Białowieża Chapter 3

The exhibition marks the next iteration in Kinga Kiełczyńska’s continuous exploration of one of the last remaining primeval forests in Europe: Białowieża, situated in the northeastern region of Poland, stretching across neighbouring Belarus. The concise “environment” comprises of recent as well as recycled works, which focus on the specific location and offer possibilities for interpreting the wild and unknown, drawing on personal narratives and observations.

Upon entering the gallery, viewers encounter a wall-sized work on paper entitled Swamp (after Wajrak) (2019), selected from the series, whose reference points are photographs by journalist and nature conservation activist Adam Wajrak. The piece, intentionally created with charcoal, is loosely attached to a section of metal fencing, reminiscent of barriers erected along construction sites to conceal emerging developments or to newly erected border fences along the eastern Polish border to Belarus. On closer inspection, the seemingly half-abstract, frottage-like composition reveals unruly contours forming trunks, leaves, stems, bushes, and the titular marshy landscape in the lower part.

The bas-relief objects, titled Understory 01-03 (2024), are crafted entirely from wood, which is partially coated in an asphalt- rubber compound (Pol. ‘abizol’). Found in the basement of the artist’s father, it was used for waterproofing surfaces in the past but now remains a toxic oil-based residue, no longer serving any purpose. This narrative forms the backdrop of the series, which was initially created in 2016 and subsequently modified now in order to highlight the journey of the sourced primeval wood. First, it was transformed into floorboards, then framed in a showcase painted with processed petroleum, also known as black gold—a substance derived from the organic remains of plant and animal organisms that serves as a primary component of plastics, a common packaging material.

The exhibition continues in the upstairs space, presenting Tipping Point (2024), a sparse single object resembling a children’s swing typically found in every playground: an oblong board resting on a rough log of wood. On each side of the ramp, there are charred and uneven shapes of wooden trunks, barely balanced as they swing on a log. The ghostly object evokes nostalgia by replicating the vernacular aesthetics of the past, or, ironically, by bearing a resemblance to locally manufactured, environmentally friendly crafts.

Białowieża is one of the few remaining areas of untamed wilderness in Europe. Self-renewing processes shaped the forest, which remained untouched for many centuries, and a variety of plant and animal species inhabited it, creating an environment in which life, mostly non-human, remained largely undisturbed. In Kinga Kiełczyńska’s series on this theme, we’re reminded not only of depictions of the wilderness but also of the conflicts that arose around 2016. Political decisions prompted management interventions in the forest during this period. Consequently, loggers entered the forest, felling and uprooting trees labelled as infested, marking a significant departure from historical preservation. In fact, locals processed and sold these trees, deemed commercially worthless, as firewood or flooring, marking a turning point in the forest’s history.

The artist recalls a time when she lost her way in the forest and her cell phone ran out of power, imagining what the experience of walking outdoors in the past would look like. It can also be related to the notions of “bewilderment” described by Jack Halberstam in his 2020 book Wild Things: The Disorder of Desire.

We can find several expressions there that stem from encounters with an untamed nature that defies man-made systems of morality and normalisation, creating “disorientation” rather than providing tools to monitor the “other”. Halberstam also looks at different ways of understanding humans’ binary relationships with nature, illuminating past attempts to domesticate it and looking at the modalities of the wild and desire through a queer lens.

As explored in the work of Kiełczyńska, Białowieża is also a site of the other—an unknown, unpredictable, and unstable environment in which everything can occur; it can serve as a refuge as well as a danger. The act of recognising the wilderness as something to tame leads to aberrations, or rather disastrous consequences, neglecting the living layers of Białowieża, including the lives of humans. Her long-drawn investigation of the eponymous forest manifests this reflection on our perception and interaction with the natural world.

By revisiting the mythical forest, the artist reflects on the transition from a rural to an urban mentality, a reminder of an early moment in her life. She speculates on alternatives to the formerly agriculturally-oriented society, which has now been transformed into an information society. This transition has led to a binary relationship between humans and nature. This relationship often alienates them from it, viewing nature through the filters of investment potential rather than recognising it as having its own subjectivity or as the driving force of the carbon cycle, which allows the forest to constantly decay, mutate, and revive.

The words articulated in Kinga Kiełczyńska’s Reductionist Art Manifesto (2009), stating, ‘There is too much art on the planet, and it needs to be reduced,’ resonate with the reduced number of works presented in the exhibition. In the approach proposed by Białowieża Chapter 3, the laconic exhibition serves not only as a contemplative space but also as a metaphor for our dystopian present. In this case, the artist’s installation reflects a world where nature, subjected to human control, leads to a disconnect. We can interpret it as a warning, reflecting the reduction of the wild around us. Shall we see it as a cautionary tale or mirror of today’s view of Białowieża?

Romuald Demidenko

 

Kinga Kiełczyńska’s exploration of the wild in Białowieża, Chapter 3, builds on her previous work showcased at exhibitions like Place of Power during NOT FAIR, Warsaw, and Białowieża: Ebay Meditation Room in Berlin (both 2017).
Together with Ernst Logar, Kiełczyńska is currently a recipient of the On the Road Again grant from the Austrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Austrian Cultural Forums, in cooperation with the Künstlerhaus Vereinigung Wien, investigating the speculative lifestyle of a post-oil society.

 

Białowieża: Ebay Meditation Room

Place of Power

Kinga Kiełczyńska

Romuald Demidenko

Recent Press

Aleksandra Lisek, Top 10 emergent Polish female artists, Contemporary Lynx, April 16, 2024

 

 

Look Up!

EXILE is humbled to be invited to the first gallery exchange in Warsaw entitled Constellation. Hosted by BWA Gallery, the exhibition entitled Look up! will feature works by Agnieszka Brzeżańska of BWA Gallery, Kinga Kiełczyńska of EXILE, and Anetta Mona Chisa of Anna Poterasu Gallery, Bucharest.

constellation.org.pl

BWA Gallery

10×1000

EXILE and the participating artist have taken the ongoing global crises as a starting point to offer selected artworks at a reduced price to directly support various charitable causes. The ten selected artworks were offered at a fixed price of 1.000 EUR to be donated directly by the buyer to the cause selected by the respective artist donating the work.

We would like to thank everyone for taking initiative, acquiring an artwork and donating to the causes selected by each artist. Thank you!

The offered artworks of 10×1000 were:

Kinga Kiełczyńska: Hidden interface (beaver and Andrii), 2022. Garden waste of hand-carved hazelnut shoots, beaver-worked driftwood, reclaimed cables, 90 x 60 x 60 cm
Exhibited as part of the artist’s →solo exhibition at EXILE in 2022
1.000 EUR to be donated directly to →Polish Humanitarian Action

Erik Niedling: Future 01/19/17, 2017. Tin, Lead, 8 x 53 x 18.5 cm
Exhibited as part of the artist’s →solo exhibition at EXILE in 2017
1.000 EUR to be donated directly to →Doctors without Borders

Nschotschi Haslinger: Untitled, 2019. Color pencil on paper, 30 x 42 cm
Features on the cover of →Index Nr 86, Jan 2019
1.000 EUR to be donated directly to →Doctors without Borders

Kerstin von Gabain: Pear I & II, 2022. Wax, 13 x 6 x 6 cm each
500 EUR each to be donated directly to →Caritas Ukraine Funds

Gwenn Thomas: Standard Candles, 2017. Wood and black acrylic paint, 52 x 46 x 26,5 cm
Exhibited as part of the artist’s →solo exhibition at EXILE in 2017
1.000 EUR were donated directly to →Fight for Right Ukraine

Martin Kohout: Coll., Mongolia-Cambodia, 2016. Wood, stamps, plastic grid, 52 x 34 x 7 cm
1.000 EUR were donated directly to →Fight for Right Ukraine

Sine Hansen: Bohrer mit Birne, 1970. Screen print, 61 x 42 cm.
Exhibited as part of the artist’s →solo exhibition at EXILE in 2021.
1.000 EUR were donated directly to →Medeor Fund for Ukrainian hospitals

Pauł Sochacki: Waiting for the rainbow, 2022. Oil on canvas, 27 x 27 cm
1.000 EUR were donated directly to →United Nations Refugee Agency

Nazim Ünal Yilmaz: Tare, 2010. Oil on canvas, 50 x 40 cm
Exhibited as part of the artist’s →solo exhibition at EXILE in 2020
1.000 EUR were donated directly to →Palestine Children’s Relief Fund

Tess Jaray: Untitled (Navy Blue), 2010. Unique inkjet on archival paper, 20.2 x 24.2 cm
Exhibited as part of the artist’s →solo exhibition at EXILE in 2019
1.000 EUR were donated directly to →Red Cross Ukraine Funds

Walder

In Romanticism, the forest serves as a timeless refuge from the modern world. The group exhibition Walder assumes that the forest is no longer an antipode, but the dominant reality. Ingo Niermann and Erik Niedling’s video of the same title shows a lonely middle-aged man strolling through the Thuringian woods, imagining himself as the law, the power and the people. This work is complemented by paintings, drawings, photographs and artefacts, also by Fabian Reetz, Genesis P. Orridge, Kazuko Miyamoto, Kinga Kiełczyńska and Thomas Bayrle, in which the word for world is again forest.

EXILE Erfurt, Kartausengarten 6, 99084 Erfurt, Germany

Das stille Leben des Sammlers Kempinski

You are cordially invited to the inaugural Private Viewing of the imaginary collection of Mr Kempinski. This exhibition brings together works by over 60 artists, now presented for the very first time for collective viewing.

New York-based curator Mr Miller and Berlin-based Mr Siekmeier were asked by Mr. Kempinski to create a collage of artworks that reflects upon the relationship between art and collecting.

The Kempinski collection is by definition fluctuant and can move freely from one context to the next.

Exhibition events:

Sat, May 31, 7pm
Kinga Kielczynska: Power point lecture introducing
ARP- Art Related Progress. A business proposal for an art residency program to be set up in Colombia on a self-sustainable property

Sat, June 7, 7pm
Film screening with curator Billy Miller

Fri, June 13, 7pm
Martin Kohout: One-year anniversary of Kohout’s Gotthard Tunnel Run in Switzerland during LISTE Basel in 2013 and artist booklaunch

Participating Artists: Nadja Abt, Aggtelek, Joseph Akel, Peggy Ahwesh, Anonymous, Francisco Berna, Douglas Boatwright, Matt Borruso, Matthew Burcaw, Elijah Burgher, Luke Butler, Anders Clausen, TM Davy, Mark Dilks, Discoteca Flaming Star, Paul Gabrielli, Robin Graubard, Markus Guschelbauer, Frank Hauschildt &Valentin Hertweck, Adrian Hermanides, Dan Herschlein, Benjamin Alexander Huseby, Monika Paulina Jagoda, Stephan Jung, Vytautas Jurevicius, Renata Kaminska, Saman Kamyab, Kinga Kiełczyńska, Lisa Kirk, Martin Kohout, Marcus Knupp, Ulrich Lamsfuss, Cary Leibowitz, Hanne Lippard, Mahony, Katharina Marszewski, Darrin Martin, Rachel Mason, Howard McCalebb, Kazuko Miyamoto, Bob Mizer, Erik Niedling, Hugh O’Rourke, Joel Otterson, Rob Pruitt, Johannes Paul Raether, Annika Rixen, Matteusz Sadowski, Salvor, Dean Sameshima, Pietro Sanguineti, Fette Sans, Wilken Schade, Jason Seder, Barbara Sullivan, Gwenn Thomas, Goran Tomcic , Rein Vollenga, Jan Wandrag, Fresh White, Tara White, Norbert Witzgall, Carrie Yamaoka

 

Bonus stage of evolution is being constantly thirsty

What’s the opposite of progress? What’s another word for progress? What defines progress? Does progress require change? Does change equal progress? Why is it important to know the difference between change and progress? What is progress in history? And what is the cost of it? What is the relationship between change and growth? What does growth mean to you? Are there limits to it? Why is change important to growth? Why is growth important in biology? How natural is it? How natural is an algorithm? And how algorithmic is nature? Does growth always come from within you? And what is ‘you’? Is it your body? Or is it your mind? Or is it also the air around your skin and the light it reflects?

Bonus stage of evolution is being constantly thirsty is an environment made up of two movies, two sculptures and a curtain. You are invited to meditate on the interconnectedness of materials.

Respect what you have. Interview with Kinga Kiełczyńska for The New Institute

Features
OFLUXO

Białowieża: Ebay Meditation Room

Białowieża, is one of the last and largest remaining parts of primeval forest in Europe, and historically a place of many violent occupational histories, the most recent being the German occupation during WWII. At a size of 141,885 ha it extends across the border between Poland and Belarus, and today, it is a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site. A primeval forest, such as Białowieża, is a forest that has attained great age without significant disturbance by humankind and thereby exhibits unique ecological characteristics. One of the most noticeable characteristics of a primeval forest is the amount of dead and decaying wood, which undisturbed provides, in the case of Białowieża, a habitat for approximately 50% of the estimated 12,000 species found in the forest.

Primeval forests have the potential to be extremely lucrative for many industries, especially the logging industry. The deforestation of these forests has been a point of contention between the logging industry, national politics and environmentalists. In 2016, Poland’s State Forestry Board approved a three-fold increase in logging, argued as an unavoidable preventive measure against an invasive infestation by the European spruce bark beetle, a controversial measure that has been contested by many environmentalist. The trees which are labeled as infested are cut, processed, and sold locally as firewood or as flooring.

The exhibition, entitled Białowieża, by Kinga Kiełczyńska, pays homage to this threatened primeval forest. The installation further utilizes the wood as a metaphor for recent right-wing movements in Polish and global politics. Set in relationship to her own body, the floor is meant to connect private and personal body politics and their attempted erosion in a regressive political climate; a tree’s purpose is to live, die, decay, and finally create new growth. This progression is set in context to micropolitical freedom of choice and expression.

The gallery’s front room is entitled, Ebay Meditation Room. Wearing clinical polypropylene shoe covers, Kiełczyńska invites the viewer to enter the room and walk upon a cut-down, imported, primeval tree from Białowieża, which now functions as temporary flooring for the gallery space. A detailed plan of the floor is placed on the wall. Each element within the space is the consequence of the previous one; a tree is cut down, processed, made into floorboards, shipped from Białowieża and installed in the gallery space. Post show, the wood will be sold once again, through Ebay; the Ebay advert appears within the space opposite a mediation pillow. The pillow hosts a speaker playing a meditation on connectivity and decay. A sample color taken from the wooden floor is extended onto the wall behind the pillow. Atop of the painted wall hangs a line of masking tape that was used to mark the border of the wood-color against the gallery’s white wall.

These deceivingly minimal gestures of Kiełczyńska’s, Ebay Meditation Room, point to a dramatic cause-and-effect beginning with a mundane, but consequentially profound, act of cutting down a tree. Such conflicting use of resources ignites a potentially tragic, irreversible chain-reaction in which each individual body, as instigator, is confronted with its own downfall. Kiełczyńska’s, Ebay Meditation Room, becomes a mediative space for many relevant social, political, as well as ecological problems.

The single wall-sized charcoal drawing in the opposite gallery space depicts a net of inter-connected lines and of looping motives that appear in form of overlapping human figures. For the artist, this drawing is the result of an extensive meditative process based on personal feelings and memories of being present in the forest of Białowieża.

The borders between each single element vanishes. Nothing can be perceived as an isolated event, the cyclical motions of growth and decay provokes a strong sensation of connectivity and complicity. The border between each element’s identity vanishes and can no longer be perceived as an isolated event.

Białowieża: Place of Power / Miejsce Mocy. Chapter 2/3

Białowieża Chapter 3

Features
Art Viewer

 

Fake

Fake is of unknown origin. It was first attested in criminal slang in London as an adjective in 1775, as a verb in 1812, as a noun in 1851 and as a person in 1888, though its origins are probably older. A likely source is feague from German fegen in colloquial use. Another source may be from Latin facere.

Fake is probably from feak, feague (to give a better appearance through artificial means); akin to Dutch veeg (a slap), vegen (to sweep, wipe); German fegen (to sweep, to polish). Compare Old English fācn, fācen (deceit, fraud). Perhaps related to Old Norse fjuka (fade, vanquish, disappear), feikn (strange, scary, unnatural) and Albanian fik (put out, vanquish, disappear).

Fake is a new browser for Mac OS X. Fake allows you to drag discrete browser Actions into a graphical Workflow that can be run again and again without human interaction.

Fake is a song written and recorded by British soft rock group Simply Red. It was released in July 2003 as the second single from the album, Home. It was the next single after their international smash hit “Sunrise.” It reached number-one on the U.S. Billboard Hot Dance Club Play for the week of February 14, 2004.

Fake was a Swedish synthpop band during the 1980s.

Fake is an uncharted territory off the coast of Ko-Realia.

Fake was an exhibition at EXILE in Berlin.

 

Aggtelek
Benjamin Alexander Huseby
Billy Miller
Christophe De Rohan Chabot
Fox Irving and Kenneth Goldsmith
Fresh White
Hanne Lippard
Heji Shin
Jo-ey Tang
Julian Fickler
Jurgen Ostarhild
Kathe Burkhardt
Kazuko Miyamoto
Kinga Kielczynska
Mark Dilks
Martin Kohout
Nadja Abt
Nancy Davenport
Norbert Witzgall
Paul Sochacki
Patrick Fabian Panetta
Pietro Sanguineti
Rachel Mason
Rapture Inc.
Rein Vollenga
TOLE & Tolan
Ulrich Lamsfuss
Ulrich Wulff
Ursus Haussmann
Vytautas Jurevicius

Irregular Readings II

Irregular Readings II is an end of (gallery) season and early evening of short readings and vocal actions by artists and writers Alex Turgeon, Anna Jandt, Elijah Burgher, Hanne Lippard, Kinga Kielczynska, Martin Kohout, Patrick Fabian Panetta, Sabina Maria van der Linden, Steven Warwick, Susanne M. Winterling, and Trevor Lee Larson.
The evening is hosted by artist Nancy Davenport whose exhibition Polaroids will have closed just one hour prior to the first reading.

Alex Turgeon is an artist who’s work operates at the intersection between poetry and sculpture. Through his work nouns evolve into objects while objects become the stuff of nouns. Currently his work explores nihilism as creation theory, gay fascism, masculine drag, greek tragedy, and interstellar space. For his contribution to the evening, he will read from his ongoing work: (love poem) for Ceres.

Anna Jandt I think someone’s in the Egypt room whom I wanted to see bare, if I could take my eyes off that dressed up broom, I should start walking there. The waiting fair across from what looks like a landslide down there. I don’t think I have been.

Elijah Burgher is an artist and occasional writer, recently relocated to Berlin from Chicago. His work examines sexuality, subcultural formation, and the occult. He will present an excerpt from Sperm Cult, a collaborative publication with Richard Hawkins to be published by Bad Dimension Press later this year.

Hanne Lippard A clear, high-pitched sound made by forcing ones breath through a small hole between partly closed lips, or between one’s teeth is used to express indignation, derision, or incredulity, but might also be the result of obstruction in the air passages by which it should not be met with aggression, but rather assistance in removing the obstructive item so that the individual can breathe at its normal pace.

Kinga Kielczynska due to the inevitable time continuum and limited capabilities of writing by hand she was not able to fully follow-transcribe the mind in its original form. she decided not to use capital letters in the text (except for in proper nouns), as lots of sentences in the text are not actual sentences, but phrase note like. hope you will still enjoy some sketched ideas in a form of inspirational, briefly noted thought like signs. the reading will be done in silence.

Martin Kohout will once again meet with Mr. Step and Mr. Weller.

Patrick Fabian Panetta uses structures and mechanisms of the given conditions and action patterns of the exhibition world, the art market, and art production directly as working material. On the occasion of EXILE’S move to New York in late 2014, the artist thieved the closing event’s guest list, compiled during the event by a hired doorkeeper. The list offers, occasionally, a detailed insight into who is invited or present and who is not. A few days later the 10 sheets of paper went back to the gallerist and are now in a glass framed version.

Sabina Maria van der Linden Showing a video and two dresses, reminiscent of Liz Taylor in Boom! (Joseph Losey 1968), made by Birgit Neppl, and remnants of Warm Assessment, 2013, a performance that was initiated by Marie Caroline Hominal, choreographer/performer, as a collaboration with Sabina Maria van der Linden – moving and moaning to the scattered biographical soundtracks Touch and Down, produced in critical times and conducted in the windows of Histoire d’Amour, a bridal wear store in Normandy, France.

Steven Warwick is an artist, writer, and musician based in Berlin. His recent work has mused on Californian desert ideology, the fear economy of the X Files, and unexplained seemingly natural desert phenomena. Here he will present a new short piece of fiction Amber in Racetrack Playa, a conspiratorial Science Fiction text set in the outdoor culture of Southern California and Death Valley, where he spent last year making work during his residency at Villa Aurora in Los Angeles, which informs forthcoming installments of work.

Susanne M. Winterling‘s reading will feature pandoras box as a polyphony and threads systemic violence and structures of hope. Re imagining what social justice could be along the path to ecocide, which might be the immersive dream in a multispecies salon?

Trevor Lee Larson shows you where to relax. A prime example of the non pressured and unfettered way in which this city’s young individualists live. Adventure and Romance. “There’s so much time you can get monumentally depressed.” “We’re starved for something new.” “The only legitimate purchase I’ve made this year.” Larson prefers a simple vodka and soda. “You can hear the wind from the forest when you’re out in the pool.”

Irregular Readings I (2013)

NOT FAIR, Warsaw

For NOT FAIR in Warsaw EXILE will present the second of three chapters of Kinga Kiełczyńska’s project entitled Białowieża.

Kiełczyńska’s project pays homage to, and raises awareness for, the threatened primeval forest by the same name. Białowieża, is one of the last and largest remaining parts of primeval forest in Europe, and historically a place of many violent occupational histories, the most recent being the German occupation during WWII. At a size of 141,885 ha it extends across the border between Poland and Belarus, and today, it is a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site. A primeval forest, such as Białowieża, is a forest that has attained great age without significant disturbance by humankind and thereby exhibits unique ecological characteristics. One of the most noticeable characteristics of a primeval forest is the amount of dead and decaying wood, which undisturbed provides, in the case of Białowieża, a habitat for approximately 50% of the estimated 12,000 species found in the forest.

Primeval forests have the potential to be extremely lucrative for many industries, especially the logging industry. The deforestation of these habitats has been a point of intensifying contention between the logging industry, national politics and environmentalists. In 2016, Poland’s State Forestry Board approved a three-fold increase in logging, argued as an unavoidable preventive measure against an invasive infestation by the European spruce bark beetle, a controversial measure that has been contested by many environmentalist as well as the European Union. The trees which are labeled as infested are cut, removed from the forest, processed and eventually sold. Such commercial sale counters claims by the Polish government that the wood infested by the European spruce bark beetle can’t serve any commercial purposes except burning. Upon the artist’s visit to local sawmills near the forest in 2016, it became evident, that the primeval forest wood was in fact actively sold for profit as wooden flooring.

For the first chapter of her project in October 2016, the artist acquired 40 m² of existing Białowieża wood flooring. The processed timber was brought to Berlin to be showcased in the gallery as part of an exhibition dedicated to the conflict surrounding the forest and its protection. Concurrently, an advert was placed on eBay with the aim to resell the wood for the exact same value as purchased. The floor did not succeed in finding a buyer and has been stored in Berlin since.

Now, for its second chapter, the untreated wood will be moved from the German to the Polish capital to be installed inside the Pałac Kultury i Nauki (Palace of Culture and Science). From September 21 to 24, 2017 the wood can be seen installed on top of the marble floor of this highly charged location. Contradicting the logic of an artfair, the flooring will not be available for sale. It becomes a short-lived anti-monument, a memorial to the forest’s commodification. Simultaneously, the wooden floor, which by its appearance within this particular building and specific artfair context, will reference minimalist sculpture. Though the wood is neither artwork nor flooring, it becomes a blank slate in the midst of a highly charged and complex socio-political, commercial as well as aesthetic environment.

After the fair, the wood will be stored in Warsaw before being returned, in the final and third chapter of Kiełczyńska’s project, to Białowieża in the spring of 2018 as a ritualistic gift offered back to the forest. There, back at its origin, the wood will be laid out one last time and left to rot. Eventually, its inherent memories of geo-political contexts experienced through its forceful removal and cyclical journey will disintegrate while simultaneously forming a biotope for the exact species in need of such dead wood to thrive in. Once disappeared, only personal memories of this particular piece of Białowieża will remain but new growth will have been created.

The Białowieża project by Kinga Kiełczyńska utilizes the wood as a metaphor for recent right-wing movements in Polish and global politics. Set in relationship to her own body, the floor is meant to connect private and personal body politics and their attempted erosion in a regressive political climate; a tree’s purpose is to live, die, decay, and finally create new growth. This progression is set in context to the increasing importance to micro-political freedoms of choice and expression.

Białowieża: Ebay Meditation Room

NOT FAIR

Pałac Kultury i Nauki / Palace of Culture and Science

MANIFESTA, Palermo

We are happy to invite you to EXILE X Summer Camp: May the bridges I burn light the way selected by Manifesta as part of this year’s 5x5x5 collateral program for Manifesta in Palermo.

The initial part of May the bridges I burn light the way is a temporary exhibition that creates face-to-face conversations between social activism, art practices and Palermo’s socio-cultural realities. Departing point is the exploitation of the self for marketing purposes or as alibi for personal intentions, as sometimes in the #metoo debate or the current rise of populism.

May the bridges I burn light the way evolves through conversations, screenings and performative interventions at Cre.Zi Plus, a daily changing group exhibition at Ballaró Market, and the distribution of the street newspaper ‘Arts of the Working Class‘, a tool of integration between the citizens of Palermo and art professionals arriving to reflect on arts and society during the opening days of Manifesta 12.

Participants: Albrecht Pischel, Angels Miralda Tena, Aris Komporozos-Athanasiou, Ayami Awazuhara & Christopher Burman, Bob Hausmann, Club Fortuna, Heiner Franzen, Dietrich Meyer, Elmar Mellert, Kazuko Miyamoto, Erik Niedling, Federico del Vecchio, Iris Touliatou, Jaakko Pallasvuo, Kinga Kielczynska, Lauryn Youden, Lorenzo Marsili, Narine Arakelyan, Nschotschi Haslinger, Martin Kohout, Patrick Fabian Panetta, Paul Sochacki, Raffaela Naldi Rossano, Sarah Lehnerer, Sara Løve Daðadóttir, Sebastian Acker, Utopian Union, Zoë Claire Miller.

May the bridges I burn light the way is curated by María Inés Plaza Lazo, in collaboration with Alina Kolar, Dalia Maini and Christian Siekmeier.

EXILE X Summer Camp was organized with the support of the Austrian Cultural Forum, Laboratory ABC Moscow, Goethe Institut Palermo, Podere Veneri Vecchio, Studio Botanic and Reflektor M.

 

FURTHER INFORMATION

MANIFESTA 5x5x5
May the bridges I burn light the way

DETAILED DAILY PROGRAM (June 13-17)
Daily program (PDF, A3, 2 pages, 3MB, English)
Programma giornaliero (PDF, A3, 2 pagine, 3MB, Italiano)

LOCATIONS (June 13-17)
Cre.Zi Plus is a community kitchen and co-working space in the areal of Cantieri Culturali alla Zisa, where the conversations and screenings will take place.
Ballarò is the oldest food market in Palermo held in Albergheria neighborhood, where EXILE will present a daily changing group exhibition during the opening dates of Manifesta 12.

DETAILED GOOGLE MAPS
→Cre.Zi Plus
→Ballarò

REVIEWS
→Marie Civikov in Jegens & Tevens (NL)
→Hulda Rós Guðnadóttir in art.zine.is (IS)
→Kathrin Schöner & Stephan Becker in Baunetz (PDF download, DE)

 

Coloring Quarantine

Coloring Quarantine was an open call and open access project initiated in response to the closure of EXILE’s physical gallery space on March 13 due to COVID-19. Contributions could be made until Apr 22, the day EXILE was able to reopen with regular opening hours.

Coloring Quarantine has the simple aim to collect and share drawings from a wide range of contributors. All collected 175 contributed drawings remain accessible via an open-access dropbox folder from where they can be downloaded and printed out on any standard printer to color in for anyone experiencing lockdown.

 

Click on link to access dropbox folder→Coloring Quarantine

 

Coloring Quarantine Contributors: Aaron Schraeter, Adam Shecter, Adéla Součková, Adnan Balcinovic, Aggtelek, Ahu Dural, Alan Stefanato, Albrecht Pischel, Albrecht Wilke, Alexander Jackson Wyatt, Ali Fitzgerald, Almut Reichenbach, Alyssa De Luccia, Andrew Read, Andrew Rutherdale, Anna Bochkova, Anna Kautenburger, Anna Schachinger, Anne De Boer, Anne Meerpohl, Anneke Kleimann, Antanas Luciunas, Antonio Della Corte, Arnold Berger, Arthur Golyakov, Aykan Safoğlu, Belen Garcia, Bernd Löschner, Bianca Pedrina, Billy Miller, Bora Akinciturk, Bruno Hoffmann, Carl Lützen, Caro Eibl, Charlotte Heninger, Chiara No, Christophe de Rohan Chabot, Christopher Prendergast, Ciresu Tudor, Clémentine Coupau, Constantin Hartenstein, Cristian Tusinean, D L Alvarez, Dana Engfer, Daniel Ferstl, Darja Shatalova, Dennis Loesch, Edin Zenun, Ellen Schafer, Eloise Bonneviot, Eric Giraudet de Boudemange, Erica Baum, Ethan Assouline, Federico del Vecchio, Felix Oehmann, Fette Sans, Filip Dvořák, Francesco Della Corte, Francis Ruyter, Francisco Berna, Gabriela Tethalova, Gaspar Kunsic, Götz Schramm, Gribaudi Plytas, Guillermo Ros, Hanny Oldendorf, Hugo Gomesand, Isabela Ghislandi, Isabella Fürnkäs, Iumi Kataoka, Jakob Kolb, Janine Muckermann, Jeronim Horvat, João Marques, Johannes Daniel, Jonas Esteban, Jonathan Baldock, Joseph Manyou, Judit Kis, Julia Fischer, Julia Magdalene Romas, Julia Rublow, Julian Fickler, Jura Shust, Jurgen Ostarhild, Karen Dolev, Katharina Hoeglinger, Kea Bolenz, Kinga Kiełczyńska, Kinke Kooi, Laura Franzmann, Liliana Lewicka, Lisa Kuglitsch, Lisa Wölfel, Lorenzo Sandoval, Lucia Leuci, Lukasz Horbow, Lux Cervantes, M Reme Silvestre, Magdalena Kreinecker, Magdalena Mitterhofer, Marcus Knupp, Marianne Vlaschits, Martin Chramosta, Martin Hotter, Maurizio Vicerè, Max Freund, Michael Eppler, Michal Michailov, Michele Bazzoli, Moritz Frei, Nana Wolke, Nataly Gurova, Nazim Ünal Yilmaz, Nicolas Pelzer, Nikolay Georgiev, Nora Köhler, Norbert Witzgall, Nschotschi Haslinger, Patrick Alt, Patrick Panetta, Paul Barsch, Paul Otis Wiesner, Paul Riedmueller, Paul Robas, Pauł Sochacki, Paula Linke, Pedro Wirz, Philip Hinge, Rafał Zajko, Real Madrid, Remi Calmont, Ricardo Martins, Robert Culicover, Robin Waart, Sakari Tervo, Sarah & Charles, Sarah Bechter, Sarah Księska, Sarah Lehnerer, Scott Rogers, Sebastian Jung, Siggi Hofer, Siggi Sekira, Sofia Nogueira Negwer, Sophia Domagala, Sophie Aigner, Sophie Esslinger, Sophie Yerly, Spencer Chalk Levy, Stefan Reiterer, Stefanie Leinhos, Stefano Calligaro, Stelios Karamanolis, Sybren Renema, Taiana Defraine, Tess Jaray, Thomas Baldischwyler, Thomas Geiger, Thomas Grogan, Thomas Laubenberger, Tilman Hornig, Timea Mitroi, Tom Holmes, Travis Jeppesen, Ulrike Johannsen, Vanya Venmer, Veronika Neukirch, Viktor Timofeev, Virginia Russolo, Vlad Nancă, Wieland Schönfelder, Witalij Frese, Xenia Lesniewski, Yannik Soland, Yein Lee, Zuzanna Czebatul