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INTERVIEW: Christopher Eamon on Rearview Mirror exhibition

Added on by Alex Mirutziu.



A video of a Lithuanian officer reenacting the way he used to shoot missiles from a Russian base; an imprint of a dirt road; footage of a Serbian woman swaying to David Bowie's "Young Americans.”

These are some of the powerful images from the Art Gallery of Alberta’s newest exhibition, Rearview Mirror: New Art from Central and Eastern Europe, which portrays contemporary life in the region after the fall of the Soviet Union.

Featuring the work of 22 Central and Eastern European artists, it includes paintings, video installations and sculptures examining pop culture, everyday life and appropriation. Guest-curator Christopher Eamon, a New York writer and independent curator, hopes it will break old stereotypes of the region. Stereotypes that it is "banal … uniform. That it is lacking in some way." The new generation of artists, such as those featured at the AGA until April 29, he says, are “completely different than a clichéd concept of the East.”
Why should people come see this show?

I think they should see it because it's showing a different angle of the Eastern European art scene. It's hopefully going to be a revelation that dispels a lot of myths. It showcases the younger generation, who have really thrown off the historical shackles 20 years after the fall of the Soviet Union.
What surprised you while you were putting this show together?

What I should have known is that each of these regions has totally distinct cultures; many of them speak very distinct languages. In terms of art, some have very deep avant-garde tendencies from the beginning of the century and some have none. We really have a totally diverse and divergent area and very quickly I learned that I am not making a representative show of the region […] What I am doing is, hopefully, showing how reality on the ground dispels the idea that there is such a thing as the East as we knew it.
What did you learn about these artists?

Appropriation — which has been very prevalent in Western contemporary art for decades […] Some of the artists from the East in this exhibition take that idea so far that they literally steal things, and that is fascinating. It kind of pushes the envelope.
What are some examples of things from this show that have been stolen?

There are sets of keys. There are staplers. There are all kinds of objects stolen directly from commercial galleries in the West. The art team Anetta Mona Chisa and Lucia Tkacova literally went and stole objects from commercial Western galleries. It is a comment on social disparity, actually. There is also an artist from Bulgaria, Ivan Moudov, who stole pieces of artwork from a gallery, but I am not going to name them because he might get in trouble.
Is it the region that ties the show together?

No. There are many artists from the region that are excellent. What really ties it all together is their approach to art-making. It's the pushing of the boundaries, the experimental nature, and I am calling it 'post-conceptual.' It is idea-driven. That is what is bringing them all together. 

                                  

A painting of a painting. Ukrainian artist Taras Polataiko, who is now based in Lethbridge, photographed pictures of work by Constructivist Kazimir Malevich from an art book. "They are glossy, so the light is reflecting back to the camera," Polataiko says. 

                                 

A work by Polish artist Anna Kolodziejska
                                

An video installation of Elvis's last concert before he died. A clip of obscure American musician Daniel Johnson singing about a ghost follows. "There is a lot of pathos in this," Eamon says. "It's about death and loss. One is an anti-hero and one is a hero."

"Pop" video to be shown at Art Gallery of Alberta until April

Added on by Alex Mirutziu.

Art Gallery of Alberta

Still from video POP by Alex Mirutziu


Guest-curated by Christopher Eamon

In a rearview mirror
I suddenly saw
the mass of the cathedral in Beauvais;
large things inhabit small, briefly.

(Rearview Mirror from Going to Lwow, 1985) 

Rearview Mirror is a large thematic exhibition that brings together the work of a new generation of contemporary artists from Central and Eastern Europe.

Twenty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, one might expect great changes in the cultural practices in the region known as the Eastern Bloc, even though the political cultures and histories of the various nations that comprise it greatly diverge. Rearview Mirror brings together artists from these diverse backgrounds and histories, who engage with post-conceptual strategies and forms, and artistic practices that range in media from video, installation and performance to sculpture and painting. Looking both to the past and to the future, the work of these 22 artists represent 11 different countries and collectively challenge accepted notions of Eastern Europe as a social, political and art historical monolith.

The exhibition does not attempt to be all-inclusive or encyclopaedic; instead it is a preliminary investigation in which one can find moments of dialogue, convergence as well as difference. It is a unique opportunity to view art works by a new generation of artists, such as Ciprian Muresan, Gintaras Dzidziapetris and Anna Molska in the context of some of their contemporaries who are already well-established in the international art world: Pawel Althamer, Roman Ondák and Wilhelm Sasnal. Artists in the exhibition include:

Paweł Althamer (Poland), Anetta Mona Chişa (Romania/Czech Republic) with Lucia Tkáčová (Slovakia), Gintaras Didžiapetris (Lithuania), Dušica Dražić, (Serbia), Igor Eškinja (Croatia), Johnson & Johnson (Estonia), Anna Kołodziejska (Poland), David Maljković (Croatia), Ján Mančuška (Czech Republic), Dénes Miklósi (Romania), Alex Mirutziu (Romania), Anna Molska (Poland), Ivan Moudov (Bulgaria), Ciprian Mureşan (Romania), Deimantas Narkevičius (Lithuania), Roman Ondák (Slovakia), Anna Ostoya (Poland), Taras Polataiko (Ukraine), 
Wilhelm Sasnal  (Poland), Sislej Xhafa (Kosova), Katarina Zdjelar (Serbia)


On January 31, 2010, the newly constructed Art Gallery of Alberta (AGA) opened its doors to an eager public. Located in downtown Edmonton’s arts district on the north-east corner of Sir Winston Churchill Square, the long road from conception to construction had finally reached its end.



Los Angeles-based architect Randall Stout’s dynamic design is the first boundary pushing infrastructure to be erected in Alberta in decades. More importantly, it symbolizes that a strong appreciation for visual art exists in this province, as the Government of Alberta committed a total of $27 million toward funding the gallery’s new facility.


REARVIEW MIRROR: NEW ART FROM CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE // On view until 5 September, 2011

Added on by Alex Mirutziu.








©  "Pop"  Alex Mirutziu  
©  "Pop"  Alex Mirutziu  
©  "Pop"  Alex Mirutziu
Participating artists: Pawel Althamer (Poland); Anetta Mona Chisa (Czech Republic) and Lucia Tkácová (Slovakia); Gintaras Didziapetris (Lithuania); Dušica Drazic (Serbia); Igor Eškinja Croatia); Johnson & Johnson (Estonia); Anna Kolodziejska (Poland); David Maljkovic (Croatia); Ján Mancuška (Czech Republic); Dénes Miklósi (Romania); Alex Mirutziu (Romania); Anna Molska (Poland); Ivan Moudov (Bulgaria); Ciprian Muresan (Romania); Deimantas Narkevicius (Lithuania); Roman Ondák (Slovakia); Anna Ostoya (Poland); Taras Polataiko (Ukraine); Wilhelm Sasnal (Poland); Sislej Xhafa (Kosova); and Katarina Zdjelar (Serbia).*

Curated by Christopher Eamon
Organized by The Power Plant and the Art Gallery of Alberta


Rearview Mirror is a large thematic exhibition that brings together the work of a new generation of artists from Central and Eastern Europe. Looking both to the past and to the future, the works by the twenty-two artists in the exhibition engage post-conceptual strategies and forms, and collectively challenge accepted notions of Eastern Europe as a social, political and art historical monolith.


In an attempt to alter stereotypes of Eastern Art and "Easternness" in general, the exhibition is a kind of preliminary experiment and dialogue in the post-socialist period. Twenty years after the fall of the Berlin wall, one might expect great changes in the cultural practices in the region known since the Yalta agreement as the "Eastern Bloc" even though the political cultures and histories of the various nations comprising it greatly diverge. Indeed this is the case in many practices that have been selected mainly for the artists' choices of non-traditional forms that range in media from video, installation and performance to sculpture and painting.


Related posts:

» Rearview Mirror at THE POWER PLANT - 1 July - 5 September, 2011

» Alex Mirutziu - "Pop" video at Art Gallery of Alberta until April

Rearview Mirror is not an exhibition that attempts to be all-inclusive or encyclopedic. It brings together the work of artists from diverse backgrounds and histories to look at the non-traditional practices of a younger generation of artists from the last decade, presenting an opportunity to view artworks by relative newcomers such as Ciprian Muresan, Gintaras Didziapetris and Anna Molska in the context of some of their contemporaries already known through international art circuits such as Pawel Althamer, Roman Ondák and Wilhelm Sasnal.


Christopher Eamon is a Canadian-born, New York-based independent curator who has curated numerous international exhibitions, and edited and written for a wide number of publications.


The exhibition is a co-presentation with the Art Gallery of Alberta, where it will be on view from
27 January – 29 April, 2012. Rearview Mirror is accompanied by a substantial publication, co-published by The Power Plant and the Art Gallery of Alberta.


 — all images except "Pop" stills, courtesy Steve Payne taken at The Power Plant, Toronto — 

Rearview Mirror at THE POWER PLANT - 1 July - 5 September, 2011

Added on by Alex Mirutziu.

Anetta Mona Chişa & Lucia Tkáčová, MANIFESTO OF THE FUTURIST WOMAN (LET’S CONCLUDE), 2008. Colour video with sound, 11:13 min. Produced by Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, 2008. Courtesy of the artists and Christine König Galerie, Vienna. Photo credits: Anetta Mona Chişa.

Works from a new generation of Central and Eastern European artists that engage post-conceptual strategies and collectively challenge accepted notions of the East as a social, political and art historical monolith.


Rearview Mirror – A large thematic exhibition that brings together the work of a new generation of artists from Central and Eastern Europe. Twenty years after the fall of the Berlin wall, the practices included in this exhibition engage post-conceptual strategies and forms. Looking both to the past and to the future, the work of the 22 artists in Rearview Mirror collectively challenge accepted notions of Eastern Europe as a social, political and art historical monolith.


The exhibition is not all-inclusive or encyclopedic. Instead, it looks at the non-traditional practices of a younger generation of artists from the last decade, presenting an opportunity to view art works by relative newcomers such as Cyprian Muresan, Gintaras Dzidziapetris, and Anna Molska in the context of some of their contemporaries already known through international art circuits such as Paweł Althamer, Roman Ondák, and Wilhelm Sasnal. The exhibition is a co-presentation with the Art Gallery of Alberta. It travels to the AGA on Jan.
27-Apr. 29, 2012.


The project will be accompanied by a substantial publication with commissioned texts, copublished by The Power Plant and Art Gallery of Alberta, and the exhibition will be complimented by talks and other public programming.


Related posts:

REARVIEW MIRROR at the Art Gallery of Alberta
Alex Mirutziu in "The Rearview Mirror" [catalogue]
Alex Mirutziu - "Pop" video at Art Gallery of Alberta until April
Rearview Mirror: (Review Article) by Milena Tomic
REARVIEW MIRROR: NEW ART FROM CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE // On view until 5 September, 2011



Artists:


Paweł Althamer (Poland),


Anetta Mona Chisa (Czech Rep., born Romania), 
Lucia Tkáčová (Slovakia), 
Dušica Dražić (Serbia), 
Gintaras Didžiapetris (Lithuania), 
Igor Eškinja (Croatia), 
Johnson & Johnson (Estonia), 
Anna Kołodziejska (Poland),
David Maljković (Croatia), 
Ján Mančuška (Czech Rep.), 
Dénes Miklósi (Romania), 
Alex Mirutziu (Romania), 
Anna Molska (Poland), 
Ivan Moudov (Bulgaria), 

Ciprian Muresan (Romania),
Deimantas Narkevičius (Lithuania), 
Roman Ondák (Slovakia),

Anna Ostoya (Poland), 
Taras Polataiko (Ukraine),
Wilhlem Sasnal (Poland)
Sislej Xhafa (Kosova),
Katarina Zdjelar (Serbia).

Curated by Christopher Eamon.