Showing posts with label Installations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Installations. Show all posts

30 Jun 2010

Lina Hakim speaks to Ida Hajdari

Ida Hajdari: You seem to be fascinated with documenting 'reality'; in your website you state that you have been taking up to 600 photographs a day for the past 6 years. That is a lot of photographs! I am not surprised you have trouble coming up with a system for organizing this collection of images. First things first though: why this obsession with recording and documenting? Is it borne out of events that are part of your personal history or is it what one could call a more intellectual interest?


Lina Hakim: I haven't updated my website in a while, so this should probably read 7 or 8 years even by now. My tentative organizing system, if I dare call it that, is a very primitive folder based one on my computer: There is a main folder titled 'Photos/Videos' where everything goes; inside it, you'll find subfolder titled photos and followed by a Roman number (i.e. 'photos III'). After 'photos VIII' though, I've been titling them 'photox'... so they are still in order as they're arranged alphabetically in my computer. In each of those there are 99 folders, simply numbered with sometimes a few hints as to what they'll contain (i.e. SkyWalkRaouda) and sometimes even dates (i.e. 15/07/04). I am currently at folder 'photox XI', folder 34).

Anyway, to get back to your question, I would say that this obsessive documentation stems from a more intellectual interest, although I do sometimes excuse it, along with my obsessive collecting (verging on hoarding), with a romanticized war reflex of stocking "just in case". It could be that it's the 'intellectual' aspect that is the excuse... I think it really stems from a desire to keep bits of the world that I know I can go back to, a bit like a diary. The collecting reflex is tied to memory in that way: it provides it with leftover traces and with things that could help me reconstruct moments or spaces in which to find something forgotten. It also has to do with a sort of mission that I feel I have been pursuing: to give thorough critical attention to the little things or habits that are usually deemed unworthy of it.

I think the documenting/collecting only becomes an intellectual project (as opposed to a reflex) when it is contextualized, edited or formatted in a certain manner, because that is when it tells a specific story. An example of that would be the My room-a-day (Beirut) project. Devised as an ongoing work, it consists of photographs of/in my room, taken (almost) every day from Sunday 17 February 2008 until my move to London in September 2008 brought it to an end. With its 'plan' defined in this way, I like to think that this series forms a collection of jigsaw pieces that suggest a very specific space, time and emotion.

I don't know if I'm making much sense.

Perhaps it all boils down to an attempt at understanding/remembering through collecting and documenting?

I.H.: I understand your 'exercises' in ordering and cataloging as attempts both to uncover meaning as well as to exhaust meaning. On the one hand, in your work the objects in a particular series, i.e. the alphabetical list of the contents of your room, are usually already connected to each other, i.e. all of the objects in the above-mentioned series are in your room, prior to any attempt on your part to rearrange them according to a new principle. This connection, however, is usually quite tenuous and does not exhaust the meaning of these objects. (For instance, I cannot remember how half of the objects in my room got there in the first place. Needless to say, this gets in the way of my being able to see them as a coherent whole, i.e. my room.) Different ways of ordering and cataloging objects, even if this process takes place in the mind only and does not affect the place that these objects occupy in the world, will reveal previously hidden aspects of these objects and uncover hidden relations between them, thus producing different realities. In this sense then, you seem to be engaging directly with the question of history. However, your interest in cataloging objects in so many different ways is also a way of exhausting their meaning, which seems to me to be emphatically anti-historical. This tension between history and its impossibility if you will, is evident in other works of yours. I am thinking here of your 'empty diaries' where you attempt to reconstruct certain days in your life, seemingly chosen completely arbitrarily, through family photographs, newspapers and your mother's recollections. The exercise is, of course, doomed to fail: the intensely personal nature of diary entries is simply incompatible with the nature of the information one obtains through newspapers. One will never be able to fill in the former through the contents of the latter. In this particular work, the newspapers and their headlines would represent the stuff history is made out of, whereas the personal photographs and your mother's recollections would represent memory. How do you navigate/negotiate the tension between these two currents in your work?

L.H.: I actually see the 'empty diaries' project as very different from the ordering and cataloguing exercises. While the latter I find to be more connected with systems of thinking and recalling, I think of the former as a more historico-political questioning. It is related to my belief that the only way one can tell a 'true' story of a place or of events that are politically sensitive or controversial, is by showing an intimate part of it that one is familiar with which can then function as an instance of that place/event rather than as an exemplar.

26 Feb 2010

‘WITCH-CRAFT-WO-MAN-SHIP’ from MAAIKE MEKKING

Maaike Mekking treated us with an extraordinary presentation of her new collection during London Fashion Week A/W 2010-11. Collaborating with a group of interdisciplinary artists like Tania Leshkina (Film Direction), Joseph Xorto (music) and Anastasia Freaygang (Poem) she presented "a fervent, mythical landscape of separates;referencing time and ritual, evoking he atmosphere of films such as Badlands (1973) and Christiane F (19821)."

All the materials used for the collection evoked a certain  "physical and emotional trek" that enticed us into another world "journeying us through an appropriation of masculine American classics; leather biker jacket, white T-shirt and denim jeans......to the vistas of Middle America with glimpses of black seen through hand-stenciled prints, zip detailing and enlarged metal poppers".Fox&Squirrel feel very happy that found the time to attend the presentation amidst the Fashion Week craziness and would like to share with you some images from this breathtaking performance. 

Photography by Keith Martin
Images kindly provided by MAAIKE MEKKING

10 Feb 2010

RainZonances 1& 2 by Antonis Antoniou


RainZonances 1 & 2 are the brain child of Antonis Antoniou and co-produced by Euripides Dikaios. RainZonances 1&2 draws inspiration from the relationship an individual has with their surrounding space. Although this relationship is usually perceived to be abstract and one that many of us take for granted Antonis proves to us that the time spent in a specific space is in fact a highly personalised moment. He achieves this by "by stretching the awareness of the sonic activity and sonic memory formed withing physical boundaries...irritating the boundaries...irritating the walls' resonance frequencies...boosting spatial experience"
RainZonances 1& 2 acknowledges that within each space lies unique acoustic architecture that is responsive to an individual's actions and therefore responsible for the creation of acoustic memory. In return this is influential on the individual's emotions and mood. By manipulating sound RainZonces 1 & 2 untrap these memories and unleash these emotions.

RainZonces 1 took place in a building designed by Neoptolemos Michaelides (probably the most renown Cypriot architect) which is situated in the old town of Nicosia. To view the video of RainZonances 1 click here whilst to have a look at more images of Michaelide's architecture taken by Orestis Lambrou click here.

Following the success of RainZonance 1 Antonis took over Satiriko Theatre, ex- Varnakides cinema, in Nicosia to stage RainZonance 2. The event included sound installations and projections (by Antonis Antoniou), sculptures and light installations (by Euripides Dikaios, Melita Couta and Harris Kafkarides)  and a performance/improvisation (by Ariana Alphas)  accompanied by live electronics (by Antonis Antoniou). These all aroused and inspired the audiences to manipulate the space themselves. The ultimate aim of RainZonances 2 was to mirror the entertainment provided by the space in the past. Ideally the theatre company left behind stage equipment, props and costumes which were were all used for this new but at the same time old performance that took the last stage of Satiriko. Satiriko Theatre is scheduled to be bulldozed down shortly.

Sculpture by Melina Kouta Performance by Ariana Alphas
Pictures of RainZonances 1 were taken by Orestis Lambrou; Pictures of RainZonances  2 were taken by Giorgos Ioannou. All images for this post were provided by Antonis Antoniou