http://www.artlyst.com/articles/delfina-foundation-artschool-palestine-joint-project-announced
he Delfina Foundation has announced 'Points of Departure', a
group exhibition and public programme that culminates a year of
collaboration with ArtSchool Palestine, the British Council and the
Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA), London. The first outcomes of
Points of Departure will be presented in Ramallah in January and
February 2013 before travelling in an expanded form to the ICA, as one
of the highlights of the next Shubbak Festival in London, summer 2013.
Points
of Departure will feature new commissions resulting from six
residencies in London and Ramallah by British and Palestinian artists:
Jumana Emil Abboud, Bashar Alhroub, Bisan Abu Eisheh, Jeremy Hutchison,
Olivia Plender, and Nathan Witt. Devised with two curators-in-residence,
Mirna Bamieh and Rebecca Heald, the works in Points of Departure are a
thoughtful exploration of the anthropological concept of liminality.
From the Latin word līmen, meaning ‘a threshold’, liminality is a
condition in which one’s sense of identity is diffused, leading not only
to states of dislocation and disorientation, but also to the
possibility of new perspectives. Residencies can also be understood as a
‘liminal’ state between time and place. But what happens when the
liminality of the residency is entwined with a place like Palestine,
which is defined by its own political ambiguity and contestation?
In
the face of globalisation, but without succumbing to false
universalism, all Points of Departure artists undertook varieties of
research to reveal a range of partial truths. At the ICA, they will be
presented in different mediums including performance, video,
installation, drawings, and intervention.
Titian’s Noli me
tangere is the starting point for Jumana Emil Abboud. Using Anglo-Saxon
and Palestinian versions of the fairytale, The Girl without Hands, she
creates an installation in which to consider on one level the body and
sensations of touch, and on another, the cultural dismemberment that
interferes with the development of human beings.
Bashar Alhroub
continues his distinctive investigation into the relationship between
memory and place. For this project, in video and collage he presents the
site of literal residency (the Delfina House) as immensely evocative
and personal.
In Welcome to Palestine, Bisan Abu-Eisheh
rediscovers his daily routes through the British resident artists’
experience of Palestine; in a “re-mapping” exercise he explores codes
and modes of travel and movement, those of a local and those of a
foreigner.
Through the manipulation of manufacturing and
commercial modes of production, Jeremy Hutchison engages in what he
terms “rituals of sense-making”. Collaborating with employees in
factories and supermarkets, he designs situations that embrace confusion
and
propose alternative kinds of logic.
Over the time she
spent in Palestine, Olivia Plender was absorbed with questions related
to historical narration and the absence of archives and museums in the
West Bank. Now, with local actors she is working on a series of
game-like improvisation exercises that explore invisibility as a
metaphor.
When he started his residency in Ramallah, Nathan Witt
set his Google Calendar to include Islamic Hijri, Hebrew Ha’luach and
Christian Gregorian calendars. Over the last six months this calendar
has been shared, posing questions about existing within three separate
religious zones.
Related research and new knowledge on the theme of liminality will
be incorporated into the exhibition catalogue. The exhibition will
be also be complemented with a public programme of talks.
Delfina
Foundation is an independent, non-profit foundation dedicated to
facilitating artistic exchange and developing creative practice through
residencies, partnerships and public programming, with a special focus
on international collaborations with the greater Middle East & North
Africa.
In 2013, Delfina Foundation will expand into London’s
largest international residency programme, also broadening its
geographical remit beyond the Middle East. Along with new commissions at
Art Dubai and the Chisenhale Gallery, Points of Departure is one of
several off-site partnership-projects during Delfina Foundation’s
renovation. www.delfinafoundation.com
ArtSchool Palestine is a
non-profit organisation founded in 2005 by a group of art professionals,
curators and artists based in Palestine
and London. ArtSchool
Palestine is committed to the production, facilitation and circulation
of artistic practices, and the provision of networking opportunities
with the aim of enhancing cultural exchange, educational opportunities
and encouraging critical debate. ArtSchool Palestine’s work includes
activities from exhibitions, film and video screenings, lectures,
performances and publications, to
establishing networks and initiating partnerships for reflection,dialogue and exchange.
www.artschoolpalestine.com
The
British Council is the UK’s international organisation for educational
opportunities and cultural relations. It operates in 109 countries to
create opportunities for the people of the UK and other countries and to
build trust between them. In the Palestinian Territories, the British
Council’s work focuses on building stronger ties and greater mutual
understanding between Palestinians and the UK, through providing
opportunities for engagement between people and organisations in
education, English, arts and society projects. www.britishcouncil.org
The
ICA, Institute of Contemporary Arts, is a not-for-profit, multi-
disciplinary arts centre established in 1947 by a collective of artists,
poets and writers to showcase and champion contemporary culture across
the broadest range of art forms. Housing two galleries, two cinemas, a
theatre, reading room, bookshop and café/bar, the ICA has been at the
forefront of cultural experiment since its formation and has presented
some of the most radical exhibitions, artists, films, music and thought
to have shaped our world. It exists today as a committed proponent of
contemporary arts practice and new ideas, presenting an international
and contextualised programme of work in new and experimental frameworks
across a variety of platforms. www.ica.org.uk
London's Shubbak
festival returns for two weeks in 2013 from 22 June to 6 July. Now
running every two years, Shubbak (meaning "window" in Arabic) presents
outstanding artists and cultural events from across the Arab world. The
festival offers audiences the chance to discover and enjoy some of the
most exciting voices and practitioners of contemporary Arab culture, in
partnership with leading organisations in London and the Arab region.
Biographies of artists and curators
Jumana
Emil Abboud (b.1971) uses drawing, video, performance, objects and text
to navigate themes of memory, loss and resilience. Her primary
interests lie in storytelling practices and her work consistently
reflects a Palestinian cultural landscape in which the struggle for
continuity in the wider political context necessitates a constant
process of metamorphosis and ingenuity. She has participated in numerous
international exhibitions in the last decade, including the Venice
Biennial, the Istanbul Biennial, the Bahrain National Museum, the
Institut du Monde Arabe (Paris), The Jerusalem Show, Darat al Funun
(Amman) and the Carré d’Art (Nimes).
Bashar Alhroub (b. 1978)
works in painting, photography, video, installation and mixed media. His
work addresses the polemics of a place. He has participated in
exhibitions including the Eli and Edythe Broad Museum (Michigan State
University, USA); Center for Contemporary Art “Lazania” (Gdansk); Mosaic
Rooms at The A. M. Qattan Foundation (London); Green Art Gallery
(Dubai); Birzeit Ethnographic and Art Museum (Palestine) and Instants
Vidéo Festival (Marseille). Bashar holds an M.F.A. from Winchester
School of Art (2010). He lives and works in Ramallah, Palestine.
Bisan
Abu-Eisheh (b. 1985) lives between Jerusalem and London, where he
recently started his M.A. at Central Saint Martins. Selected group
exhibitions include Arrivals and Departures (Ancona, 2012); The
Jerusalem Show on/off Language (2011); the 12th Istanbul Biennial
(2011); Belongings, Vita Havet Konstfack (Stockholm, 2011); World Social
Forum Photo Exhibition (Jerusalem, 2010); and SIN festival, Al-Qattan
Foundation (Ramallah, 2009). He holds a B.A. from the International
Academy of Art in Palestine.
Mirna Bamieh (b. 1983) is an artist
and curator based in Jerusalem. She currently works at Al Hoash Gallery
in Jerusalem and is pursuing her M. A. in Fine Arts at Bezalel Academy
for Arts and Design in Tel Aviv. Her current artistic and curatorial
research interests lie in psychic spaces, the landscape of politics, and
the construction of collective memory.
Rebecca Heald (b. 1976)
is Director of New Contemporaries, the annual exhibition of new and
recent UK fine art graduates. She has previously worked across
curatorial and education departments at Sadie Coles HQ, Tate Britain,
and the Hayward Gallery. Before working in galleries she was Arts and
Features Editor at telegraph.co.uk and has published widely on
contemporary art.
Jeremy Hutchison (b. 1979) lives and works in
London. He was trained in linguistics and wrote advertising for
Coca-Cola. Working across installation, video and sculpture, he designs
situations that turn everyday life into manifestations of the absurd. In
2011, he was awarded the Barto dos Santos Award and was subsequently
named by The Independent as one of the most interesting artists to
graduate last year. His first UK solo show, Erratum, opened in December
2012 at Paradise Row, London. Other recent exhibitions include The
Future Can Wait / Saatchi New Sensations (Victoria House, London) and
Acoustic Mirrors (176 Gallery / Zabludowicz Collection), and a
commission for London's Southbank Centre.
Olivia Plender (b.
1977) lives and works in Berlin. Her research- based practice varies
from graphic novels to performance, video and installation. Recent solo
exhibitions include Rise Early, Be Industrious (2012) at MK Gallery
(Milton Keynes), touring to Arnolfini (Bristol), and CCA (Glasgow);
Aadieu Adieu Apa (2009) at Gasworks (London); Information, Education,
Entertainment (2007) at Marabouparken (Stockholm) and The Folly of Man
Exposed or the World Turned Upside Down (2006) at Frankfurter
Kunstverein. Her work has also been shown in the British Art Show 10
(2011) at the Hayward Gallery (London) and touring; Folkestone Triennial
(2011); Taipei Biennial (2010); Altermodern: Tate Triennial (2009) and
the Bucharest Biennial (2010).
Nathan Witt (b. 1974) is
interested in motivations and attributed values. His work manifests in
many forms including lists, poems, vignettes, short essays and rants.
Recent projects include producing an alternative press release for
Haroon Mirza’s solo show at Lisson Gallery (London), a group show In
Search of Alchemical Times curated by Cecilia Wee (2011), guest-writing
for or-bits.com on “truth” and an artist book commission with [SPACE]
Studios.
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