No Ifs, No Buts, 8th September - 3 October 2010.

Opening: 7 September, 19.00 pm

Project curators: Gulsen Bal and Walter Seidl

Participating artists:

Esra Ersen

Daniel Knorr

Aglaia Konrad

The changing experiences with time and space formed the post-modern and 
postcolonial subject, which, according to Fredric Jameson, has been 
exposed to a loss of maps, and thus attaches less importance to the 
geographical departure and arrival points than to interim stages, which 
are mostly perceived in passing, yet producing significant visual, 
linguistic and cultural codes of interaction, the economic transition 
flow of the past decades necessitated an increased concentration on 
various forms of signification in mainly urban environments.


In exploring the new ways of thinking about multiplicity of 
subject-positions “that begins with the critique of its present 
conditions (‘being’) in order to embark upon the careful construction of 
mechanisms of engagement (‘becoming’)”[1], we are interested in how this 
might offer the possibility of a “new” space. This is intended to 
produce relational entities in which an interrelation takes place as “an 
activity of an un-framing […] which leads to a recreation and a 
reinvention of the subject itself.”[2] This is where “identity-form” can 
be re-evaluated beyond “I-other” dichotomy beyond representational 
boundaries.

This brings up a question: how is all this manifested within the realm 
of creative practice and brought into the spaces of art?

Revealing the rapid transformation of several turning points in pursuing 
a nexus that constitutes new forms of life within the framework of 
different topologies is the starting point for the exhibition project No 
Ifs, No Buts, which focuses on the geopolitical implications of what 
governs the walls of the East and West divide. The questions of 
geopolitical topology find themselves addressed in specific cultural 
conditions. The latter suggests that the sensitiveness of these issues 
marks the production of cultural spaces reflecting the respective 
representational politics. It is therefore necessary to engage or share 
an artistic platform of discussion as one of the remits of this 
multi-layered project. By discussing radical modes of 
self-referentiality which allow No Ifs, No Buts, thereby forming 
counter-strategies to globalised forces which restrict personal space, 
the exhibition raises questions about trans-cultural forms of 
geopolitical and economic conditions, which lead to a new mapping of 
terrains on a visual and discursive level.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
[1] O’Sullivan, S. and Zepke, S. Deleuze and Contemporary Art, Edinburgh 
University Press, 2009, p. 2
[2] Guattari, F. Chaosmosis: An Ethicoaesthetic Paradigm. Translated by 
Paul Bains and Julian Pefanis, Indiana University Press, 1995, p. 131


Participating artists:


Esra Ersen
Brothers & Sisters, video - 23’20“

In the video work Brothers & Sisters, Esra Ersen tries to challenge the 
usual debates on the migration issue through taking a deeper look at 
daily life of African refugees who were not able to realize their plans 
for travelling to central Europe and live illegally in Istanbul in early 
2000. In this context Istanbul becomes the exit point where the city 
functions as the emergence of transit conjunctures for the temporary 
state of the immigrations beyond the precarious political agenda of 
status quo.

Ersen’s artistic practice which is mostly built around interaction and 
making the “demographic politics” visible has been a significant aspect 
for the pre-production of this particular work. Ersen started filming 
after spending four months of a dialogue period that define the 
existential ambiguity with the participants of the work, and she has 
engaged with a critique of the present conditions (‘being’) reflecting 
the tinted ignorance of the immigration phenomena within Turkey through 
subjective stories.

Daniel Knorr
Architecture Bucureşti 2001/2005, photographs

The work Architecture Bucureşti 2001/2005 consists of 26 unique 
photographs made by Nea’ Costică, a street portrait photographer, after 
the instructions of the artist. The photographs deal with urban 
wasteland and the construction as well as deconstruction of new and old 
buildings. The phase of urban transformation of Bucharest is shown in 
these photographs, which are made with an old-fashioned plate camera, 
referencing to the uniqueness of each photograph, which exists in both 
positive and negative prints, showing the ambiguities of Bucharest’s 
changing urban outlook. The black-and white images convey a spooky 
character of the town as a place where corruption and dubious business 
is still under way. Meeting the standards set by the EU is still a 
difficult task for a city, which has for a long time been seen as 
Communism’s most megalomaniac city, and which is gradually adapting to 
the overarching European norms. Reforms in urban planning become a task 
which still seems difficult to tackle with regard to the city’s past and 
future.

Aglaia Konrad
Desert Cities, photographs

Aglaia Konrad focuses a direct gaze on cities such as Cairo, Alexandria, 
and Anwar el Sadat. This is not classic architectural or documentary 
photography: her way of seeing things is unadorned and draws our 
attention straight to the history of the real setting. The photographs 
show the application of “modernist” principles to architectural 
development in desert landscapes. They spotlight an improbable dialogue 
between imported models and vernacular elements, constructions and 
sites, desert and communities, modernity and tradition (catalogue 
description). People moving into these buildings try to find a new 
exclusivity for social as well as living standards. Yet, many of these 
new housing projects from the 1990s are already falling into ruins and 
got abandoned; raising questions about the necessity for such grand 
endeavours far from traditional traffic routes. How do deserts attract 
attention and how easily are the dreams of utopian places destroyed? 
Konrad’s photographs are testimony to these unusual developments.


supported by:


BM:UKK

Stadt Wien - Kulturabteilung MA 7



About us:

Open Friday, Saturday 13.00 - 18.30 and open for the rest of the week 
days by appointment only.

Admission free

Open Space

Zentrum für Kunstprojekte

Lassingleithnerplatz 2

A- 1020 Vienna

Austria


(+43) 699 115 286 32


for more info: [email protected]

http://www.openspace-zkp.org

Open Space - Zentrum für Kunstprojekte aims to create the most vital 
facilities for art concerned with contributing a model strategy for 
cross-border and interregional projects on the basis of improving new 
approach.

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