10/9 2018 Dokumentarfilm & dialog / THE HUMAN BODY VERSUS THE PERFORMATIVE BODY

Dansehallerne & Kunsthal Charlottenborg inviterer til filmvisning af den roste dansedokumentar BALLERINA af instruktør Maja Friis. 

I forlængelse af filmen vil Maja Friis og danser Ana Sendas (P) tale om den kreative proces ved tilblivelsen af filmen med afsæt i deres koreografiske metoder, inspireret af site-specific undersøgelser, bevægelse som greb i filmisk historiefortælling og temaer, som inspirerede karakteren i filmen.

Det foregår 10. september 2018 i Charlottenborg Art Cinema, Nyhavn 2, Kbh K kl. 19-21. Fri entré.

Aftenen begynder med visning af dansedokumentaren Ballerina (52 min.) en poetisk dansedokumentar inspireret af Elsa Marianne von Rosens livslange ægteskab med dansen.
Et poetisk blik på en sand “pas de trois” – på balancen mellem menneskelig kærlighed og kunstnerisk passion.

Filmen blev i 2013 nomineret til en Bodil for ‘Bedste Danske Dokumentar’ og blev præmieret af Statens Kunstfond.

Uddrag fra filmen:
 “Nothing shall ever come between me and dancing” Elsa Marianne von Rosen, 9 år gammel.

Link til filmens hjemmeside
majafriis.dk/projects/ballerina/

Om Maja Friis – instruktøren bag Ballerina
Filmisk historiefortælling er for mig kunsten at skabe audiovisuel koreografi – at skabe følelser i bevægelse. I mit arbejde sigter jeg mod at bruge bevægelse gennem tid og rum som greb til at skabe visuelle og æstetiske oplevelser, der kan røre os på en måde, der ligger udenfor tid og rum. At skrive manuskriptet er at koreografere bevægelserne i kameraet såvel som bevægelserne foran det: Bevægelse og stilstand, skygger og lys, farver og fravær, lyd og stilhed.

Maja Friis har en Cand-mag i filmvidenskab fra Københavns Universitet med tilvalg i dramaturgi og i Dansens æstetik og historie. Temaet i hendes afsluttende afhandling var “Bevægelse som filmisk narrativ”. Desuden har Maja haft research-studier i dans på film ved La Cinémathèque de la Danse i Paris.
www.majafriis.dk

Eventet er en del af programrækken CHOREOGRAPHY IN ACTION
Dansehallerne præsenterer møder mellem tilknyttede kunstnere og gæster fra Dansehallernes programmer og forestillinger – alle indenfor feltet koreografisk scenekunst. Ny kunstner hver mandag.
Programmet foregår på engelsk, og er dog åbent for alle, der er interesseret i at opleve ny koreografisk performativ kunst gennem intellektuelle og fysiske oplevelser.
Der er fri entré.

Mere info om eventet her

 

Full Public Talk Program – ‘The Artistic & Curatorial Thing’ 28 – 31 August 2018

Public Talks: Frans Jacobi, Bassam El Baroni, Sidsel Nelund, Pedro Gómez-Egaña, Irit Rogoff.
28 – 31 August 2018

Location: Faculty Library of Social Science (Det Samfundsvidenskabelige Bibliotek), Gothersgade 140, DK-1123 Copenhagen K)
Art Production in the New Creative Economy.

Full program for this year’s The Artistic & Curatorial Thing.

Organized by SixtyEight Art Institute

SixtyEight Art Institute is delighted to invite you to the public events surrounding our summer program The Artistic & Curatorial Thing. We have invited artists, art writers, curators, cultural producers, and theorists to collectively reflect upon how to create a future for independent artistic and curatorial research and knowledge production.

The aim of the program is to reflect on how artistic and curatorial methodologies continue to be collaborative, co-creative, critical, and experimental within the ever-expanding parameters of cultural production. How can artistic development persuasively balance the importance of artists’ practices, artworks, and critical ideas in times when these often take second place to mediation, value creation, and social capital?

The talks and conversations will revolve around fundamental questions about production in the field of contemporary art, such as the production of knowledge, of space, of histories, and of artistic and curatorial discourses. If exhibition-making and other means of making art public are increasingly perceived, used, and disseminated as a kind of social capital – a resource in the creative economy – how do artists, writers, and curators create or maintain independent and critical discourses in an expanding cultural sphere, which increasingly seeks to promote and develop spectacle, performativity, or entertainment?

All talks are free and open to the public.

Faculty Library of Social Science (Det Samfundsvidenskabelige Bibliotek), Gothersgade 140, DK-1123 Copenhagen K) This building is located (2 mins walk) near SixtyEight Art Institute.

TALK PROGRAM OUTLINE:

Tuesday 28 August:

19.00 – 21.00:
Artist Pedro Gómez-Egaña – Economies of Attention and Sites of Exception.
Moderator: Christopher Sand-Iversen, Director, SixtyEight Art Institute.

Pedro Gómez-Egaña’s talk will reflect on our general crisis of attention. He will also discuss how certain artistic approaches attempt to resist the intensities and saturations that we are exposed to in everyday life, including ‘scrolling’ or ‘supermarket’ modes of viewing in visual arts. Part of Gómez-Egaña’s artistic practice investigates ‘economies of attention’ in relation to temporality, and how these relate to technological progress. His work often refers to historical and literary examples of industrialization, be it early engineering or mythical machines, and juxtaposes them with current notions of acceleration and media saturation. The role technology plays in sensorial manipulation, and political instrumentalization of time is crucial to his research.

Pedro Gómez-Egaña (Born in Colombia). Artist, Researcher, Professor of Sculpture and Installation at the Faculty of Art and Design of the University of Bergen, Norway. Gómez-Egaña has developed a variety of research projects at different institutions and with partners such as Istanbul Biennale, Goldsmiths College in London, Kunstnernes Hus in Oslo, The Laban Centre in London, Bergen National Academy of Arts, and Universidad Nacional de Colombia. His recent work has been staged at various platforms such as Performa13 in New York, Brussels Biennial, Kochi-Muziris Biennial, Marrakech Biennial, South Bank Centre in London, Kunstnernes Hus in Oslo, Hordaland Kunstsenter, L’appartement 22 Rabat, Institute of Contemporary Art in London, Galeria Vermelho-Sao Paulo, Kunsthall Mulhouse in France, Colomboscope in Sri Lanka.

Location: Faculty Library of Social Science (Det Samfundsvidenskabelige Bibliotek), Gothersgade 140, DK-1123 Copenhagen K

Wednesday 29 August:

19.00 – 21.00:
Theorist Sidsel Nelund – Thesmophoria: On the Economization of Art, Research and Politics.
Moderator: Line Ellegaard, Curator, SixtyEight Art Institute.

The past decades have seen a series of attempts in Europe and the Middle East to use art spaces to create political spheres and engage citizens through artistic and research-based responses to matters of collective concern. Think of topics such as the Anthropocene, Europe after 1989, economy and migration, together with the use of terms such as forum, assembly, hearing and summit in the titles of large scale and oftentimes recurrent exhibitions. But what implied histories do such attempts carry with them? And how can we actively choose which histories to base further attempts on?

Sidsel Nelund is Head of the Institute of Art, Writing and Research at The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, Schools of Visual Arts. She holds a PhD from the University of Copenhagen with the dissertation Acts of Research: Knowledge Production in Contemporary Arts between Knowledge Economy and Critical Practice (2015). In her academic and performative writings, she is interested in collective knowledge production, the notion of the forum and the role of the researcher in art. Lately, she has been absorbed in the topic of sleep.

Location: Faculty Library of Social Science (Det Samfundsvidenskabelige Bibliotek), Gothersgade 140, DK-1123 Copenhagen K

Thursday 30 August:

19.00 – 21.00:
Artist Frans Jacobi – Moving Around a Circumstance.
Moderator: Hugo Hopping, Artist/board member, SixtyEight Art Institute.

“But if I move around a circumstance which cannot get away from me, then my pace can be irregular; I can linger or hurry according to my own subjective needs, can take a step backwards or leap ahead, and so forth.” (Schiller)

Inspired by an excerpt from a correspondence between Schiller and Goethe, Frans Jacobi will present fragments of the two research projects Aesthetics of Resistance and Synsmaskinen. In an attempt to create situations and structures that enable a ‘lingering contemplation’ of specific issues, the two projects investigate, respectively, the performative politics of contemporary activism and the hyper-complex realities of contemporary crises. Visiting the concept of ‘active time’ in order to understand how activism performs certain political figurations, and the method ‘semantic field’ used to generate short stories, the talk will address art’s ability to reflect upon urgent political issues.

The evening will also be a presentation of the book 2061 Inmoral Lidos, produced by Synsmaskinen in collaboration with the performance group Discoteca Flaming Star. 2061 Inmoral Lidos is a collection of short stories, presenting the opaque surface of a bent universe – part fiction, part wild research.

Frans Jacobi, born 1960, Danish visual artist. Frans Jacobi was educated 1982-88 at the Academy of Fine Arts’s Sculpture School in Copenhagen, where he also taught between 1994-2006. In 2012, he was awarded a PhD from the Royal Institute of Art in Malmö / Lund University with the dissertation and exhibition Aesthetics of Resistance. The same year he became a Professor at the Art and Design College in Bergen.

Location: Faculty Library of Social Science (Det Samfundsvidenskabelige Bibliotek), Gothersgade 140, DK-1123 Copenhagen K

Friday 31 August:

15.00 – 16.00:
Curator Bassam El Baroni – The Post-Agonistic Institution.
Moderator: Iben Bach Elmstrøm, Curator/former Director, SixtyEight.

This evening is dedicated to questioning how art and art productions like exhibitions, critical art talks and events have been adopted into the general liberal democratic project. The developments between art and democracy have opened up two general strands: participation, a mirroring or mimesis of democracy; and implication, a critique of democracy. In this light, Bassam El Baroni will revisit the idea of ‘agonism’ as theorized by Chantal Mouffe, unpack it and think through it. He will talk about what kind of institutional imagination such a theory proposes and its limitations as a methodology taken up by the field of art in view of today’s political landscape. The talk will suggest that espousing democratization as a project within the expanded field of art and its institutions requires the acceptance of political antagonism as a starting point and a laboring towards a ‘radical intersubjectivity’ as an end-point rather than agonism per se.

Bassam El Baroni is Assistant Professor in Curating and Mediating art at the School of Arts, Design and Architecture, Aalto University. He was founding director of the Alexandria Contemporary Arts Forum (ACAF) a now closed non-profit art center in Alexandria, Egypt from 2005 – 2012 and co-curator of the 8th edition of Manifesta – the European Biennial of Contemporary Art – in Murcia, Spain, 2010. He co-curated the Lofoten International Art Festival, Norway, 2013 and curated the 36th edition of Eva International – Ireland’s Biennial, Limerick, 2014. Other notable projects include curating ‘What Hope Looks like after Hope (On Constructive Alienation)’ at HOME WORKS 7, Beirut, 2015 and ‘Nemocentric’ at Charim Galerie, Vienna, 2016.

16.30 – 18.00:
Theorist and curator Irit Rogoff – Who do We Face?
Moderator: Hugo Hopping, Artist/board member, SixtyEight Art Institute.

Irit Rogoff’s talk will take as a point of departure her recent and ongoing theorizing around the construction of a ‘we’ in political and philosophical terms, as well as in relation to the momentary convergences and communities that ‘audiences’ in an art context might constitute. In a discussion of future climates of institutional activities and critical practices, and initially positing these thoughts from within Brexit Britain, Rogoff introduces two models of ‘we’ – one philosophical, one political – and questions the tension between these two, the way they might operate in fusion as well as in relation to the area of art today. In the debate about new challenges in independent artistic and curatorial practices, Rogoff’s reflections on collectivity, mutuality and collaborations provide sustained thought on the relations between art, communities and practices of solidarity in relation to political urgencies.

Irit Rogoff is a writer, teacher, curator and organizer. She is Professor of Visual Culture at Goldsmiths, University of London, a department she founded in 2002. Her current work focus on new practices of knowledge production and their impact on modes of research, under the title The Way We Work Now. As part of the collective freethought, Rogoff was one of the artistic directors of the Bergen Assembly, Bergen, 2016.

Location: Faculty Library of Social Science (Det Samfundsvidenskabelige Bibliotek), Gothersgade 140, DK-1123 Copenhagen K

18.00 – 20.00:
Pre-art fair party at SixtyEight Art Institute. Drinks and music.

The Artistic & Curatorial Thing is organised by curator Line Ellegaard and curator Iben Bach Elmstrøm for SixtyEight Art Insitute, 2018.

This extended learning and speakers program consists of two strands: one, with closed day workshops and a full event program for a select number of participants; and two, with an evening program of lectures that are open to the general public. This year SixtyEight Art Institute has invited artist Simon Starling, curator/sociologist Maria Berrios, artist Kristoffer Ørum, curator Iben Bach Elmstrøm, artist Jacopo Miliani and curator Jussi Koitela to give workshops, tours and studio visits.

Last year’s speakers and workshop leaders included curator, writer, and researcher Simon Sheikh, professor Sarat Maharaj, editor of The Nordic Journal of Aesthetics and associate professor at Aarhus University Jacob Lund, curator at Savvy Contemporary Antonia Alampi, curator at BAK – Utrecht Matteo Lucchetti, writer at kunstkritikk Maria Bordorff, and artist and organizer of Copenhagen Free University and now Hospital Prison Archive Jacob Jacobsen, among others.

SixtyEight Art Institute is an artistic/curatorial research organisation that aims to uncover, develop, and further exchanges between artists and curators and their creative labor. The Artistic & Curatorial Thing is SixtyEight Art Institute’s new educational arm, which aims to organize and develop public learning formats within the local context of Copenhagen and it is kindly supported by Nordic Culture Point. SixtyEight Art Institute’s exhibition program is kindly supported by The Danish Arts Foundation and Københavns Kommunes Billedkunstudvalg.

Er du vores nye praktikant?

Vil du være med til at planlægge Copenhagen Photo Festival 2019? Vi har brug for flere hænder på vores team her i efteråret. Hos os har du mulighed for at få erfaring med alt fra eventplanlægning, kulturformidling, det indledende udstillingsarbejde, sociale medier og i mindre grad video og fotografering.

Læs hele stillingsopslaget her.

Ansøgning senest den 1. september kl. 12, opstart hurtigst muligt.

Vi glæder os til at høre fra dig.

Forskningspraktikant til digitalisering af Kunstforeningen GL STRANDs arkiv (Universitetspraktik)

Kunstforeningen GL STRAND søger en praktikant, der kan assistere med research, strukturering, digitalisering og formidling af institutionens arkiv.

Vi søger en, der

  • har erfaring med at arbejde med historisk kildemateriale
  • har kendskab til eller kan transskribere nygotisk håndsskrift
  • kan arbejde selvstændigt
  • er grundig og kan lide at arbejde struktureret med detaljer, samtidig med at der er blik for de større linjer

Vi forestiller os, at du læser etnologi, kunsthistorie, historie eller lignende på kandidatniveau og har interesse for det kildemateriale (noter, protokoller, breve, bestyrelsesreferater), der fortæller historien om Kunstforeningen og den danske kunstscenes udvikling i årene 1825-1925. Arbejdet indebærer bl.a. oprettelsen af et personarkiv over kunstnere, bestyrelsesmedlemmer og samarbejdspartnere.

Stillingen giver dig mulighed for at assistere den grundforskning, der ligger til grund for udvælgelsen og ordningen af det materiale, der fortæller Kunstforeningens historie, og giver indblik i dispositioner og arbejdsgange i et forsknings- og digitaliseringsprojekt.

Som praktikant vil du arbejde tæt sammen med Marie Finsten Jensen, der er ansvarlig for digitaliseringen af arkivet, men du vil også indgå i en hverdag med hele GL STRANDs team.

Kunstforeningen GL STRAND er blandt landets førende kunsthaller for moderne kunst og samtidskunst og har siden 1825 øvet indflydelse på dansk og nordiske kunst- og kunstinstitutionshistorie. Læs mere om Kunstforeningen GL STRAND og dens historie på http://www.glstrand.dk. Digitaliseringsprojektet er en del af ”Kilder til Dansk Kunsthistorie”, der finder sted i regi af Ny Carlsbergfondet og har til formål er at indscanne, tilgængeliggøre og formidle skriftligt kildemateriale til udvalgte danske kunsthistoriske emner i annoteret form. Læs mere om KTDK på http://www.ny-carlsbergfondet.dk/da/kilder-til-dansk-kunsthistorie-ktdk.

Praktikstillingen er ulønnet og løber over efterårssemesteret 2018 med start i uge 36. Vi tager hensyn til individuelle studieordningskrav, og det er også muligt at studere et fag sideløbende med praktikken. Praktikken tilrettelægges efter de af universitetet udstukne retningslinjer for en meritgivende praktik.

Ansøgning, CV og evt. eksamensbevis sendes til udstillingsinspektør Anne Kielgast, ak@nullglstrand.dk. Du er velkommen til at kontakte Marie Finsten Jensen, hvis du har spørgsmål til stillingen på mfj@nullglstrand.dk // 33360257.

Ansøgningsfrist fredag den 24. august 2018.

Ledige ophold og stipendier ved Det danske Institut for videnskab og kunst i Rom forår 2019

Forskere indenfor alle grene af viden­ska­ben, kunstnere indenfor alle kunst­ar­ter, arkitekter, musikere og forfattere kan nu søge studie­op­hold på Det Danske Institut i Rom i for­året 2019.

Instituttet har til huse i Kay Fiskers for­nemme bygning fra 1967 og ligger i Borghese-parken, få minutters gang fra Piazza del Popolo og Roms centrum (se www.acdan.it).

Som stipendiat på Det Danske Institut deltager du i et internationalt for­sker- og kunstnermiljø. Du får adgang til by­ens enestående ressourcer i form af muse­er, monumenter, biblioteker, ar­­­ki­ver m.m. Husets personale står til rådig­hed med hjælp og vejledning.

Informa­tion om stipendie­mulig­­heder og ansøgnings­skema findes her:

www.acdan.it/stipendier.html

Frist: 17. september 2018

Ursula Reuter Christiansen: Om mine ledestjerner

Ursula Reuter Christiansen har til årets jubilæumsudstilling på Kunsthal44Møen: “Møenlight Sonata – Quasi Una Fantasia” bidraget med et helt nyt værk “Virgo”. I dette billede har Christiansen genskabt stjernetegnet jomfruen på en baggrund af sort silika, et industrielt restprodukt der udmærker sig ved sin glinsende kvalitet. De enkelte stjerner er skabt af diamantlignende sten og er forbundet af fornavnene på kunstnerens personlige ledestjerner; feministiske ikoner.

Lørdag d. 30 på Kunsthal 44Møen vil Ursula Reuter Christiansen på uddybende vis fortælle om sine ledestjerner, der blandt andre tæller Rosa Luxumberg, Clara Zetkin, Alexandra Kollontai, Hannah Arendt, Sarah Bernhardt og flere.

Vi skænker efterfølgende vin og kaffe i haven.

Open Call: The Artistic and Curatorial Thing

Image: Design by Ida Elisabeth Jensen

OPEN CALL: The Artistic & Curatorial Thing
28 – 31 August

Deadline 15 July 2018

SixtyEight Art Institute is welcoming artists, art writers, curators, and art organisers to join us for our annual free intensive summer programme. Using the concept of a ‘thing’, an old Nordic concept for a meeting place, an assembly of the community, or what can be defined as the precursor of the modern term ‘parliament’, SixtyEight Art Institute is inviting you to join us for a series of workshops, evening talks, and conversations, led by some of the most interesting artistic and intellectual profiles in the Nordic region. The programme is modelled as a series of workshops and lectures, which will focus on the various dimensions behind exhibition-making and artistic and curatorial research methodologies.

Thematic frame: Art Production in the New Creative Economy

This year’s summer school will operate under the thematic framework of ‘Art Production in the New Creative Economy’ as a way to open up questions and debates about new challenges in independent artistic and curatorial practices. The aim of the programme is to reflect on how artistic and curatorial methodologies continue to be collaborative, co-creative, critical, and experimental within the ever-expanding parameters of cultural production. The workshops, talks, and conversations will revolve around fundamental questions about production in the field of contemporary art, such as the production of knowledge, of space, of histories, and of artistic and curatorial discourses. If exhibition-making and other means of making art public are increasingly perceived, used, and disseminated as a kind of social capital – a resource in the creative economy – how do artists, writers, and curators create or maintain independent and critical discourses in an expanding cultural sphere, which increasingly seeks to promote and develop spectacle, performativity, or entertainment?

How can artistic and curatorial practice both reduce the effects of neoliberal cultural policies and at the same time secure and actively produce independent artistic production? Does artistic and curatorial practice conform to expectations from our current system of galleries, art markets and government grants or can it actively change them? How can artistic development persuasively balance the importance of artists’ practices, artworks, and critical ideas in times when these often take second place to mediation, value creation, and social capital? Can art practitioners and curators find new positions and critical methodologies in the current neoliberal political climate and a general popular celebration of contemporary art, the artist, and the curator? SixtyEight Art Institutes invites artists, art writers, curators, cultural producers, speakers, and theorist to collectively reflect upon how to create a future for independent artistic and curatorial research and knowledge production.

The Artistic & Curatorial Thing consists of two strands: closed workshops for ten selected participants and an evening programme of lectures that are open to the general public. The workshops are designed exclusively for participants to strengthen their understanding of curatorial mechanisms and research positions via a combined practical and theoretical approach. The workshops are closed and intimate sessions that seek to ask, at a fundamental level, how independent artistic and curatorial practice sustain, develop, and strengthen within the current challenges and change in the sphere of art production. The evening lectures are open to the public and examine the thematic frame through subquestions and themes presented as public talks, conversations and Q&A.

SixtyEight Art Institute invites artists, art writers, art historians, curators, cultural producers, and students to apply. The full programme will be announced at www.sixtyeight.dk. Last year’s speakers and workshop leaders included curator, writer, and researcher Simon Sheikh, professor Sarat Maharaj, editor of The Nordic Journal of Aesthetics and associate professor at Aarhus University Jacob Lund, curator at Savvy Contemporary Antonia Alampi, curator at BAK – Utrecht Matteo Lucchetti, writer at Kunstkritikk Maria Bordorff, and artist and organiser of Copenhagen Free University and now Hospital Prison Archive Jacob Jacobsen, among others.

To apply for full participation, including both workshops and evening lectures, please send the following to info@nullsixtyeight.dk, att: The Artistic and Curatorial Thing:

–  A written statement about why you would benefit from participating in the programme (max 2000 characters, excluding spaces).

–  Your CV (including nationality, age, and contact information)

DEADLINE: 15 July 2018.

The learning programme is dedicated to Nordic based candidates and funded by Nordic Culture Point. SixtyEight Art Institute cannot cover travel cost or accommodation, but provides a free learning programme for selected participants.

***
SixtyEight Art Institute is an artistic/curatorial research organization that aims to uncover, develop, and further exchanges between artists and curators and their creative labour. The Artistic & Curatorial Thing is SixtyEight Art Institute’s new educational arm, which aims to organize and develop public learning formats within the local context of Copenhagen. The program is kindly supported by Nordic Culture Point. SixtyEight Art Institute’s exhibition program kindly supported by Billedkunstudvalg Københavns Kommune, The Danish Arts Foundation and Bikuben Foundation.