florian schneider on Sat, 10 Jul 1999 01:22:12 +0200 |
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Syndicate: club event and short interview with apsolutno |
SUN 11 JUL 99 20:00 UEBER DIE GRENZE A club event with shows, presentations and projections about wars, borders and bordercamps feat. APSOLUTNO (Novi Sad) and cross the border (Munich) CLUB 2 Kirchenstr. 96 Muenchen/FRG -- MON 12 JUL 99 20:00 APSOLUTNO present their works at MEDIENFORUM Literaturhaus Salvatorplatz 1 Muenchen/FRG -- WE ARE IN AN ABSOLUTELY TEMPORARY POSITION Interview with two members of Apsolutno, an art association from Novi Sad (YU). > You are an experimental art collective from Novi Sad. Can you describe, how you spent the last three month? When the bombing started, we first thought it was a bluff, a deal, and that it would end very soon. However, after a week it was only getting worse and worse and we were unable to continue with our work, some projects that we started. So when the second bridge in Novi Sad was destroyed we left the country. We first stayed in Budapest for a month and a half, a friend invited us to stay in her flat and people from Center for Culture and Communication were very hospitable so we were able to continue work on our projects there. After that we received a two month residency fellowship in Vienna by KulturKontakt, which was enormous help for us, and we are still in Vienna. We were very lucky in that our previous contacts and friendships enabled us to continue a more or less normal life and spend our time productively. But most of the people who left Yugoslavia just spent time sitting in Budapest waiting for visas or for the end of the war. > Your works began on the field of fine arts, but in the last years you included more and more political influences. Is it a result of the political situation in Balkan region or does it more refer to your groups development over last 6 years? Both. We started moving towards the idea of dealing with our immediate context, and as the context was more and more politicized, so our production included these aspects as well. Our conception is to deal with the hear and now, following absolutely real facts, wherever we are and whatever that is. Also, there is a moral responsibility of artists in such societies to not ignore what is happening. So the events of the 90s in the Balkans have had a great influence on our work and way of thinking. > Borderlines and boundaries seem to be important issues in some of your recent works. Can you describe what you realised and what was the esthetical impact of borders within the FRY context and within the context of your works? We started dealing with the issue of borders first because we experienced them very deeply - as borders became very difficult to pass within ex-Yugoslavia, but also borders within Europe. The issue of borders can be seen on many levels: physical, political, administrative, but also mental. In ex-Yugoslavia there are many places where the actual borders don't exist, but the mental barriers are very strongly present. But we think there are elements of this phenomena in other places in Europe too. In our project HUMAN we are marking the border between eastern and western Europe by putting a traffic sign on the no-mans-land between countries. On the sign there is always the same word, but written in the languages of the neighbouring countries: MAN. The projects addresses issues connected with borders, such as the possibility of communication, understanding, cooperation etc in the world which insists on borders and exists within them. > You work with a range of different old and new media. Is it a strategical decision or does it come from tactical desiderations? The field of art at the end of the century experienced an enormous expansion, both in a semantic sense and in the sense of the media. The choice of medium is part of the work, a message in itself. It is an absolutely real fact that there is an ecclectic spirit in arts in our times. We use a particular medium as part of the concept of the project, there is always a fusion of contents and the medium. It is an open process, in which we also learn and experiment with the possibilities of each medium we deal with. > Why there's such a significance of independent media in FRY's political and aesthetical discourses? Because first of all there is a great need for independant media in FRY, which never had a continuious existance. The very existence of independent media stands for basic democratic values. There is a need for the media which would be outside of the constraints, and which would therefore be more flexible, deal with more open research and provide a pluralistic view. This is necessary not only in the political sphere but in the domain of mental atmosphere and way of thinking, in arts as well. > In the last few weeks discussions "urban culture of Yogoslavia" was a buzzword for non-compromised resistance on practical cultural level and it was very much connected to the myth of B92. What is the broader meaning of this expression and how or where it will continue after the stop of NATO bombing? The dichotomy urban versus rural, or advanced versus primitive etc is a completely wrong way to deal with the situation, which is much more complex. The myth of B92 created an impression that B92 is the only 'different' view, and that such a view can only come from the centre of the country. Such a black and white framework doesn't correspond to reality but it was a much easier way to create a presentation of the situation. > People from Novi Sad describe the actual situation like a "now or never". What are your plans for the nearest future? In the last ten years there have been many times when it was 'now or never' but this time perhaps it really is so. Our plans are also related to the development of the situation. We are a group of four members, one lives in Sombor (north Serbia), and has been in Yugoslavia all the time of the bombing, another is doing his MA studies in San Francisco, and the two of us are currently in Vienna. We will certainly continue with our work, and this displaced position is adding new layers to our experience. Our definite plans can not be made much into the future. We are in an absolutely temporary position right now and that is the way we are thinking. -- ASSOCIATION APSOLUTNO the independent association apsolutno was founded in 1993 in novi sad, yugoslavia. the production of the association is created through collaboration of its four members (zoran pantelic, dragan rakic, bojana petric, dragan miletic). since 1995 the works have been signed apsolutno, without any reference to personal names. the production of apsolutno started in the field of fine arts. gradually, it has developed to include not only aesthetic, but also cultural, social and political aspects. the production is realized in various media (video, printed materials, installations, site specific projects, audio, cd rom) depending on the idea of the project. the work of apsolutno is based on an interdisciplinary research into reality, with the aim to make it open to new readings. this is an open process, which focuses on diverse phenomena in the surroundings, and therefore requires continuous perceptiveness in order for such phenomena or places to be noticed, understood, interpreted or marked. projects are often realized in public spaces or in locations for specific purposes (such as a shipyard, a bridge, cemetery, borders etc.). the artistic conception is based on the principle that the way to the global, i.e., universal, is through the local. therefore, projects typically start in a response to a sociological, cultural or political stimulus from the immediate surroundings. contact: [email protected] CROSS THE BORDER The myth of borders was always tied up with the myth of pushing them back, overwhelming them, and moving the frontier forward. In the current process of globalization, borders, at least those which encompass nation-states, seem to dissapear in a way -- but for flows of money, goods, and capital, not for people. Borderlands have become a laboratory for new control technologies, and the postmodern or post-national borderlines become the barrings of a worldwide apartheid system. Cross the border is an association of activists and artists working on the fields of politics and media. For the first time the group came together at Hybrid Workspace during documenta X, in order to promote the 'no one is illegal' campaign. These days the handbook 'no one is illegal', edited by cross the border, is being published in ID-Verlag, Berlin. In four weeks, from august 7 - 15, cross the border is one of the organisers of the camp on polish-czech-german border triangle <http://www.contrast.org/borders/camp> ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate to unsubscribe, write to <[email protected]> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe [email protected]