The Event 23 September–20 November 2011
The 29th Biennial of Graphic Arts, Ljubljana29gbljubljana.wordpress.com
List of exhibited artists and projects: Ant Farm, Oreet
Ashery, Bababa International, Robert Barry, Nina Beier & Marie Lund, Jerzy
Bereś, Karmelo Bermejo, Anna Berndtson, Conny Blom, János Borsos, Tania
Bruguera, Graciela Carnevale, Anetta Mona Chişa & Lucia Tkáčová, Marcus
Coates, Brody Condon, Alain Della Negra & Kaori Kinoshita, Marco Evaristti,
Terry Fox, Dora García, Félix González-Torres, Núria Güell, Manuel Hartmann,
Alfredo Jaar, Jaša, Enrique Ježik, Regina José Galindo, San Keller, Daniel
Knorr, Božena Končić Badurina, Gregor Kregar, Siniša Labrović, Liz Magic Laser,
Marcello Maloberti, Teresa Margolles, Kris Martin, Dalibor Martinis, Dane
Mitchell, Shana Moulton, Kusum Normoyle, OHO Group / The Šempas Family /
Milenko Matanović / David Nez / Marko Pogačnik, Once is Nothing (Presentation
of an exhibition curated by Mária Hlavajová and Charles Esche as part of the
2008 Brussels Biennial), Serkan Özkaya, Kim Paton, Mark Požlep, Praxis
(Brainard & Delia Carey), Public Movement, Franc Purg & Sara
Heitlinger, Sal Randolph, Maruša Sagadin, Hans Schabus, Santiago Sierra, Mladen
Stropnik, Sz.A.F., Tan Ting, Unguarded Money (Presentation of an action
carried out in Budapest in 1956 by Miklós Erdély his friends, and members of
the Hungarian Writers Union), Matej Andraž Vogrinčič, Wang Jin, Anna Witt
The art event—the central theme of the 29th Biennial of
Graphic Arts in Ljubljana—experienced a remarkable development in the twentieth
century and today appears as a privileged medium. It is employed as a medium by
a broad range of various figures from the contemporary art world in a broad
spectrum of different forms.
At the exhibition, which seeks above all to present as fully
as possible the energy and vitality of the current trend of art events, a
selection of such events are presented in four different groups based on themes
that are typical for contemporary art: violence, generosity, emptiness, and the
search for the sacred and ritualistic. These topics were selected, among other
reasons, because the events that thematize them also meet the requirement that
they are not something new, neither in terms of their artistic iconographic
motifs nor in terms of actual human or social practice. Events in which we can
with impunity partake in violence, in “shamanistic” violence to oneself, in
Dionysian or absurdist ritual, or in the establishment of an idyllic communitas that
shares a common meal are, indeed, activities that have been practiced and even
depicted for millennia.
In the exhibition, as well as in an extensive programme of
artistic and theoretical events, the Biennial poses the questions: Why and how
has the event become a suitable vehicle for a variety of artistic purposes,
poetics, and content? Is the choice of this medium a response to specific
impulses and voids in our “desacralized” everyday existence? And also, what are
the potential dangers of such a development, given that it is happening more
and more in the completely formalized framework of art institutions, which in
recent decades not only house and exhibit contemporary art, but also commission
and produce it. Thus they have become commissioners of contemporary art of a
similar type and scope as were once the aristocracy and the church.
Symposium: The Event as a Privileged Medium in the
Contemporary Art World An international symposium will address specific
“targeted” questions about the ideological significance of the profusion of
events in contemporary art institutions. A varied cast of anthropologists,
philosophers, historians, and art historians have been invited to participate.
The following speakers have been announced: Luisa Accati,
Beatrice von Bismarck, Thomas Fillitz, Dario Gamboni, Werner Hanak-Lettner,
Nathalie Heinich, Bojana Kunst, Henrietta L. Moore, Michael Newman, Robert
Pfaller, Renata Salecl, Roger Sansi-Roca.
Friday, 4 November, 11 p.m.–7 p.m. Saturday, 5 November, 10
a.m.–2:30 p.m. Location: the auditorium of the Museum of Modern Art (Moderna
galerija), Cankarjeva 15, Ljubljana.
Admission is free. The symposium will be broadcast live on
the website. For detail information on the Symposium and the Biennial please
visit 29gbljubljana.wordpress.com.
The curator of the 29th Biennial of Graphic Arts in Ljubljana
is Beti Žerovc. Venues of the 29th Biennial of Graphic Arts: International
Centre of Graphic Arts, Museum of Modern Art, Jakopič Gallery, Gallery of
Cankarjev dom, exhibition sites on Gosposvetska cesta 12 and Vošnjakova ulica
4.
Viewing hours: Tuesday–Sunday, 10 am–6 pm.
Organizer: Mednarodni grafični likovni center / International
Centre of Graphic Arts Grad Tivoli, Pod turnom 3, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia,
tel. + 386 (0)1 2413 800, www.mglc-lj.si
Press contact: Lili Šturm: tel. + 386 (0)1 2413 818,
lili.sturm@mglc-lj.si
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