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New perspectives on the 1980s - Counter-cultures from Catalonia, Turkey and Madrid

Exposición / Van Abbemuseum / Bilderdijklaan 10 / Eindhoven, Noord-Brabant, Holanda
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Cuándo:
02 jul de 2016 - 25 sep de 2016

Inauguración:
02 jul de 2016

Comisariada por:
Fefa Vila Núñez, Teresa Grandas

Organizada por:
Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía (MNCARS), Van Abbemuseum

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pdf Nota de Prensa de New perspectives on the 1980s

Descripción de la Exposición

On Saturday 2 July 2016 from 14.30 until 17.00 three new contributions, from Catalonia, Turkey and Madrid, will open. At 2.30 pm there is a conversation with the curators Teresa Grandas (MACBA, Barcelona), Merve Elveren (SALT, Istanbul) and Fefa Vila Núñez (independent researcher, i.c.w. Museo Reina Sofía, Madrid). For free entrance during this opening, please register online. The 1980s. Today’s Beginnings? explores the long 1980s from six European perspectives, examining the relevance of this transformative decade for today. This collaborative project comprises a diverse mix of artworks, music, TV, graphic and archival material, exploring a wide set of socio-political themes through the lens of culture. The different presentations and mediation programme present cultural production that took place against the mainstream, examining its role in moments of state structures in transformation. Culture was central in responding to or predicting deep societal shifts. As Europe is in the midst of a defining transition in terms of how it sees itself and its relationship to others, it is urgent to examine key moments in identity formation and self-organisation from the recent past. The material presented draws from projects carried out by partners of the museum confederation L’Internationale alongside research undertaken by curators at the Van Abbemuseum. Highlighting the reorientation between civil society and the state during the decade, this project aims to show the significance of developments in the 1980s for society today. Different European perspectives The project gives space to multiple narratives and voices from different European perspectives, beginning with counter culture in the Netherlands, the Slovenian collective NSK and black art form Great Britain. The configuration of the galleries will shift during the course of the exhibition; the presentation of NSK lasts until 26 June and from 2 July three new presentations developed by our partners in Istanbul, Barcelona, and Madrid will be added. - Talking Back. Counter Culture in the Netherlands 16.04 – 25.09.2016 Curator: Diana Franssen, Van Abbemuseum. Talking Back examines Dutch counter culture in the 1980s through the squatters movement and their cultural spin-offs in artists initiatives with alternative attitudes to the art world. A group of artists increasingly employed video, sound and photography to subvert mass-media’s ‘manipulative’ patterns of representation. Other countercultural movements looked at the position of women and their role in these alternative networks, and activist groups. Though radical in the beginning, these micro histories also show the shift from an open-minded society to a more individual, closed society. Artists: Catrien Ariëns, Hans Breder, Daniel Brun, Miguel-Ángel Cárdenas, Ulises Carrión, René Daniëls, DEDO-Harry Heyink, Sandra Derks, Jaap Drupsteen, David Garcia & Annie Wright, General Idea, Heiner Holtappels, Patricia Kaersenhout, Jouke Kleerebezem, Bertien van Manen, Raul Marroquin, Mariano Maturana, Joost Seelen, Servaas, Rob Scholte, Lydia Schouten, Sluik/Kurpershoek, Stansfield/Hooykaas, Moniek Toebosch. - Thinking Back. A montage of Black Art in Britain 16.04– 25.09.2016 Curator: Nick Aikens, Van Abbemuseum. In 1980s Britain a powerful conversation emerged amongst black artists, film makers, thinkers and institutions. It was the outcome of artists trying to understand their relationship towards Britain’s colonial legacy, an increasingly divisive contemporary politics and the space of culture within which ideas of resistance, expression and identity formation could coalesce. Thinking Back will present a number of key artworks, films and archival material from this pivotal moment in British culture outside the country for the first time. Artists: John Akomfrah, Rasheed Araeen, Black Audio Film Collective, Sonia Boyce, Chila Burman, Eddie Chambers, Rotimi Fani-Kayode, Mona Hatoum, Lubaina Himid, Gavin Jantjes, Claudette Johnson, Isaac Julien, Keith Piper, Ingrid Pollard, Donald Rodney, Marlene Smith, Maud Sulter. Archives: Blk Art Group Research Project, African-Caribbean, Asian & African Art in Britain Archive (Chelsea College of Arts Library, University of the Arts), The June Givanni Pan African Cinema Archive (including films by Imruh Bakari and Amani Naphtali), Making Histories Visible Archive (Centre of Contemporary Art at the University of Central Lancashire), The Stuart Hall Library, Iniva (Institute of International Visual Arts), London. - NSK: From Kapital to Capital. An Event in the Final Decade of Yugoslavia 16.04 – 26.06.2016 Curator: Zdenka Badovinac, Moderna gallerija, Ljubljana. This part follows events of the different Neue Slowenische Kunst (NSK) collectives, with a focus on multimedia group Laibach (est. 1980), visual arts group IRWIN (est. 1983), and the theatre group Scipion Nasice Sisters (1983-87). NSK is too often associated exclusively with the context of failing Yugoslavia and socialism. This research highlights the power of the collective artistic faculty and its fundamental goal: to construct a new artistic constellation that would allow them to propose a different society and to enter an international dialogue. The presentation was first shown at Moderna galerija and has been especially adapted for the Van Abbemuseum. Artists: Laibach, Irwin, Scipion Nasice Theatre, Cosmokinetic Theatre Red Pilot, Cosmokinetic Cabinet Noordung, New Collectivism, Department of Pure and Applied Philosophy, Builders, Retrovision, Film. - Video-Nou / Servei de Video Comunitari, a case study in Spanish transition 02.07 – 25.09.2016 Curator: Teresa Grandas, MACBA, Barcelona This presentation looks at a pioneering collective project that took place in the immediate aftermath of Franco’s death in 1975 and the state’s shift from a dictatorial to democratic sphere. Video-Nou / Servei de Video Comunitari used portable video equipment, initiating activist TV stations that were rooted in conceptual art practices and institutional critique. From 1978 they became focused on documenting social changes as a result of the gentrification of neighbourhoods in cities across Catalonia. Their ‘video interventions’ are now a cornerstone in the understanding of the historical events and social processes during this transformative time in Spain. Artists: Video-Nou / Servei de Video Comunitari. - How did We Get Here? Turkey in the 1980s 02.07 – 25.09.2016 Curator: Merve Elveren, SALT, Istanbul How Did We Get Here? delves into the recent past of Turkey starting from 1980, a period that introduced free market economy under military rule. This chapter gives an account of the decade, with an emphasis on Istanbul, through archival materials including magazines, photographs, and films, alongside artworks that evoke the political and cultural climate of the 1980s. It maps the struggle of the decade, tracing the origins of the current context of Turkey through social movements and elements of popular culture. The presentation was first shown at SALT and has been especially adapted for the Van Abbemuseum. Artists: Asl? Çavu?o?lu and Bar?? Do?rusöz. Archives of: Yücel Tunca, Aziz Nesin Archive, Füsun Ertu?, Gençay Gürsoy, ?brahim Eren, Gülnur Savran, Murat Öne?, Nilgün Öne?, Tu?rul Ery?lmaz, Murat Çelikkan, Serdar Ate?er. - Archivo Queer? Screwing the system (Madrid 1989 - 1995) 02.07 – 25.09.2016 Curator: Fefa Vila Núñez, independent researcher, in association with Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid. Archivo Queer? consists of an open archive with a palimpsest of images, publications, videos and writings from public performances, actions and campaigns of queer movements in Madrid in the early 1990s, a time when the AIDS crisis was a pandemic. The archive, presented here for the first time, aims to subvert hetero-centric and patriarchal forms of categorization through its formation and display. Archivo Queer? is initiated by Fefa Vila Núñez, promoter of the artist group LSD and Sejo Carrascosa of the group Radical Gai – with the collaboration of the artist Andrés Senra and the researcher Lucas Platero - developed over a yearlong residency at Reina Sofia. Artists: Archivo Queer? is comprised of material drawn from collective production in the late eighties and nineties by activists who collaborated with LSD and Radical Gai. Room 6 Within the exhibition Room 6 will aim to link themes and histories in the exhibition to constituencies and events in Eindhoven. Partners The exhibition is part of the five year programme The Uses of Art, on the legacy of 1848 and 1989, organised by L’Internationale, within which the 1980s has emerged as a key area of research. Bosch Grand Tour The exhibition is part of the Bosch Grand Tour; a series of thirteen contemporary exhibitions in seven prominent museums in the region of Brabant, inspired by Hieronymus Bosch: www.bosch500.nl/grandtour.


Imágenes de la Exposición
Installation view \'The 1980s. Today\'s Beginnings?\', Room 7: \'NSK. From Kapital to Capital\'. Photo Peter Cox

Entrada actualizada el el 16 jun de 2016

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