ISTANBUL. PASSION, JOY, FURY

İstanbul'daki sosyo-kültürel değişimi masaya yatıracak olan sergi, 11 Aralık 2015- 1 Mayıs 2016 tarihlerinde Roma'da MAXXI Müzesi'nde yer alacak.

İtalya’nın ilk kültür sanat enstitüsü MAXXI, 11 Aralık 2015- 1 Mayıs 2016 tarihinde Hau Hanru, Ceren Erdem, Elena Motisi ve Donatelle Saroli küratörlüğünde bir İstanbul sergisine ev sahipliği yapacak. 45 mimar ve sanatçının 100’ün üzerinde çalışması giderek çağdaş değişimin sembolü olan bir kentin dönüşümlerini, çelişkilerini, yeniliklerini ve umutlarını sunacak.

2014’te başlatılan, Akdeniz’in kültürel gerçekliklerine ve Orta Doğu ile Avrupa arasındaki ilişkiye adanan bir projenin ikinci ayağı olan bu sergi, başta Gezi Parkı protestolarında ortaya çıkan anahtar konular üzerine yansımalar olmak üzere İstanbul’daki mevcut kentsel, kültürel, sosyal gerçeklik dönüşümlerini ve bunların yaratıcı süreçlere etkilerini irdeliyor. Superpool, Serkan Taycan, PATTU, SO? gibi tanıdık simaların da yer aldığı sergi şu bölümlerden oluşuyor:

A Rose Garden? This part of the exhibition acts as an introduction to the project as a whole. The protest at Gezi Park in Istanbul has become a symbol of the resistance of civil society against the regression of democracy in which artists and intellectuals have played a central role.

The works of the artists and architects of this area recount the traces of that experience and the reflection it provoked, including the animated film Rose Garden with the epilogue by Extrastruggle (also responsible for the graphic identity of the exhibition as a whole), the performance At the Edge of All Possibles by Zeyno Pekünlü who presents the public with the emotions of the Gezi protests through the memory of those days or Post Resistance, the photographic series by Osman Bozkurt.

Ready for a change? Istanbul has been at the centre of profound urban change based on the logic of profit and the exclusion of the poor. Gentrification and social division have been stimulated in the name of innovation and urban development. In this section, artists and architects bear testimony or attempt criticism like Serkan Taycan who with his photographs recounts the expansion of the residential quarters around Istanbul, a concrete landscape that looms from the hills, or like Halil Altindere who with the video Wonderland recounts the differences between communities.

The project by the Superpool group of architects Mapping Istanbul in 2015 is an attempt to map the exponential change that has invested the city over the last few years, a video updating of the mapping produced in 2009.

With the project To build or not to build MAXXI has called three groups of architects PATTU, SO? and Architecture For All to create a series of installations in the museum spaces that investigates public space in Istanbul. A reflection on the consequences of the proliferation of spontaneous construction, frequently unregulated and aggressive, and on the formal characteristics of those finished and unfinished spaces. It is an interrogation of the possible form of the urban regeneration of Istanbul, starting out from those space created by the incorporation within the old urban fabric of new structures.

Can we fight back? Over the years the city has been not only the setting for heated confrontations between urban visions, but also the arena for social conflicts and political debates. Questions such as cultural identity, civil rights, freedom of speech and religious faith are at the heart of social life and creative practices are closely linked to them. This part of the exhibition features among others works by Sarkis an artist who was present in the Turkish pavilion at the last Venice Biennial and the delicately feminist and committed work by Güneş Terkol who creates tapestries with a political theme with the female communities.

Should we work hard? Turkey’s attempt at integration within the global economic system has led to the uncontrolled economic expansion of the city that has always been associated with the coexistence of diverse economic systems. The new laissez faire ideology has upset established positions, the working classes have lost their rights and the need for an alternative has become a central issue in artistic and architectural thinking. Do we really have to work so hard? This is the question asked by Ali Kazma with a series of videos devoted to very different jobs such as those of the calligrapher and the butcher and Burak Delier who in a video recounts the attempts of major companies to create “community” through recreational activities.

Home for all? Istanbul is historically a cosmopolitan, multi-ethnic and multicultural city despite having also been the setting for the oppression of minorities. The refugees that in recent times have been pouring into Turkey have inevitably had an impact on the city too: will it be a further burden or a new opportunity? This section features among others works by Hera Büyüktaşçıyan who presents works on memory of multi-ethnicity, and the film by Cynthia Madansky & Angelika Brudniak on Turkey’s eight borders. Mario Rizzi and Cengiz Tekin present portraits of the more recent refugees settled in the city.

Tomorrow really? Istanbul and Turkey, like Europe and the Middle East, are confronting with a profound economic and democratic crisis and the consequences of war. The future appears to be decidedly precarious, but the works brought together in this section reveal the existence of a laboratory of ideas and projects focussing on the construction of possible alternatives. The works include the site specific performance by the collective Ha Za Vu Zu, the site specific work by Ceren Oykut that invades the walls of the museum with large scale drawings and the video by Inci Eviner Nursing Modern Fall in which the rational and irrational represented by modernist

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