Past Screenings

Unforgiving Years: The Incidental Insurgents, Part 2

Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme

Unforgiving Years: The Incidental Insurgents, Part 2

2014, 6′ 30″

5 October 2015 – 10 November 2015

 

To accompany the exhibition of Unforgiving Years: The Incidental Insurgents, Part 2 in the downstairs space at 56 – 57 Eastcastle Street (25 September – 24 October) and at the Artissima art fair in Turin, Italy (5 November to 8 November), Carroll / Fletcher Onscreen is showing the film that links to the installation.

 

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The Incidental Insurgents

We are believing and dis-believing
We are in the midst of the not yet material
or perhaps the already determined
inhabiting a time of radical potentiality and its collapse
In search of a new language
in need of this
always on the verge
always becoming and yet…

The Incidental Insurgents is mapped out as a three part multi-layered narrative, with chapters completing and complicating each other, and unfolding the ‘story’ of a contemporary search for a new ‘political’ language and imaginary. Multiple texts and fragments, largely the writings of Victor Serge and Roberto Bolano, alongside manifestos, memoirs, testimonies, and text written by the artists, are sampled and re-pieced together to form an altogether new script. As the project unfolds and the search continues, new threads emerge that take us into expected and unexpected places, deadly serious and deadly playful all at once. Contributing to a growing density of material, where the figure of the incidental insurgent, part bandit, rebel, part vagabond, artist, returns and resurges in many forms and characters. Recast into a convoluted script of sampled text, images, objects and sounds.

The Part about The Bandits, begins with four seemingly disparate coordinates, the early anarchist life of Victor Serge and his contemporary anarchist-bandits in 1910’s Paris; Abu Jildeh and Arameet and their bandit gang in volved in a rebellion against the British in 1930’s Palestine, the artist as the quintessential bandit in Roberto Bolaño’s novel The Savage Detectives set in 70’s Mexico, and the artists themselves in present day Palestine. Weaving the first part of the story by looking at the resonance between the inspiring, bizarre and sometimes tragic stories of these diverse bandits, the outsider rebel par excellence, often rewritten as mere criminals (or naively romanticized as wayward figures) and excluded from the narrative of revolutionary struggle. Ironically these figures most clearly articulate the incompleteness and inadequacies in existing oppositional movements political language and imaginary. Often desperately searching for a language able to give form to their impulse for more radical forms of action.

Unforgiving Years, the second part of the story, traces the metamorphosis of these incidental figures (Serge, Bolaño, the artist themselves) or the resonance of their final gestures years after they have been killed (Bonnot Gang, Abu Jilda), following the figures or their echo to strange places and obscure positions. Arriving at a vanguard political publishing house in 1970’s Jerusalem. Perhaps it is here that the trace of Abu Jildeh, dead then for 40 years, returns.

 

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Where the first part of the story expresses the impulse for more radical forms of action, the characters urgent need to overcome their unbearable living conditions, the second part partially looks at what happens when these gestures are unfulfilled, for those who are not killed, somehow left behind. At the same time, it unfolds a recurrent impulse to refuse the seeming ‘permanence’ of a capitalist-colonial present, that though defeated at multiple moments continues to resurge and return. Unforgiving Years is about things lost and others glimpsed in the wreckage, about what can be conjured into being from the ashes.   A victory in defeat. A provocation to rethink the seemingly un-imaginable.

“Then they would reshuffle the pieces of this story and talk to me about those shadowy figures, those occasional brothers and sisters -in-arms, the ghosts populating their vast freedom, their vast desolation”.

In the last part of the search When The Fall of the Dictionary Leaves all words lying in the street (2015), obsession gives way to hallucination. Times, places and characters recede leaving only the impulse towards that unfullfiled desire for a radically different way of being.   We are somehow in the folds and density of moments, recaptured, retrieved and made anew, embodying all the characters and situations we have lived vicariously. That is to say embodying all times.

 

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“This was a daydream, Vaneigem cheerfully admitted – but “daydreaming subverts the world”. When this free field was finally opened by the noise of the exploding syntax, when the fall of the dictionary left all words lying in the streets, when men and women rushed to pick them up and make pictures out of them, such day dreams would find themselves empowered turning into catalysts for new passions, new acts, new events: situations, made to be lived by their creators a whole new way of being in the world”

A multi-channel sound piece is the main pulse of the final chapter, with 4 screens playing intermittently and creating a choreography of movement and pauses, synchronization and disjuncture. Elusive traces, objects and material from this hallucinatory search appear in the space between the screen, as though they are another code we are meant to decipher, a broken syntax to be reassembled, an unfinished map. The beginning of a daydream, one that could subvert the world as the Situationist would have said.

The Incidental Insurgents is meant as an investigation into the possibilities for the future rather then the past, where a convoluted story situated in multiple times starts to emerge. Initiating an obsessive search to figure out how we, like the incidental figures before us, find ourselves inhabiting a moment full of radical potential and disillusionment. Searching for what we cannot yet see but feel is possible.

 

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Bio

Basel Abbas (b. 1983, Nicosia, Cyprus) and Ruanne Abou-Rahme (b. 1983, Boston, US) live and work between Ramallah and New York. Solo exhibitions include ICA, Philadelphia, USA (2015); OCA, Oslo, Norway (2015); AKW, Cologne, Germany (2014); and New Art Exchange, Nottingham, UK (2011). Selected group exhibitions include the 12th Sharjah Biennial, Sharjah, UAE (Recipients of the Sharjah Biennial Prize, 2015); 10th Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju, Korea (2014) and 31st Sao Paulo Biennial, Sao Paulo, Brazil (2014). The Incidental Insurgents, Part 2: Unforgiving Years will also be shown in Present Future at Artissima 2015. The Incidental Insurgents, Part 3: When the fall of the dictionary leaves all words lying in the streets will be shown at Kunsthalle Wien as part of the exhibition Political Populism, opening 7 November

 

Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme (1)

Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme (12)

Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme (11)

 

 

 

 

 

GESPIELIN

Ayla Pierrot Arendt,

GESPIELIN

2014, 22’00”

16 June – 22 June 2015

 

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Synopsis

“GESPIELIN reveals the editor´s choreography of the available material from an 18 day working phase with two hired dancers. Her interests and desires, her way of creating relations of relevance, effect how you see the dancers and their play. To document is to show interest in something. To edit means to choose what is interesting. But the depicted constitutes the gaze of the voyeur as well as it reaffirms the labour and existence of the performer. The camera was looking for the rare event, exotic features, extreme situations; a real moment and the beauty in it. The women performed conscious of the gaze of the camera; they fictionalized themselves as the Other that looks back in order to inscribe themselves in history as subjects of consciousness. Their time is retrievable, public and relevant. Otherness can be performed and explored constructively when it understands itself and video has become its tool.” Ayla Pierrot Arendt.

 

Bio

Born 1987 in Munich, DE.

Visual Art studies in the USA and at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna, AT.  Master of Choreography and Performance at the Applied Theatre Department in Giessen, DE.

Ayla Pierrot Arendt works choreographically, thinking and staging in order to contribute to a historical time with perspectives of critical and feminist nature. Her interests lie in the immediate access to an event and experience, and their translation to effect. She interrogates perceptions and the scope and potential of actions, not to write fiction but to crystallize reality. She looks for ways of participation.

Her main media are video and installation, as these are time and experience-based. Painting and drawing allow visualizing the processes of overwriting and deleting more effectively that is why she likes to use them as screens for reflection and projection. The gap between practice and product is part of her examination of the Inter-esse as the performative moment between trigger and (re)action.

Exhibition and festival participation: Videonale, Kunstmuseum Bonn, DE; Lichter Art Award, Frankfurt, DE (Finalist); 27.Dresdner Filmfest, DE; European Media Art Festival Osnabrück, DE; antimatter Media Art Festival, Victoria, BC, Canada; Biennale des Bewegten Bildes, Frankfurt, DE.

 

GESPIELIN at videonale.15

“The earth revolved, so that we came close to one another, it revolved about itself and in us till it finally brought us together in this dream. I lose myself in the person whom I see. I am a permeable membrane. I soak up her beauty. She shines. She sparkles. She does not move. She just stands there. In all her loveliness. Absolutely immaculate. Like an angel. I now see the world only in

Courtesy Xhesika Hoxha and videonale.15, read the full text here.

 

Credits

Performance: Oksana Griaznova, Merel Roozen

Camera: Maren Wiese

Dramaturgy: Marion Siefert

Sound: Fullruhm, Don Dyzette, Rahel Pötsch

Support: Hessische Filmförderung

© Ayla Pierrot Arendt, 2014.

 

Contact

ayla.pierrot.arendt@gmail.com

dddocumentary.com

 

 

 

Projection on the Crisis

Philipp Gufler

Projection on the Crisis

2014, 36’19”, 16:9

28 May – 15 June 2015

 

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Synopsis

Consisting of three parts – a video installation, a screen print naming the authors of the filmed objects and a book published by HAMMANN & VONMIER – Projection on the Crisis provides a kaleidoscopic view of the beginning of the AIDS crisis in Munich in the 1980s. The video transfers the spectator into a classical white cube gallery setting, where Gufler presents documents collected from the archive Forum Homosexualität München e.V. in chronological order and complements them with recent works by artist friends. The exhibition was conceived for the filming, a film set that was never open to the public, thus the exhibition remains as a purely virtual space. The artist’s playful handling of different levels of representation can be understood as a comment on the problematic relationship between homosexuality and history. The posters, art works, newspapers and  TV footage, which can be found partly in the accompanying book, are captured by a fluid camera motion and reveal a discussion about sexuality, love, morality and death quite similar to those we have today. The infamous Peter Gauweiler (former Bavarian State Secretary) and the then Bavarian Minister of Education, Hans Zehetmair, answer the emergence of the AIDS epidemic with the most drastic and shocking proposals; the prevention of the disease is not at the forefront of Gauweiler’s Maßnahmenkatalog and Zehetmair’s rhetoric, instead the exclusion and ultimately the extinction of the “germ carrier,” ie the homosexuals, takes centre stage. Gufler opposes these homophobic resentments with the emancipatory battle cries of Munich’s gay and lesbian movement and, thus, draws an oscillating image of Munich and at the same time German history.

Participants: Maximiliane Baumgartner, Adrian Djukic, Gursoy Dogtas, Florian Gass, Albert Knoll, Dr. med. Hans Jäger, Stephan Janitzky, Richard John Jones, Simon Leahy, Stefanie Hammann, Maria Mier, Mirja Reuter, Lisa Schairer, Barbara Spiller and Guido Vael.
Text: Nicholas Maniu

“The exhibition was never public, I installed it only for filming. I wanted to highlight the moment of staging history, how history has to be reproduced and is restaged all the time, fragile and liquid in its meaning. What stories are excluded? By asking why this part of recent German history is so rarely known outside a gay and lesbian scene I wanted to ask more general questions on representation and power. I included archive materials in the timeline which are reflecting, e.g. my mirrors, to make our camera and me filming and guiding the viewer through the exhibition visible.” Philipp Gufler in conversation with Carroll/FletcherOnscreen.

Projektion-auf-die-Krise-buch

 

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Bio

The artist Philipp Gufler (1989) lives in Munich. His work spans a variety of media (prints, performances, video and more). He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich, the Academy of Design Karlsruhe, and the University of Amsterdam. His work has been shown at “Loop” in Barcelona, Kunstverein München, “Videonale15” at Kunstmuseum Bonn and in the galleries Françoise Heitsch in Munich and Sassa Trülzsch in Berlin. Since April 2013, Gufler has been conducting research in the archives of Forum Homosexualität München e.V. and since October 2014 he is part of the committee at Lothringer13Florida, an artist-run space by the city of Munich.

Filmography

2014: “Interview with Erich Haas” (w/ Liane Klingler), 24 Min., HD, Sound, Farbe
2014: “Projection on the Crisis (Gauweilereien in Munich)”, 36 Min., HD, Sound, Farbe
2014: “Portraiture as Crisis”, 9 Min, HD, Sound, Farbe
2012: “Eingebildete Männlichkeit”, 23 Min, Videoinstallation, HD, Sound, Farbe
2012: “Next year in Bad Tölz” (w/ Maxi Baumgartner, Florian Gass, Mirja Reuter, Max Schmidtlein and Lisa Schaierer), 9 Min, Videoinstallation, HD, Sound, Farbe
2011: “Ritual of Farewell”, 6 Min, Super 8 Digital Transfer, Farbe,
2010: “Pfaueninseln” (w/ Salong), 30 Min, Farbe, Sound,

Solo Exhibitions

2014: “Zirkeltraum”, Françoise Heitsch, Munich
2014: “Gauweilereien”, Schwules Museum*, Berlin
2013: “42”, Galerie Sassa Trülzsch, Berlin
2012: “Quecksilberwand”, Wolff Verlag, Berlin
2012: “Eingebildete Männlichkeit”, Akademie Galerie, Munich

Awards

2012: Recipient of the city of Augsburg art award
2014: Award by the Academy of Fine Arts Munich foundation for “Projection on the Crisis“
2014: Recipient of the Bayernwerke art award for “Projection on the Crisis”
2015: Recipient of the art award by the bavarian state
2015-2017: scholarship at De Ateliers, Amsterdam (NL)

Links

Philipp’s website here.

Philipp’s videonale.15 page here.

Here’s the Forum Homosexualität München e.V. where Philipp has been researching.

Philipp’s pages at Francoise Heitsch here.

And an interview (in German) here.

You can find more about the publication at Hammann & VonMier’s website here (it’s worth €14 and more!).

 

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