Archive for January, 2012

New Modernities. Addendum to Arab Agendas

I just published a text in AM called Arab Agendas. Looking at this now, I realise that the one thing I didn’t have time to address in the feature is technology and its relationship to the visual agenda.

It feels banal to spell out so bluntly, but technological interfaces have shifted the manner in which we interact. To reference ‘Arab Agendas’ (AM 353), it seems that no example is better than the case of the Egyptian revolutionary dissidence of 2011. The story of how Twitter and Facebook were used as rallying platforms has been expounded upon in considerable detail by various news outlets. A fascination here was undeniably how such a prolific use of technology could manifest, especially in a developing country. This brings us to Giles Deleuze’s assertions of technology being a socialising force. In the case of the Egyptian revolution, this socialisation, also led to a heightened case of audience/participant appropriation. Take for example, the assassination of the media artist, Ahmed Basiony, who was shot by a sniper with a bullet to the head on the 28th of January 2011, whilst protesting in Tahrir Square.

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Arab Agendas

Could the west’s recent embrace of the Arab Spring become a suffocating bear hug? –  Omar Kholeif, Art Monthly

Order the new issue of Art Monthly online here.

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Subversion, curated by Omar Kholeif

Marwa Arsanios · Sherif El-Azma · Wafaa Bilal · Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige · Khaled Hafez · Emily Jacir · Larissa Sansour · Tarzan and Arab · Sharif Waked · Akram Zaatari

Cornerhouse is delighted to announce Subversion, a unique group show of new and recent contemporary  art which explores and rethinks modern Arab identity.

Twelve emerging and established artists use autobiographical narratives amalgamated with fiction, popular culture and subversive parody, to express the dichotomies they face as they perform multiple roles in a society which is frequently represented to the outside world in a contorted and mediated manner.
Spanning an array of techniques including installation, video, photography and sculpture, the artists collectively illustrate fragments of the distorted imagination that often preoccupies the Arab world, uncovering the contrasts of existence in a disputed political region. But instead of conforming, they approach the various masks they are expected to wear with a sense of humour whilst referencing to the duplicitous performances of their everyday life.

Emerging Gaza artists and filmmakers Tarzan and Arab will present their award- winning Gazawood project (2010), including short film Colourful Journey and a series of striking cinema poster pastiches of imaginary movies from different genres (illustrated above left). Originating from a region that has not had a functioning cinema since the 1980s and heavily relies on satellite TV and illegal DVD copies, the works on display strongly reflect the twins’ interest in and passion for film.

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