---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: Artinfo Digest, Vol 14, Issue 11
From:    [email protected]
Date:    Sat, February 13, 2010 1:00 pm
To:      [email protected]
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Message: 3
Date: Fri, 12 Feb 2010 12:49:24 +0100
From: Cs?ka Edina <[email protected]>
Subject: [artinfo] Aarhus Art Building: Open Call for Proposals

IMAGINE - Towards an eco-aesthetic

Aarhus Art Building - Center for Contemporary Art

Contact
[email protected]

Address
http://www.aarhuskunstbygning.dk
Aarhus Art Building
J M Moerks Gade 13
DK-8000 Aarhus C
Denmark

 Info
Deadline March 15 2010



OPEN CALL FOR PROPOSALS

IMAGINE
Towards an eco-aesthetic, 2011

Artists and curators are hereby invited to submit proposals for 2011.

'Only when people are in a position to use their own creative potentials,
which can be enhanced by an artistic imagination, will a change occur
[....] Art can and should strive for an alternative that is not only
aesthetically affirmative and productive but is also beneficial to all
forms of life on our planet.'
Rasheed Araeen: Ecoaesthetics. A Manifesto for the Twenty-First Century

In the autumn of 2009, Rasheed Araeen, editor of the respected periodical
on art and culture Third Text, launched a frontal attack on the modern ego
and the recuperation of the avant-garde. Instead of the con?tinued rigid
production of objects and a stubborn anchoring in art institutions, Araeen
pleads for a collective artistic imagination as the only road towards '[?]
rivers and lakes of clean water, collective farms and the planting of
trees all over the world.'

>From what is perhaps a slightly one-track masculine perspective, Araeen's
manifesto examines earlier failed attempts to step down from the pedestal
of the bourgeoisie in favour of a collective commitment to our
surroundings and the environment. Nevertheless, the notion of art as a
positive, giving alternative unhampered by the restraints of either
representation or negation is relevant in a new decade in a new
millennium.

In trying to conceive of such an alternative it seems a reasonable first
step to take a closer look at allian?ces between art and sustainable
development For at the roots of the idea of sustainability lie an ethical
imperative and a persistent struggle against inequality ? parameters that
seem indispensable today if we actually want to imagine change and
alternatives.

The notion of sustainability first aroused political attention in the
1970s, although it can also be traced back to the 1960s in the shape of
various grass-roots movements. In 1972 the UN Conference on the Human
Environment was held in Stockholm ? this was the first of its kind, and at
the same time the first transnational forum that even considered the
environment and society as a single, interconnected issue.

The conference was strongly influenced by the book Limits to Growth
published by the global think tank Club of Rome the same year, in which
the problems of exponential growth vis-?-vis the limited resources of the
Earth were outlined. The book inspired thoughts about the limits of growth
in terms not only of the human population but also of economic factors.
This realization that the Earth was not an inexhaustible store?house of
resources contributed to the development of a notion of sustainability
that takes the future generations of the Earth into account.

The correlation between ecological and social issues is a fundamental
aspect of thinking about sustaina?bility, and consequently also involves
concepts like responsibility and ethics. Similarly, in various move?ments
that have consistently had sustainability as a central point of reference
since the 1970s, for instance Social Ecology and Ecofeminism,
sustainability is inextricably bound up with an astute critique of the
dominant hierarchical structures.

The notion of sustainability thus includes the consideration of social
structures, subjection and domi?nation, ethics and economics on an equal
footing with consideration of the environment and the ecology. If art
today is to have the above-mentioned positive starting point, it needs to
think about this complex apparatus as a whole and imagine an alternative.
Only thus can we move towards an art that is healing and affirmative ? and
thus towards an eco-aesthetic in the new millennium.

With this background the Aarhus Art Building is hereby issuing an Open
Call for Proposals for 2011. We welcome suggestions for group exhibitions,
solo exhibitions and workshops as well as suggestions for projects in
public space.

Guidelines can be found at http://www.aarhuskunstbygning.dk. The
guidelines must be followed in the application to make it eligible for
consideration. Deadline March 15 2010.


-- 
Moldova Young Artists Association "Oberliht"
http://www.oberliht.org.md
. . . . . . . . . . .
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