exhibition text
the world next door
an installation of 8 videoworks from around the world addressing territoriality
curated by ruth bianco at mca (malta contemporary art), marsa shed, malta 2009
The idea for this exhibition grew out of a continuing interest with the "notion of territory". The participants are all artists I have met on my travels whilst they themselves were "away from home", engaged in fine art research. It is within this ongoing context of interrogation and travel that I would like to introduce the works in this joint exhibition. This implies that the work is contextually fluid and nomadic - open-ended, questioning journeys, rather than closures. The show, therefore, is "a-topic" in that the works resist fixture and examine "territory" through temporality and 'viatorisation' in terms of themes, materiality, personal experiences and artistic navigation. For clearly, spatial perception is transformed when global networks, speedy travel, political, business and weather crunches bring more climates for flight, migration, and a collapse of distance, with yet a stronger awareness of cultural multiplicity. The sociologist Marc Augé talks of a sweeping "net" wherein the knots link us together. Yet, like the junctions on a spatial superhighway these constellate in multi-directions.
The language of video was chosen not only for its mobility but also because it is an apt expression for 'the consumption of movement'; even more so, because its light-bound nature gives a spatial and visual freedom that remains very particular to it. Adversely, the medium's "ease" often gives it a non-place amongst art formats, particularly here in Malta, although it is precisely its transience that in fact gives it potential and conceptual challenge. Indeed, when Augé identifies "non-places" (eg airports, stations, motorways) as consumptive havens of fleeting character, he also sees them as: 'the extension of new spaces in our world; spaces of circulation giving us the sense that the earth is small..' The non-place is: 'a space of absolute freedom. A freedom that remains very particular.'
These videos have that kind of vehicular quality, where the materiality of time itself is part of the issue of the materiality of art and culture today, combined in the personal histories, land politics, physicality, loss, sense of itinerancy, escape or imaginings through which each artist here chooses to address territoriality. For, increasingly, we are told, there no longer is any territory... this has become one of the illusory effects of globalisation. In his recent introduction to Altermodernity, Nicolas Bourriaud observes: 'in a world every inch of which is under satellite surveillance, territory takes the form of a construction or a journey'. 'The exodus' he says is the gestural legacy of modernity leading to the current standpoint of: 'the extreme globalisation of culture'. In the context that art has always been creatively "fugitive", my view is that more than "refugee", the contemporary artist is "avatar" (living transformed realities). My surmise is that territoriality is but "connective transitoriness". The artists here all navigate through different media to explore interdisciplinary practice in their art, and video is but one conceptual departure for them in this show.
The title of this show is a re-use from a literary work by Rajni Srikanth that searches for human meanings beyond cultural identities, places and current tense geopolitics. In this exhibition, the moving image is used as a metonymic device to map territoriality through individual meanings by artists I met on the move, themselves on the move, whose art is in research and on the move:
Reem Bader, Maria Papanastasiou, Sumita Chauhan, Linda Gibson, Leah Decter, Josephine Turalba, Esin Croft.
ruth bianco
project curator
may 2009
References:
L'art du Décalage; Marc Augé: www.multitudes.samizdat.net 2009
Tourism could well be the last utopia; Marc Augé: www.atopia.tk 2009
Altermodern; Nicolas Bourriaud; Tate Triennial, Tate Publishing London 2009