Exhibition announcement: Not Where from but Where to...

Opening: 19 October, 19.00 pm

Project curator: Alenka Gregorič

Participating artists:

Nika Autor
Nemanja Cvijanović
Vuk Ćosić
Katarina Zdjelar

It is easy to say that the society we live in today is driven by the 
power of money. The power relations – which are created through the 
channels of capital driven society – are in hands of a few subjects 
keeping not only their strategic positions but also manipulating media, 
politics and economics. Of course, this is no longer news and for the 
last few of decades it is accepted as just part of our reality. The 
constraints of these power driven relations are commonplace and their 
effects are obvious. However, the revolutionary spirit of 1968, the idea 
of changing the established order in various social spheres of life and 
giving the voice to the ones outside the power structures is, although 
faint, still alive today.

I would say that there is still a common ground for revolutionary 
thinking, but it is – in a way – articulated through local territorial, 
geographical and political units. Because the world is rushing towards a 
globally oriented society, acting locally raises questions which could 
change the reality of many – but on a small(er) scale. In the last few 
years we can trace the growth of art initiatives and projects that 
eschew the globally oriented for the locally specific. Artists are often 
responding to their immediate social and political environment, raising 
questions about the microcosms they live and work in. We could easily 
call them small-scale revolutionaries because they are questioning their 
immediate social and political surroundings. These micro-revolutions 
featured in their artworks, whether documenting the foundation of 
political parties, tracing the graphical representations of borders, or 
examining the local media representation of marginalised people, render 
the effects of the global through the contours of the local.

Information on the artists:

Nika Autor

Postcards

Experimental film, PAL DVD, 2010

The film is trying to expose the absurdity of the regime that the 
European Union is imposing on a migrant population. She wanted to 
manifest the absurdity of certain relations that are being forced upon 
individuals to partake in them. Her work is the reaction to the 
relations of inequality, to an unequal distribution of power that is 
being historically reproduced through the domination of power relations 
on both national and global level. In the film she tried to join the 
selected footages from different sources reflecting on the idea of 
democracy of the European neo-liberal system. The footages are taken 
from the National Archive of Radio and Television of Slovenia from media 
reports on migrant questions taken from 2001-2008.

Report on the state of the asylum policy in the Republic of Slovenia 
from January 2008 to August 2009

Documentary film, PAL DVD, 2010

The Film is trying to expose the struggle and life of the asylum seekers 
in Slovenia. Asylum seekers are more and more becoming the object of 
systematic physical and psychological violence. The Asylum Centre has 
become an instrument for averting asylum seekers’ and dismantling the 
right to asylum, rather than being an instrument of their protection. An 
ever more present repression over asylum seekers coincides with the 
trend of asylum law. The Film exposes the structure of the asylum legal 
regulation, its transformation, the disappearance of the right to 
asylum, the criminalization of asylum seekers, systematic physical and 
psychological violence over asylum seekers, emergent of the European 
apartheid system, the system of production of “sans papieres” while 
pointing out the self-organization of asylum seekers themselves and the 
meaning of social centres and open autonomous spaces that self-organized 
asylum seekers and their supporters are using in their everyday organizing.


Vuk Ćosić

Greater Slovenia, 2004

Series of pretty computer graphics in medium format

The project is researching the visual image of the Slovenian territory 
in maps of Europe and the World. First findings are confirming that 
Slovenia is very decorative. Also, it is recommendable for countries to 
remain above pixel size, and if that is unavoidable then stay square in 
order to be correctly represented.


Nemanja Cvijanović

Mount Triglav on The Adriatic Sea, 2010

Happening (performed as a sign of gratitude of Croatian people to the 
people of Slovenia at the rational decision on the referendum on border 
arbitration)

Series of 3 black and white photographs

Production: DOPUST

Mount Triglav on The Adriatic Sea is a peculiar continuation of three 
happenings performed by Slovene artists, historic and contemporary, 
using the idea of mount Triglav as an allegorical symbol of geography, 
nationality, and state, which possesses a historically constructed 
identity. The live sculpture Triglav was first performed in the Zvezda 
park in Ljubljana on December 30th 1968 by David Nez, Milenko Matanović 
and Drago Dellabernardina, members of OHO, the most important 
neoavantgarde movement in Slovenia. The group IRWIN reconstructed this 
action in 2004, while in 2009 the artists Janez Janša, Janez Janša and 
Janez Janša performed a happening they entitled Triglav on Triglav as a 
reconstruction of the works of OHO and IRWIN with the intent of 
continuing conceptual art in Slovenia and exposing the ideological links 
of contemporary and past history.

Allegorically, in Slovenia Mount Triglav is a symbol, its identity is 
artificially constructed and linked to the people and the country, while 
in Croatia the same holds for the Adriatic Sea. Mount Triglav on The 
Adriatic Sea attempts to deconstruct these identities and challenges the 
exclusive right of newly constructed neighbouring nations to make use of 
these symbols. Triglav on The Adriatic Sea was performed on June 2 
during a 2010 DOPUST festival at the legendary Bačvice beach in Split, 
to show gratitude for the decision by Slovenia on the border arbitration 
referendum.


Katarina Zdjelar

We need to have civil consciousness and basta, 2010

video

In her video piece We need to have civil consciousness and basta, 
Katarina Zdjelar focuses on a group of concerned citizens in Naples who 
rally around the common idea of making a difference in politics. We 
follow a crucial meeting, at which they are deciding whether they should 
become a political party or not. Rather than evolving around the 
participants’ standpoint, concrete proposals, agreements and 
disagreements, the piece looks at the moment of transition, in which a 
citizen-enthusiast becomes a politician.


supported by:


BM:UKK

ERSTE Foundation

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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