Tag: issues

  • Life as an exhibition and exhibition as life

    Life as an exhibition and exhibition as life

    They are artists from Romania and
    Germany and decided to spend some time together during the pandemic as an alternative
    to the searching of an artist confined to an isolated space. And when 12
    artists spend time together speaking, cooking and working the result cannot be
    but an exhibition.




    Born out of life
    the exhibition itself is an illustration of life as it was felt by the group:
    private versus collective, general versus individual, spare time versus working
    hours. Curators Catinca Tabacaru and Daniela Palimariu talked to us about the project
    and the Staycation exhibition.




    Catinca Tăbăcaru: Staycation has been born out of the present pandemic, because we artists,
    like everyone else, had to find our own space to relax and be ourselves. We
    thought it as a meeting space and didn’t see it as an exhibition at first. It all
    started with a symposium we staged in July when six artists from Berlin and six
    from Romania got together and jointly with Daniela Palimariu from Sandwich and
    Rachel Monosov from CTG Collective we created a situation in which we stayed
    together for one week. 12 creative artists, one week together; we lived
    together, cooked bread and walked through the Vacaresti delta. We talked and
    talked, about the world and what is happening to the environment, about the
    pandemic and all.




    Daniela
    Pălimariu told us how the team involved with the aforementioned project got
    together.




    Daniela Palimariu: Each of the three partners in this project, I, Catinca and Rachel proposed
    a number of young emerging artists, some from Bucharest, some from Berlin. Some
    of them I knew pretty well, about the others I was just curious. Anyway, the
    group eventually started to take shape and some bonds were created. The
    relationship between us grew steadily because we had this time between the
    symposium in July and the exhibition that we have now. We wanted to bring
    together artists from various environments, with different approaches,
    committed artists, who want to get involved in this on a long term. Their
    commitment is visible in the way they work, they communicate, their
    professionalism. Those very young are highly educated and we can continue to
    develop this relationship on a long term.




    The
    aforementioned artists found the best ways to cooperate and communicate as Catinca
    Tăbăcaru told us:




    Catinca Tabacaru: I have participated in similar projects of this kind, which most of
    the time ended up in some frustration or tension of one kind or the other. However,
    this time because we were able to choose the artists ourselves and we wanted
    them to be smart, ambitious but with a good heart, we relied very much on this
    idea of slowing down a bit. We all had the feeling that life is hectic nowadays
    so we decided to take things easily for a while. We went together to the
    market, bought organic food from farmers, cooked some meals and tackled various
    issues, from private to general. We went for a stroll in the Vacaresti park,
    which was quite a slice. One of the artists who was from Taiwan got us together
    in a special kind of meditation, where we tried to experience some sort of collective
    rest and even collective dreaming if possible. It was an interesting experience
    one cannot quite often have as an adult. Children often sleep together, but we
    as adults not very often, you know. So we created an atmosphere where we can
    feel and listen more than we can talk or do, although it turned out to be a lot
    of talking eventually.




    Yen Chun Lin,
    Isabella Fürnkäs, Lexia Hachtmann, Bethan Hughes, Lera Kelemen, Barbara Lüdde,
    Catinca Mălaimare, Rachel Monosov, Daniela Pălimariu, Ana Pascu, Ioana Stanca,
    Ana-Maria Ștefan are the other artists involved with the project. The outcomes
    of their meetings will be on view by February 12th at the Catinca
    Tăbăcaru and Sandwich Malmaison Gallery. But what is the public going to see
    there? Here is Daniela Pălimariu again:




    Daniela Palimariu: The other space is Sandwich of Space, an extension of the Sandwich gallery
    opened in 2016 and the works on view here are various in both spaces. These two
    galleries have been fitted with size-specific installations but they also have
    on view paintings, sculptures, ceramics, video installations and a performance offered
    by Catinca Malaimare. There is only one
    exhibition but with two locations, which I might say aren’t different
    conceptually. Of course most of the works stemmed out of our summer experience as
    well as the relationship created back then. Many have specifically hinted at
    our group and the experience we enjoyed together, as the number 12 recurrently
    appears in some works and so do various images we shared back then. However,
    these aren’t very clear, very specific as every artist was left the freedom to
    interpret that experience as they wanted and that became visible in the works.




    The exhibition
    is the most visible part of the project and comes as a conclusion of the
    symposium held in the summer of last year, where the participants met and were
    introduced to the host-city Bucharest. However, the most important thing is that
    these young artists managed to find a functional way of surviving during a
    pandemic without losing themselves.


    (bill)