal and unethical act committed in an age and world of deep crises, when eating and drinking clean water remains a real struggle for millions of people in only one country. For those of us living in countries where we still have enough food to eat and water to drink, we can wrestle harder to ‘get closer to listening to those for whom this world has become intolerable.’    

Ten years after 9/11, the big question of whether this overall confusion has settled in to our lives and created a deeper gap between ourselves and the systems we vote for, remains life-size. As global confusion and public opinion (c)rises, and, spontaneous narratives and artificial democracies spread out and root themselves, respectively, we search for new ways to collect our actions and connect our narratives with those most pushed out of the humane social conditions which keep us in the only world we have to live. My goal, here, is to show, and push, activist art-making, writing and intervening, which produce provoking and transforming truths that undermine media sources, and form a new field of aesthetic and critical action. Today, more than ever, we wonder what we should be doing to ‘get closer to listening to those for whom this world has become intolerable.’

Working with means, which communicate ideas and issues – whether with art, aesthetics, language and critical writing – holds us open to current challenges of the vast value of producing truths today. In a period of detrimentally high rates of unemployment, a phenomenal concentration of corporate greed, elevated levels of consumption beyond our means, increasingly excluding anti-immigration laws which, at best, keep the vulnerable on the fringes of society, a deeply unequal distribution of wealth and energy, and, high levels of distrust towards democratically elected governments[4], we are, more than ever, perhaps, called as responsible citizens of this world to re-evaluate how we produce truths, and, to keep on creating spaces from which to disseminate stories and transforming messages, capable of reaching large audiences worldwide.
Mitch Epstein, American Power, 2011 ("a five-year long, twenty-five state investigation of energy production and consumption in the American landscape, it questions the power of nature, government, corporations, and mass consumption in the United States."[5])

  Maria Petrides, on wall st., 2011

Maria Petrides, on wall st., 2011 (to watch a video made by Cypriot visual artist, Kakia Catselli and myself, in October 2011, during Occupy Wall St. visit http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XLJFf4r0S7g)


Writer, curator, editor and artist, Alfredo Cramerotti, in Aesthetic Journalism: How to Inform without Informing, talks about tracing a shift in the production of truth from the domain of the news media to that of art and aestheticism. He writes, ‘we no longer consider artists as specialized craftspeople: to produce sense socially and politically one has to abandon the idea of artisanship in favour of innumerable forms of expression, which include film festivals, newspapers, television, internet, radio and magazines’[6]. If every artist is a journalist, as the title of the Blowup Reader series[7] suggests, then our ongoing belief that ‘journalism is intended to be a service in the interest of the highest number of people possible’[8] can work its way imaginatively through infinite forms of visual and textual articulation, focusing on the importance of what art practice and research transforms, and not what it represents. With a real emphasis insistent on what artistic means can do rather than “be”, they bring us, I believe, ‘closer to listening to those for whom this world has become intolerable.’
Artists as intervening tellers of critical communication, and as reclaimed journalists, in the way that journalism ought to ‘comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable[9] was born in the 1960s. As media historian, critic and curator, Deirdre Boyle writes, ‘[This] was an auspicious time for the debut of portable video. The role of the artist as individualist and alienated hero was being eclipsed by a resurgence of interest in the artist’s social responsibility, and as art became politically and socially engaged, the distinctions between art and communication blurred. At first there were few distinctions between video artists and activists, and nearly everyone made documentary tapes.’[10]


On April 22, 2011, a year after the disastrous oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, art activist group  Liberate Tate protested against Tate’s sponsorship relationship with BP. Their intervention involved pouring charcoaled sunflower oil from “gas cans painted with the BP logo on them” over a third member’s naked body”. On the same day, 166 artists published a letter in the Guardian calling on Tate to end its sponsorship with BP.[11] To watch the documented video of the protest/performance, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4-vGbsBLKM


However, unlike the mid to end of the 20th century, this century has abundant means by which to re-tell its histories and stories, and to make its interventions, digital and physical postings, or direct actions. And it’s important that we have access to so many places from which to be inventive and truthful in speaking critically to the social injustices around us. American hacker-ethicist Steven Levy in discussion with British poet and blogger Rick Holland tells us that, ‘the daily forms of communication and storytelling have changed drastically, and I think that affects how we think. I think our brains are hard-wired to respond to narrative and storytelling, so it’s not surprising to me that we construct narratives out of all possible forms of communication and expression, and that’s why platforms like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, blogs and instant messaging have become such rich wells of ideas: because they each present different forms of spontaneous narrative.’[12]

Digital narratives and literacy actually stir us from being idle consumers of a technology where information is received without much critique, to becoming cradles of awareness by posting ourselves publicly in the world which we live, both online and off. This publicized process of production and prophetic endorsement potentially transforms public opinion and destabilizes the protocol of traditional media and mainstream platforms of news broadcasting. It is not the question of truths that is in any crisis, I don’t think. It is how we evaluate these truths and the means made available to us so that we can relay them that we ought to be concerned about keeping current, truthful and imaginative. And what these visual and other means share is their effectiveness as tools to enhance critical reflection and provoke action in public and private spaces, consequently, showing us how to ‘get closer to listening to those for whom this world has become intolerable.’

Jane and Louise Wilson, Untitled 1 (Nature Abhors a Vacuum) 2010 - (interior of building in Pripyat) the ghost town situated within proximity to the Chernobyl disaster. The artists travelled to the Ukraine to “shoot a series of large- format photographs in a 30-square km radius known as the Exclusion Zone. This area marks the limits of radioactive territory that is still considered too dangerous to support prolonged exposure (although thousands of people entered the zone each day to work in the three remaining nuclear reactors until December 2000).”[13]



Maria Petrides, Independent Writer
Appeared in The Cyprus Dossier - Issue 3: 'In Crisis - Countdown To Infinite Crisis'



Notes

Boyle Deirdre, A Brief History of American Documentary Video’, Subject to Change: Guerilla Television Revisited, Oxford University Press, 1997
Cramerotti Alfredo, Aesthetic Journalism: How to Inform without Informing, Intellect:   
   The University of Chicago Press, 2009
Griffee Susannah L, Ojalvo Holly Epstein, ‘Do You Trust Your Government’, The New            
   York Times, May 8, 2012
Ed. Gordon MacDonald, photoworks, Issue: November-April 2011/12
Ed. Dax Max, Electronic Beats Magazine, Issue: No 29, Spring 2012
Popken Ben, ‘Art Activists Cover Naked Body In Oil In Tate Museum To Protest Censorship And BP Sponsorship’, The Consumerist, April 22, 2011, retrieved May 5, 2012, from 
Roy Arundhati, the algebra of infinite justice, Viking by Penguin Books, 2001



[1] Roy Arundhati. (2001) the algebra of infinite justice, p. xxii
[2] Indian governments have often used the pretext of threat to both India and Kashmir from neighbouring Pakistan in order to enforce extreme nationalist agendas. ‘Text of Vajpayee’s Letter to Bill Clinton’, The Hindu, 14 May 1998
[3] Roy Arundhati. (2001) the algebra of infinite justice, p. 24
[4] In October 2011, a relatively recent poll found that Americans’ distrust of government is at its highest levels in history. Almost half of the public thought that the sentiment at the root of the Occupy movement generally reflects the views of most Americans.
[6] Cramerotti Alfredo. (2009), ‘Why Aesthetic? P. 22. See also Cramerotti’s website. http://www.alcramer.net/
[7] This particular series collected texts on the subject of art as a form of journalism. Visit http://www.v2.nl/archive/articles/every-artist-a-journalist-blowup-reader-2/view
[8] Cramerotti Alfredo. (2009), ‘Why Journalism? P. 22. See also Cramerotti’s website. http://www.alcramer.net/
[9] Dunne Finley Peter. (1899), Mr. Dooley in Peace and in War. The whole quote of the humorist is as follows: ‘The newspaper does everything for us. It runs the police force and the banks, commands the militia, controls the legislature, baptizes the young, marries the foolish, comforts the afflicted and afflicts the comfortable, buries the dead, and roasts them afterward’.
[10] Boyle Deirdre. (1997), A Brief History of American Documentary Video, p. 51
[11] Popken Ben. (2011) Art Activists Cover Naked Body In Oil In Tate Museum To Protest Censorship And BP Sponsorship
[12] Ed. Dax Max (2011) Holland Rick & Levy Steven during a skype discussion, “I thought I was staring into the mystery of life itself”, Electronic Beats Magazine, p. 71

[13] Schuppli Susan. (2011) ‘Material Malfeasance: Trace Evidence of Violence in Three Image-Acts’, photoworks, p. 29

Monday, May 7, 2012

 2 seconds of clapping 
(Kids are people too)















In this 8' 09" black and white video, time and place take on another significance. The environment in which social categorizing generally happens is not necessarily contingent upon, or sensitive to, the individual features of each member, which escape generalizations. One such grouping is that of the officially underrepresented, children and teenagers, whose diverging voices are, often, squashed into a frame. Already taxed on the milk they are ‘nourished’ with, these ‘growing into’ citizens are regularly deprived of their voices, or, at best, represented through decision-making adults.  

Artist and architect, Alkis Hadjiandreou, takes off from the ‘real’ setting of an American TV series from the 1980s called, Kids are people too, hosted by actor, Michael Young. Hadjiandreou re-treats a speedy and cheesy entertainment show with an endoscopic meticulousness. The children and teenagers in the audience are brought to the forefront of their own portraits. Zooming into the experience of being sidelined by virtue of categorization, the artist imagines what these individual portraits might look like, decontextualized from the blurriness of unruly media projection. Slowing down the rhythm of this TV show, suggesting that we, too, take our time to consider who each ‘kid’ might be, the video dissects, in parts, the imagery of these mashed-up children and teenagers.

The result works as a moving visual and sound rendering decelerated to show how fragile these profiles are. Time is prolonged without dictating limits, to neutralize the misconfiguration of the ‘kids’ in the show. Hadjiandreou’s images perform a sort of unpacking of the mass, where the crowd is defined each time by authorities and regulators, institutions and guardians. A teenage audience staged to applaud celebrities, making themselves ‘personalities’ by inference, is powerfully transformed anew into a space pixelated with self determined young people whose clapping celebrates their own eccentricities.  



The group show Revolver will run from April 28 until May 26, 2012 at the Phytorio, Visual Artists Association, Nicosia



Maria Petrides – Independent Writer

Monday, April 23, 2012

Sowieso at Kreuzberg Pavillon


Athina Antoniadou, Klass Hübner, Astrid Menze, Demetris Neokleous, Maria Petrides, Panikos Tembriotis, Witte Wartena





























Bang! Pow! Pff!
Simon says, 'let...'
Simon says, 'let us...'
Simon says, 'let us explode...'
Simon says, 'let us explode for...'
Simon says, 'let us explode for half...'
Simon says, 'let us explode for half an...'
Simon says, 'let us explode for half an hour...'
Simon says, 'let us explode for half an hour today.'
Syria - shuffling with spades to dig out our positions to empathise. Where can we empathise from? We're spraying connections to stay connected with the other side of things. Half an hour of activity diffuses aggression. Sounds soiled from de-lighted daily found events and objects, people and places, subjects and sirens, re-imagine another space in the other side of things.

Please turn your head to the left.

We're in a life of documentary-ing.
Carrying events from far away into present forms.
Norms shift and slip once we capture them on screen and in ink.
We do think.
But we look anew at terms of reconsideration.
Exhilaration builds bonds for crossing those difficult differences. Interferences rehearsing themselves; improving relations and forming new interactions. Scratching surfaces. Counting curves. Fiddling falsehoods.
Unimportant men making decisions, very important ones, about our lives, our documentary-ing.
Repeating wrecking rituals.
And we, dance, deliriously, in another documentary-ing, of our claimed, desires.
Barack says, 'we...'
Barack says, 'we believe...'
Barack says, 'we believe in...'
Barack says, 'we believe in change...'
Barack says, 'we believe in change and...'
Barack says, 'we believe in change and freedom...'
Barack says, 'we believe in change and freedom and...'
My ink ran out on the last two words.
Barack says, 'we believe in change and freedom' (and revolution).

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

20 minutes – moments of form and bliss

Most of us living in Cyprus would probably agree that any development in the arts on the island is a great thing, as we are continuing to ‘culturally position’ ourselves between Europe, the Mediterranean and the Middle East. But after the 12th Contemporary Dance Platform which took place at Limassol’s Rialto Theatre from March 9th to 11th, some twitchy gestures, and long and deep sighs heaving from the audience, suggest that some would have wished away a bit of dance and theatricality. And this wish isn’t necessarily an ill-intended one; it’s a charged change from an unreceptive Cyprus audience to a brave one equipped to raise its critical voice.

There’s a certain magical challenge that comes with having a dense amount of time in which to present and perform. And there’s also an equal challenge for a lively audience to remain intrigued in the present time for 20 minutes each time.

Time, at all times, in whatever space created, can be experienced as a drag to our feet through a painfully slow sense of moments approaching their ‘end’. But time can also suspend our own expectations by placing us in another experience of a time escaped. Lia Haraki’s fresh piece, Tune In, worked powerfully on the level of zoning us out of our sense of time. Like a devoted dervish ecstatic at the point of a spiritual pinnacle, Lia Haraki’s concentrated and liberating performance whirled us into an airy space and engrossing timelessness.

In a very different tone, the collaborative initiative of Noema Dance Work’s, Haze, recreated another form of space on stage, and off, altering our perception of where the dancer’s body and its movement, between fragile screens, appeared each moment in relation to its blurred audience. I, myself, was tuned in the spectacular Weather Project (2003) of visual artist, Olafur Eliasson, where artificial mist permeating the air and a yolk sun rising out of the haze to illuminate the refigured ceilings of the Turbine Hall, altered the room’s temperature and the viewer’s perception. Refined and consistent in its concept and visual imagery, Alexandra Waierstall’s study of haze has whet our appetite for her following full evening piece.

In hindsight, a new wish foresees more thorough collaborations in the emerging arts scene of Cyprus, and an all the more involved and growing audience.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

(Relax and let the right one in)

Sirens of distressed ambulances warned the walking busybodies of the city that they must get somewhere immediately. Heads turned swiftly as gravel hurled to their feet from the speed of the ambulance. Murmuring sounds of people anxiously trying to get to their 9-hour shifts on time could be heard like a fading beat, as they rushed into the underground wondering whether there were to be a delay on the trains. The outbursts of youth on the unswept streets of Athens had left their traits of deep disaffection behind. Smashed windows of stores in Kolonaki, the city’s only remaining clean and, until then, untouched area, awakened these citizens to new wonders. The month of April 2009 was happening for the first time. This marked the event as singular. Were all events exclusive, wondered Myrna as she walked away from the arresting scene of police crime at Constitution square and towards the lovers’ scene.

Outside a run-of-the-mill Costa Café, just at the beginning of darkness, Clement and I froze in a lock of gaze, the kind that holds you in a time where memory never seems to have existed. The arms of Clement wide open, the shape of desire and need (Barthes) unfolded as my longing eyes captured that zestful moment in a warm embrace. Two bodies met; their soft mouths lured each other’s breath. The heat between us lovers intensified as did the rage of the disaffected. And just as I was suspended in what seemed like a timeless moment, only several kilometres away the city of Athens was turning red in flames and fury, the fierce police fumbling for opposing inhabitants to drag to their dungeon. Trouble usually starts from authorities, overregulated and under, barring dissenting voices, and ignoring the injustices they help generate and keep in tact. Echoing and embryonic voices waiting at the line. One minute people are ready to slip off the slithering edge, and the next, they are just pending… without witnesses, an unimagined tomorrow and an unimaginable moment of the present.

And as the rioting environment came to a break and I released myself from the curved clasp of Clement, it occurred to me for the first time that I wasn’t the only one disconnected from the political passion surrounding us. The next day would swallow up the remaining tear gas and smoky air from the blasting molotovs; the enraged would still feel enraged, perhaps with a real sense of the city now vacuumed of several functioning shops; the government officials would turn their attention to new 'criminal' records; and it would seem like the purpose of these outbursts was to destroy a few small shops.




Published in The Moment at SMITH magazine

http://www.smithmag.net/moment/story.php?did=310210

Friday, January 13, 2012

Slipping Signs




Opening: 13 January 2012, 20:00
Duration: 14 January– 8 February 2012


Penindaplinena Gallery is pleased to  present the group show entitled, Slipping Signs.


Dimitra Bista | Socrates Fatouros | Anastasia Mina | Maria Aristotelous | Konstantinos Dregos



Landscapes seem seismic when burning colours from the sky and expressionistic strokes of thick paint envelop the canvas. In this group show at Penindaplinena Gallery, explosive remnants of material rephrase interruptions and form fresh beginnings. The exhibition Slipping Signs showcases five multi-media artists working from scapes to escapes, scopes, styles and space, as they seize them at shifty and slippery moments. In these works, random and anticipated transformations transpire from dark to light, from reflection to position, from networks of lines to swelling surfaces, addressing matters of identity and continuation, repetition and inscription, site and interiority, frame and de-centralization.   

A starting point for many of these artists’ works takes off from a given inner place, or  city, where, although the intention seems to be to move in this identifying place of ‘rest’, there is a longing to explore disruptions that ‘promising’ sites do not anticipate. The works composing the exhibition Slipping Signs evoke a new habitat to revive vision, to dream another dream, to embark on re-constructing intimate possibilities where the impulse of identifying insists on slithering. Comfortable in zones of indefinite and infinite connections, these artists’ works vigorously surface through a distinct treatment of pencil, paper, ink, acrylic, canvas and cardboard.               

Maria Aristotelous’ thick coats of paint in long strokes splattered in apparently unintended smears are pencil lined, like fluid feathers of interaction and interruption in these painting’s reflections. Dimitra Bista’s refined pencil on paper drawings subtly move in a net of lines and scratches which seem to meet somewhere between a deliberate de-centralization of ‘beginning’, and, a lack of colour and neat symmetry. Although working with seemingly inflexible materials, such as leather and porcelain, glass plaster and tar, Konstantinos Dregos’ sculptures, like flesh, flow organically through space without ever trapping these forms in a solid surface. Paint drips on canvas like water seething before the bubbles morph into flowers, half blooming, half fleeing. In a leveling and surging force, the drawings of Anastasia Mina work like pencil and writing; smooth surface and compulsive depth; an urging and urgent process of impulsive intensity which, while engrossed in a swirling repetition, also dissolves the raw residues of lead to reach a liberating coexistence of black on white. In City End, Socrates Fatouros handles the textures of oil and acrylic on cardboard through a fragile vigor of colour, which erupts, in a volcanic temper, from the centre out. The city doesn’t end somewhere; it unfolds. No longer a heart, the edges of this city extend beyond an ‘identifiable’ city, or as in the sculpture, City 1, the sign and the city stand tall yet dizzy, suspended from a precarious pole.




Maria Petrides, Independent writer




Επικοινωνία:
PENINDAPLINENA Gallery
Τάσος Στυλιανού
Ε: tassos@50-1gallery.com, m: +357 99 522977, t: +357 25 340727

Sunday, December 18, 2011

The Unwise Monkey

http://www.amazon.co.uk/product-reviews/B005OK4WWI/ref=cm_cr_dp_all_summary?ie=UTF8&showViewpoints=1&sortBy=bySubmissionDateDescending


Francoise Fautrel’s latest novel, The Unwise Monkey, draws its reader by its dazzling wit, and its suppleness in arousing suspense and evoking sensibility. In this powerfully humble and humbling novel, consistently crossing the crumbling boundaries of autobiography and fiction, Francoise Fautrel generously re-imagines the shocking experiences of her young survivor heroine, Clara, without ever relegating her to a position of victim. Written with the hindsight of a street-smart child, this book is an open gesture to anyone who has felt broken yet directed by a drumming desire to create new conditions for a dignified life.

Independent Writer - Maria Petrides

Monday, July 11, 2011

Υπεράνθρωποι










Ένας τρόπος με τον οποίο χαρακτηρίζεται η μεταμοντέρνα ταυτότητα, είναι μέσω του υψηλού libido, του οποίου η εκρηκτική και απελευθερωτική ενέργεια επεκτείνεται, οδηγώντας σε ένα ευκίνητο τόπο, όπου η ταυτότητα γίνεται μη-ταυτότητα. Στη δουλειά του Γιάννη Βαρελά αυτή η εύπλαστη ‘ταυτότητα’ μοιάζει να αποδομείται συνεχώς. Τα εντυπωσιακά κολάζ-σχέδιά του απεικονίζουν υπερμεγέθεις χαρακτήρες (με ένα, άν θέλετε, Νιτσε-ακό τρόπο του Ubermensch όπου ο άνθρωπος είναι παντοδύναμος/υπεράνθρωπος), των οποίων το φύλο παραμένει ακαθόριστο. Στα έργα του η δυναμικότητα και η υπερβολική αρρενωπότητα συνυπάρχουν με το εύθραυστο, η επιβλητικότητα με τη σεμνότητα. Και ενώ η ακριβής κάθετη γεωμετρία της δουλειάς του υποδηλώνει μια ισχυρή σύνθεση (όπως ένα υψηλό αστικό κτίριο), συγχρόνως αυτοαναιρείται με ένα ανάλαφρο αλλά υπονομευτικό τρόπο.

Ένα από τα τρία σχέδια του Βαρελά, τα οποία εκτίθενται τώρα στην 1η μπιενάλε της Αθήνας, σφίζει από πολιτισμικούς συνειρμούς, χριστιανικά σύμβολα, σεξουαλικά υπονοούμενα και μυθολογικές αναφορές. Στη βάση του υπεράνθρωπου, εκεί που ‘κανονικά’ θα ήταν τα πόδια, υπάρχει ένα κολάζ που απεικονίζει ένα Βαυαρό βασιλιά, και ακριβώς από πάνω, σε ένα δεύτερο κολάζ υπάρχει η μαρμάρινη εκδοχή του χριστού της καθολικής εκκλησίας. Συνεχίζοντας ανοδικά την παρατήρηση του σχεδίου, συναντούμε ένα Ελληνικό ξωκκλήσι του 14 αιώνα (σε ένα τρίτο κολάζ). θα μπορούσαμε να πούμε ότι παρακολουθούμε μία ιστορική-δημιουργική εξέλιξη. Και στη συνέχεια καταλείγουμε σε ένα σύγχρονο τοπίο του φαντασιακού, όπου το αφηρημένο και το διακοσμητικό συναντιούνται προσωρινά. Αυτή η μεταμόρφωση λειτουργεί ως η σπονδυλική στήλη της γιγαντιαίας φιγούρας που ενώ την στηρίζει, συγχρόνως τη μεταλλάσει και συνεπαγόμενα ολόκληρη τη σύνθεση – πιθανώς ένα σχόλιο για την αλληλοεξαρτώμενη σχέση του ατόμου με την ιστορία του.

Στο δεύτερο σχέδιο ο Βαρελάς αφαιρώντας τις όψεις ενός διαμερίσματος από το περιβάλλον τους, τις συναρμολογεί σε μία μορφή. Ένα πρόσωπο που προσωρινά προσδιορίζεται από το πιο χαρακτηριστικό αρχιτεκτονικό στοιχείο μιας πόλης -ίσως και της Αθήνας-, τις πολυκατοικίες της.
Ταυτόχρονη αποδόμηση και αναδόμηση. Μία διακριτική σύνθεση όπου τα μάτια κοιτάζουν ένα ευμετάβλητο και οριζόντιο τοπίο πόλης, ενώ στην απτή κατασκευή του διαμερίσματος προσδίδονται εύκαμπτες, ανθρωπομορφικές ιδιότητες. Είναι μία αδιόρατη έκκληση για ένα πιο ανθρώπινο Αθηναικό τοπίο, για την τροποποίηση της τωρινής ταυτότητας ώστε να αρχίσει να υλοποιείται μία καινούργια Αθήνα;



Μαρία Πετρίδη (συγγραφέας & υποψήφια Διδάκτωρ UCL)
Δημοσίευση στο Υ.Γ τον Σεπτέμβριο του 2007