Opening days: June 26-27-28
Info: www.praguebiennale.org
Email: praguebiennale1@flashartonline.com
Organized by Giancarlo Politi and Helena Kontova, editors
of Flash Art magazine, together with Milan Knizak and Tomas Vlcek, directors
of the National Gallery in Prague, the inaugural edition of the Prague
Biennale, “Peripheries become the center,” is one of the major
art events of the year. This benchmark exhibition showcases the work of
around 260 emerging artists from all over the world, selected by a team
of 30 influential curators, to create a pluralistic vision of contemporary
art today. A huge survey realized with a low budget (compared to other
blockbuster exhibitions), the Prague Biennale has pushed its organizers
to face amazing challenges, but these constraints represent a move towards
new horizons, new solutions, and new exhibiting philosophies.
The title of the Prague Biennale, “Peripheries become the center,”
refers to the dissolution of the dichotomy between “periphery”
and “center” and to a liberation of plurality in terms of
both identity and artistic practice. The distinction articulated in this
dichotomy has become increasingly irrelevant due to information technology,
the mass media, migration, and nomadism. The escalating phenomenon of
globalization and the seeming collapse of physical distances brought about
by the Internet have changed the terms in which the relations between
periphery and center are negotiated, and even the definitions of what
these two places are. The proposal that “Peripheries become the
center” is a point of departure for the curators of the Prague Biennale,
opening up space for investigation of their own diverse areas of research
and interest.
One of the main focuses of the exhibition is new trends in painting. Lazarus
Effect is an impressive panorama of works by emerging painters
represented each by one or two large-dimension works, most of which were
made specially for the Biennale. Curated by Luca Beatrice, Lauri Firstenberg
and Helena Kontova, Lazarus Effect is an attempt to assess the health
of the medium of painting, which constantly manifests its possibility
and vitality through young painters’ forays into diverse styles
including abstraction, collage, figuration, and hyperrealism. Superreal,
curated by Lauri Firstenberg, further considers hyperrealism, investigating
the return to the traditional, historical, slow territory of realist painting
in an age informed by advancing digital technologies and accelerating
speeds of information.
All the artworks at the Prague Biennale will be presented not in national
“pavilions” but in a pluralistic mix. In this way Mission
Possible, the Czech section curated by Michal Kolecek, is open
to other European nationalities and aims to rethink the identity of Central
Europe. This view opposes the typical understanding of Central Europe
as an intersection of European East and West, and focuses instead on the
North-South axis, underlining the significant role of the Czech state.
The melting of the opposition between center and peripheries is explored
as a potential ground for new creativity in the section entitled When
the Periphery Turns Center and the Center Turns Periphery, curated
by Jens Hoffmann. This section of the Biennale gathers the work of artists
coming from places that directly express the ambivalence of the terms
“center” and “periphery,” for whom issues of racial,
sexual, political, or social identity have become an optional reference
but not necessarily an unalterable doctrine.
In the contemporary globalized cultural situation, Space and Subjectivity,
curated by Lauri Firstenberg, intends to examine the concept of the masses
vis-à-vis Hardt and Negri’s model of the multitude. A selection
of photography and video, from portraits of urban life in Mexico City
to anonymous Israeli suburban borders, explores the anxiety between homogenization
and difference in the constitution of identity.
In the same vein, alone/together, a section of artists
from Northern Europe curated by Jacob Fabricius, examines the relation
between the individual and the collective, focusing on artistic strategies
that challenge the restrictions of society. Beautiful Banners:
Representation/Democracy/Participation, curated by Marco Scotini,
similarly addresses artistic practices as the meeting point between the
public and symbolic sphere in the new global order; and The Art
of Survival, curated by B+B (Sarah Carrington and Sophie Hope),
presents tactics, strategies, and attempted expeditions by artists working
towards a space of self-determination, independence, or resistance.
Overcoming Alienation, curated by Ekaterina Lazareva,
considers what globalization means for the art world today. Demonstrating
a wide interpretation of the Biennale’s themes, the selected Russian
artists are all engaged in overcoming the alienation of cultures, languages,
and religions, by addressing topical subjects such as consumerism and
corporations, immigration, communication, and social relations.
(Dis)locations, curated by Julieta Gonzalez, proposes
that mobility and the diaspora are direct consequences of the globalization
of the art world, and accordingly presents works by Latin American artists
who either currently live abroad or have done so for a long time during
their careers. An awareness of the “location” of the work,
not only within the exhibition space, but also within the more general
sphere of the art world, is an articulating thread in all the selected
works. Through their problematization of space as the site of power, knowledge,
and culture; and with their dislocation of given concepts, situations,
and myths, the selected artists contest the stereotypes the West has imposed
on the rest of the world.
The Prague Biennale explores new trends in digital art as well. The image
chosen for the catalogue cover and the poster for the Biennale is a digital
manipulation by Jean-Pierre Khazem of one of the icons of the Western
visual tradition, the Mona Lisa.
IMPROVisual, curated by Lavinia Garulli, ventures to
explore the ways in which the liveness of digital media performances brings
a new kind of contact with reality into the audio-visual work. Electronic
music is a pure sound event in which there is no specific image of the
sound source, allowing the music to suggest new visual landscapes. Works
investigating the live interaction of sound and image are freed up to
concentrate on improvisation instead of reproduction, as reality no longer
means an external thing. For the first time a Biennale proposes live VJing
as a kind of artistic practice.
Virtual Perception, curated by Laurence Dreyfus, presents
an international selection of digital artists. Innovative and unclassifiable,
these inventors of images use different forms of expression: animated
film, Flash, net art, analogue and digital images. Different types of
reality confront each other and mix together, often with the appropriation
of narrative figures from video games or interactive fictions that progressively
move away from traditional video. From an aesthetic point of view, these
images do not resemble any others: they are flat, pixilated, super-colored,
rapid, and unusual.
In addition to the changes brought about by digital technology, the issue
of retaining a national identity as the art world becomes increasingly
globalized is a subject of debate and investigation. Several sections
of the Biennale focus on diverse artistic scenes: Leaving Glasvegas,
curated by Neil Mulholland, presents work by artists active in the Scottish
cities of Dundee, Edinburgh, and Glasgow; individual “atypical”
presences in the Hungarian art scene are gathered together by Judit Angel
in Differentia Specifica; Fragments of Contemporary Identities,
curated by Charlotte Mailler, exhibits works by (mostly Swiss) artists
examining the representation or value of tradition in contemporary culture;
Italy: Out of Order, curated by Luca Beatrice and Giancarlo
Politi, surveys contemporary art from Italy; Dorothée Kirch has
selected artists as different as possible for Global Suburbia
to paint a picture of contemporary art in Iceland; The Deste Foundation
presents a panorama of contemporary Greek art curated
by Xenia Kalpaktsolgou; Francesca Jordan and Primo Marella present a survey
of Chinese Art Today; Tomas Vlcek highlights work by
leading historical protagonists of the Czech art scene in Special
Homage to Czech Women Artists; and Seduced (by Speed and Movements): Towards
active agencies of fictions and realities in Polish art, curated
by Adam Budak, maps the vast cultural territories in which Polish contemporary
artists construct multilayered and fluid structures of meaning, immersed
in a process of constant shifting between the real and the fictive, the
active and the passive, the mobile and the fixed.
Other thematic exhibitions include Come with me, curated
by Gea Politi, which presents works by experimental filmmakers, including
Alfonso Cuaròn, director of the upcoming Harry Potter and the Prisoner
of Azkaban; Aión: An Eventual Architecture, curated
by Andrea Di Stefano, a survey of digital architecture; Collecting,
Channeling, curated by Sofía Hernández, which exhibits
three projects that collect and channel a range of views, interests, and
objects of material culture; Illusion of Security, curated
by Lino Baldini and Gyonata Bonvicini, which presents works that investigate
questions of surveillance and “insecurity” culture; Disturbance,
curated by Helena Kontova, which gathers a small group of contemporary
artists intently pursuing their own singular visions; and Brand
Art, also curated by Kontova, for which three artists were commissioned
to create works interpreting the Mattoni brand on billboards around the
city. The Prague Biennale also presents special projects by Oliver
Payne and Nick Relph, curated by Gregor Muir; Sigur Rós,
curated by artist Francesco Vezzoli; and Pass It On,
an exquisite-corpse video project by Raimundas Malasauskas.