stefan rusu on Thu, 12 Jul 2007 18:05:24 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-ro] A for Alibi_DE APPEL |
de Appel presents the group-exhibition: "A for Alibi" 14 July – 19 August 2007 opening: Friday 13 July, from 18:00 at de Appel
Artists: James Beckett (RSA 1977), Mariana Castillo Deball (MEX, 1975), Sebastian Diaz Morales (ARG, 1975), Suchan Kinoshita (JAP, 1960), Brian O'Connell (BEL, 1972), Tine Melzer (GER, 1978), Irene Kopelman (ARG, 1974) and Maria Barnas (NL, 1973).
Curator: Uqbar Foundation
"A for Alibi" is a group exhibition curated by the Uqbar Foundation, a platform for interdisciplinary exchange, working in close collaboration with research institutes such as universities, libraries, museums and archives. The way different disciplines and sections of knowledge approach the world, how these methodologies function, and how they contribute to build a collective notion of reality are central questions for Uqbar. Uqbar is initiated by artists Irene Kopelman (AR) and Mariana Castillo Deball (MEX). The exhibition at the Appel represents the final stage of the long-term project "A for Alibi".
During the preparatory phase of "A for Alibi", a group of artists known for their reflective approach and interest in research, was asked to develop a project based on the extensive historical collection of scientific instruments, objects and documents belonging to the University Museum in Utrecht. Without specific scientific foreknowledge, they performed intensive research on the lenses, photos, documents and prisms in the collection. Within the project not so much of the technical aspects of the instruments or the exact meaning of the scientific documents is the primary interest. Science has produced a repertory of images - for example tables, photos or experimental data – that represent natural phenomena and visions of the world. The relation between these images and reality is complex, in the sense that their meanings are always fluctuating. An alibi – the plea or mode of defense under which a person on trial for a crime proves that he was in another place when an alleged act was committed – contains a comparable twisted relationship between the inquire and the facts, the mystery and the reality. The drifting dynamic of the alibi served as a methaphor of the project, in the sense that in the history of representation the position of the actors is also constantly shifting.
The art works that originated give interpretations that normally remain outside science, because they are the product of free speculation, not bound by academic rules or accountability. The artists call attention to what is not immediately visible; they unveil hidden stories or points of forgotten knowledge. In doing so they ask essential questions: How do we apprehend the world and how are our own discoveries, devices, and theories actually transforming us? What are the boundaries of scientific practice and how are they related to other aspects of society outside of the scientific field? What happens if the subject and the object being observed are the same thing? How can we observe and experiment with ourselves? The questions that the artists raise in their projects and the way they make use of the Utrecht University Museum's collection are completely different from an academic ap¬proach. "A for Alibi" aims with its distinct perspective to give another narrative to the history of science.
For more information about the project visit: www.uqbarfoundation.org or www.deappel.nl
'Informance' "A for Alibi" 15 July 2007, 14:00-17:00 Location: de Appel Free entrance, reservation required via: reservation@deappel.nl
In "A for Alibi", the exchange of knowledge and ideas is an essential part of the lively dialogue between science and the arts. Learning to operate and understand scientific instruments is a successful way to stimulate that discourse. On July 15th the Uqbar foundation, in collaboration with de Appel, organises the 'informance' "A for Alibi". During this afternoon the accompanying publication of the exhibition will be presented. Physicist Peter Heering (GER) will demonstrate a special solar microscope (a device that can project microscopic species) and artist Carsten Wirth (GER) will explain how a camera obscura works.
Visit to the Magic Lantern collection of Prof. Willem A. Wagenaar 19 August 2007 2.30 pm bus leaves from de Appel 6 pm return at de Appel Free. Reservation required: reservation@deappel.nl
On the final day of the exhibition a visit is staged to the private theatre of professor in Experimental Psychology and magic lantern expert Willem A. Wagenaar in Zeist. Wagenaar houses one of the largest European collections of Magic Lanterns, one of the earliest devices that could project (moving) images. Wagenaar will give a demonstration as a true 'magic lantern performer': with images, stories and music.
Publication "A for Alibi" The publication "A for Alibi", edited by the Uqbar Foundation, will be issued to complement the exhibition. In addition to scientific essays on, for example, the historical changes in the perception of the natural world, artists also sketch their personal reflections and relate alternative stories in different 'case studies'. These indicate routes towards new ways of looking at, and thinking about, specific scientific knowledge or objects. With texts by Mika Hannula, Raimundas Malasauskas, Charlotte Bigg, Erna Fiorentini and Katrin Solhdju, an interview with Tiemen Cocquyt, and contributions by the participating artists Maria Barnas, Brian O'Connell, Irene Kopelman, James Beckett, Sebastian Diaz Morales, Suchan Kinoshita, Mariana Castillo Deball and Tine Melzer.
Concept: Uqbar Foundation Design: Manuel Raeder, Mariana Castillo Deball Published by Sternberg Press ISBN: 978-1-933128-33-7 Price: EUR 27, - _______________________________________________ Nettime-ro mailing list Nettime-ro@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-ro --> arhiva: http://amsterdam.nettime.org/