Tag: #artnet

Social distancing – Week 10: Days of Protests

On Monday 25th May in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the policeman Derek Chauvin, held his knee to George Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes. Floyd kept repeating “Please, I can’t breathe”, but Chauvin did not listen to the imploring man. By the time the paramedics arrived, it was too late. George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, was dead.

The murder has been filmed, and its video went viral straight away, stirring the anger of thousands. Soon, enraged protests sparked in Minneapolis and in response, president Trump threatened black American citizens with barbaric murdering by tweeting: “When the looting starts, the shooting starts.” As a result, protests took place all over the country, also counting several episodes of violence. In an attempt to counteract violence in the streets, on Monday 1st June, NY Mayor De Blasio, announced a citywide curfew (the last curfew was put in place in 1943). Since the curfew announcement, protesters got together against police brutality and systemic racism worldwide.

The makeshift memorial outside Cup Foods where George Floyd was murdered by a Minneapolis  police officer
MINNEAPOLIS , MINNESOTA – MAY 31: The mural and makeshift memorial outside Cup Foods where George Floyd was murdered by a Minneapolis police officer on Sunday, May 31, 2020 in Minneapolis , Minnesota. (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

The art world rose its voice in solidarity with rioters too. Alongside joining demonstrations, artists have been painting murals in Floyd’s memory in the US, Europe, Syria, and elsewhere. Email inboxes flooded with newsletters stating the organisation’s support to the Black Lives Matter movement. Emails which often include tips on how to safely protest amidst the threat of Coronavirus.

In Minnesota, the Walker art Centre and the Minneapolis Institute of Art have pledged to cut ties with the Minneapolis Police Department by stopping hiring police at their events. Collecteurs – the collective museum of private collections based in NYC – converted its Instagram profile into a live archive of the BLM movement. Their Instagram page showcases historical images related to black people long-lasting fight for their rights as well as real-time footage of current protests. Cultural organisations from around the world are campaigning in support of BLM. These vastly share bail funds and reading lists to inform their audience while providing the tools to help protesters.

All these are just some example of an overall soft contribution. However, hopefully these small actions will lead to a more radical change within an industry which is still predominantly white.

Raised fist – black power symbol – image taken from Pinterest

 

Social distancing – Week 8: Roaming

I spent the last week roaming the web looking for inspiration and guidance, both in life and art. I discovered and lingered in content that spoke to me about our existence. My tone might sound a bit apocalyptic. Still, all this ‘digital life’ in lockdown is shaking my foundations leaving me –and maybe you as well – with a sense of being disconnected from reality. I found some positive vibes in reading and looking at images on the internet. I read The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho and a 2019 interview by Andrew Goldstein with Emmanuel Perrotin. I looked at some shots on Princess Cheeto and at the posters designed for 2020Solidarity crowdfunding project.

the Alchemist by Paulo Coelho cover taken from Waterstones
Image taken from Waterstones.com

The Alchemist, probably the simplest yet most inspiring book I have ever read, narrates the adventures of Santiago, a young shepherd who chooses to follow his dream. The main character is a human being who, like all of us, has fears and doubts. He questions ordinary things such as animals, the world, and his dreams. Fascinatingly, there seems to be always at least one moment in the story when the reader identifies herself with the shepherd. The book unveils how Santiago finds inspiration and determination to pursue his dream after every difficulty that appears in his path. This is an inspirational fable which helps to keep the light up in this dark time.

Gallery owner Emmanuel Perrotin in Paris on May 20, 2019 - Photo - JOEL SAGET-AFP-Getty Images - taken from Artnet
Gallery owner Emmanuel Perrotin poses during a photo session in Paris on May 20, 2019. (Photo by JOEL SAGET/AFP/Getty Images) – image taken from Artnet

In what seems to be the factual world, I got absorbed in the reading of an interview with the French art dealer Emmanuel Perrotin, published on Artnet last June. Did you know he began working at an art gallery at the age of 17? Surely those were different times, but I really liked that he did not become one of the most prominent art dealers in the world overnight. The gallerist talked of how, in order to slowly establish his legacy, he spent many years taking the risk to nurture and represent young artists. Perrotin led his battles with victories and failures precisely like the majority of people.

Still, in my addictive browsing activity, I found some rest from my COVID-19 anxieties on @princesscheeto, an Instagram profile and website about cats. Here a creative photographer expresses her talent by shooting her furry pets in colourful yet improbable sets. The style is of fashion photography and shows a good knowledge of editing. You can find a snooty cat, a cat-ice-cream sandwich, sailor cats, a wizard-cat and so on. Leaving a smile on my face, these joyful pictures reminded me that you can be creative even when showing your skills and talent. Thumb down to boredom and let’s cheer up with creativity and colours in this harsh time of confinement!

Anne Imhof Eliza Douglas in Anne Imhof, Imagine, Galerie Buchholz, 2019, Photography: Nadine Fraczkowski 2019 - Image taken from Between Bridges website
Anne Imhof Eliza Douglas in Anne Imhof, Imagine, Galerie Buchholz, 2019, Photography: Nadine Fraczkowski 2019 – Image taken from Between Bridges website

Differently, it was through Art Basel LinkedIn page that I read of 2020Solidarity, a funding project launched by Between Bridges foundation. The idea attracted over fifty artists who came together to design an A2-size poster each. The participant list includes Anne Imhof, Mark Leckey, Seth Price, and BB’s initiator Wolfgang Tillmans among other international names. Their creations are being offered to those cultural organisations in need of financial support which, then, will offer them as rewards for a 50€ / £50 / $50 donation. 2020Solidarity represents a small yet real way for artists to help organisations whose mission is primarily to support artists. The cultural ecosystem has evolved during the pandemic. In fact, both parts, artists and organisations, can be supported or supporters interchangeably.

This week I benefitted from lots of different stimuli finding relief in literature, art, and social initiatives. They reminded me that the world is still full of hope, dreams, creativity and, above all, human beings ready to stand-up in support of each other and their values.

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Social distancing – Week 6: “2 Lizards” by Meriem Bennani and Orian Barki

Have you ever read “The Best and The Worst of The Art World” which Artnet publishes every Friday? It is a bullet point list of news divided into two categories, predictably “Best” and “Worst”. Reading it is for fun. It is like taking a quiz in which one can also learn by reading just the news in capsules. Often, while going through the list, I become curious about something and decide to go deeper by clicking on the article links. It was in this way that I found out about the popular video series, “2 Lizards”. The project was launched on Instagram IGTV in early March by artist Meriem Bennani, in collaboration with documentary filmmaker Orian Barki (both millennials and based in New York).

The series is presented in 2-minute episodes mixing 3D-renderings of animals set against real footage. The main characters are two lizards living in Brooklyn during the lockdown sharing their thoughts, concerns, and feelings of isolation. The neighbours are animals of other species. Since the first episode (there are five to date), the artist duo has been contacted by creatives willing to contribute to the project. So, they opened up and started remote collaborations with friends and peers, adding soundtracks and voices to the films.

Episode 1 went viral getting more than 154k views at the time of writing. How comes that these short videos are so popular??? They are comforting. We can easily identify with the animated characters as they express our own feelings perfectly. In fact, both plots and dialogues are taken from everyday situations we are all living through in this strange time of social distancing. In the first chapter, the 2 lizards snoop at their neighbourhood from a terrace while conversing on the quarantine optimistically. “In a fucked up way, I’m loving this,” says one. The other answers back: “That is such a quarantine week one thing to say.” 

Episode 4 is about a feline nurse’s day-to-day life who talks with the two reptiles. The cat-nurse reports one heart-breaking event that happened during one of her shifts at the hospital. A patient connected to a ventilator, telephones his wife. The nurse, who was holding the mobile to the patient’s ear, explains how bad she felt as all the wife could hear was a ventilator. The video ends with the ubiquitous clapping for carers from balconies, and the nurse asserting “this pandemic has made me way cooler than I really am.”

Episode 5 is probably the most iconic of the series until now. The 2 reptiles go out for a stroll in a deserted New York City. They discuss how the city has changed and how, after all, still looks normal if not for the frozen economy. At a certain point, one of the lizards gets a call from her French mother. The mother-daughter chat reveals a condition familiar to many living in big cities, living overseas from their families while having news updates from home countries. When the phone call ends, the other companion needs to pee. Soon the buddies realise nothing is really the same during the lockdown. Starbucks is closed, and the lizard answers the call of nature in Time Square, pointing out that there is nobody around.

Bennani and Barki cunningly translate what we hear and see on TV and social media onto these witty micro-videos. What I felt from watching the episodes is that I am a person like many others. I find in these short animations something that belongs to me too, hope and anxiety. The reptiles’ lives and their dialogues perfectly embody our current ordinary in the uncertainty of the pandemic.

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