30 Ekim 2010 Cumartesi

speak, memory

on archives and other strategies of cultural memory

About;

Borrowing from the title of Vladimir Nabokov’s classic autobiography, Speak, memory is a three-day event structured around presentations, panel discussions, screenings, and artist talks exploring the rich array of methodologies that can be adopted to unearth, revisit or reactivate past artistic practices.

Recently, the Middle East has seen the emergence of a series of archival and historiographic endeavors focused on a local and regional history of modern and contemporary art. In response to the scarce and scattered art historical documentation of the region’s most recent past, a growing number of researchers, curators and artists have begun collecting documents and recording the oral histories of artistic practices and exhibitions that have seemingly been forgotten, misinterpreted or dismissed.

As these research projects gain momentum, private collectors and newly created museums are also slowly acquiring artists’ archives, magazines and other remnants of the region’s 20th century cultural history. These developments are not unique to the Middle East. A similar phenomenon has been taking place in Latin America, where private collectors, foreign museums and universities have been buying and exporting privately held archives related to artistic production of the 60’s and 70’s.

The current situation calls for a critical discussion between institutions, collectors, artists, curators, and researchers interested in reactivating recent cultural memory in a way that enables the creation of a multiplicity of narratives and ready access to these histories. Speak, memory seeks to instigate an informed debate on the challenges and strategies for the preservation of modern and contemporary art histories, focusing on those that have been scarcely documented or are underrepresented in dominant art historical narratives. In addition, the symposium will present archival initiatives that stand out for their successful organizational model, accessibility and discursive potential, as well as online platforms that are already providing possibilities for collaboration. Rather than being a one-time event, the symposium aims to create a network of archival initiatives and broader historiographic endeavors that can facilitate a series of ongoing conversations and collaborations.

Speak, memory will take place at the Rawabet Theater by the Townhouse Gallery in Cairo on October 28-30, 2010 and will coincide with the exhibition of the Bidoun Library Project in the First Floor Gallery. The symposium will also be preceded by a workshop led by the founders of the digital archive PAD.MA, which will take place on October 17 to 20 and October 23 to 27 (see the call for applications for more information). The language of the symposium will be English and simultaneous translation into Arabic will be provided. Due to limited seating, registration is required. To register for the symposium, please email a completed Registration Form to info@speakmemory.org. Places will be allocated on a first come first serve basis.






26 Ekim 2010 Salı

my studio!

Garanti Platform Contemporary Art Centre / Istanbul

12 Ekim 2010 Salı

at the studio / 21th century

The Delfina Foundation / London

11 Ekim 2010 Pazartesi

3 Ekim 2010 Pazar

Studio Osep at Delfina Foundation


Tayfun Serttaş - Studio Osep
10 November - 10 December 2010
Mon to Sat, 10:00 - 18:00 at The Delfina Foundation.

Private view: Tuesday 9 November 2010, 18:30 - 20:30

Osep Minasoglu is one of the oldest living studio portrait photographers of Istanbul. Current resident artist Tayfun Serttaş has been collecting, recording and classifying his works for the past 10 years. A rarely encountered selection of works, the Studio Osep archive records the shifts in representational practices in Istanbul between 1953 and 1986. Presented as a body, and placed on a parallel perspective with the history of the Turkish Republic, these personal testimonies of individual memory gain a collective meaning: they articulate the social contradictions embedded in the recent history of the city.

These configurations include exhibitions (most recently at Galeri NON, Istanbul in 2009) and a publication (Stüdyo Osep, published by Aras in 2009). The exhibition, which is partly re-created at The Delfina Foundation, incorporates original material from the Studio Osep archive as well as biographical elements lifted from Osep's life story.

For The Delfina Foundation, the Studio Osep archive has been re-curated to achieve new and poetic associations. The selected photographs focus on the transforming everyday practices that have shaped the making of modern Turkey and question the evolving function of vernacular photography in relation to discourses around identity and the grander narrative of history.

Artist, writer and social scientist Tayfun Serttaş (b. 1982) lives in Istanbul and Bodrum. His main subject areas are urban anthropology, gender & minorities, cultural heritage & migration. Tayfun has exhibited his work internationally, including Centrun Sztuki Wspolczesnej (Warsaw, 2010), Galeri NON (Istanbul, 2009), Centre Pompidou (Paris, 2009) and Architekturmuseum (DAM Frankfurt, 2008). Stüdyo Osep, edited by Tayfun Serttaş, was published in 2009 by Aras.

Tayfun is a current resident artist at The Delfina Foundation as part of the 2010 edition of the Accented Residency, with the generous support of the British Council's Creative Collaboration and Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Centre, Istanbul.

1 Ekim 2010 Cuma