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Pavilion of Serbia at the 53rd International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia
Pavilion of Serbia at the 53rd International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia
Zoran Todorović: WARMTH
and
Katarina Zdjelar: BUT IF YOU TAKE MY VOICE, WHAT WILL BE LEFT TO ME?
Official inauguration: “Padiglione Jugoslavia”, Giardini di Castello, 6 June 2009 at 12h
Projects:
* Zoran Todorović, WARMTH 2009 (blankets made of human hair on wooden palettes, video-documentation on monitors)
* Katarina Zdjelar, BUT IF YOU TAKE MY VOICE, WHAT WILL BE LEFT TO ME? 2006-2009 (4 a/v-projections)
Although artists of different
generations and attitudes,
Todorović and Zdjelar share
a determination to locate
their art in the world made of
regulated social structures and
individual resistances. Their
worldviews are contrasted
in the troubled context of
“national presentation”:
one which energetically and
methodically acts out and
overtly identifies with its
own space of fatalism and
another which by aiming
simultaneously to our
empathy and critical distrust
shapes its own space of
engagement.
Pavilion of Serbia at the 53rd International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia is open to become a space of dialogue between two art projects, thus far unrelated yet now jointly presented. Although they are artists of different generations, attitudes and philosophies, Zoran Todorović (Belgrade, 1965) and Katarina Zdjelar (Belgrade, 1979), share a common point in arguing that an artist is a free mediator within the space of social interaction, and that artistic subjectivity emerges only if situated in the frictions of a world constructed from social matter. They share determination to locate what is identified as contemporary art in the web consisting of social structures and individual resistances, yet they are taking this shared determination in different directions.
For his project Warmth, Todorović initiated systematic stockpiling of up to 2 tons of human hair. Hair was collected for months in hairdressing salons, but also in military barracks where hair-cutting is a norm of discipline, control or “social care”. The conditions in which this process is carried out in a closed system are thoroughly documented, and this bio-waste is reused as the material for curious looking blankets which are amassed and made available for exhibition, utilization, inspection or hypothetically a DNA test in which each participating/inscribed body could perhaps be identified.
Todorović always deals with modes of enacting bio-political control and explores the ways in which institutional spaces of control and punishment are inscribed in the body. He has been utilizing products/leftovers of the body as “raw-materials” for distressing counteractions. As in many of his previousprojects, Todorović explored his own scepticism towards ideas of social progress, emancipation and seemingly benevolent regulations, by questioning the norms of representation and participation; ethical and aesthetical
standards.
On the other side, Katarina Zdjelar explores contrary processes of self-realization with all their paradoxes, promises and failures. As a foreign artist based in the Netherlands, she finds a way to situate experience of dislocation by investigating forms of regulated systems of communication and learning, rather than focus on the loss churned out by this dislocation. Language learning is of particular significance for her as this is a codified method of cultural integration not only involving a symbolic “rite of passage” of the uprooted individual, but also the corporeal affect shaping this “speaking body”.
Her videos are examining norms of establishing individual relations from trying (and failing) to pronounce an other’s name (There Is No Is, 2006), up to procedures of removing an accent in attempt to extract the ‘foreignness’ within a subject’s speech (Perfect Sound, 2009). She also turned to situations in which a group effort is made to recover or improve abilities which are not motivated by dominant values of success and competition but rather consider an unwanted surplus of inadequacy, insecurity and ineffectiveness (Everything Is
Gonna Be, 2008 and A Girl, the Sun and an Airplane Airplane, 2007).
By juxtaposing two artistic positions, our intention is not to create a seamless space of cohesion and harmony. It is rather the opposite: to mark the contesting zones of contemporary art as artist-specific (as well as sitespecific) and to gain something out of this relation/confrontation. It may still be our intention to represent what
we understand as major concerns, as both specific to Serbian society but also to the larger world-in-crisis. Yet, we also suggest a way of sharing certain opposing worldviews articulated by different artistic approaches: one which energetically and methodically acts out and overtly identifies with its own space of fatalism, and one which by aiming simultaneously to our empathy and critical distrust shapes its own space of engagement.
Two illustrated catalogues will be published by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Belgrade to accompany the exhibition with the contributions by Anke Bangma, Jan Verwoert, Mladen Dolar, Katarina Zdjelar, Branimir Stojanović, Frans-Willem Korsten, Stevan Vuković, Jasmina Čubrilo, Melentie Pandilovski and Alexandar Zistakis.
Contact
Nataša Lazić (press): natasa@msub.org.rs
Vesna Milić (co-ordination): vesna@msub.org.rs
Museum of Contemporary Art
Ušće 10, blok 15, 11070 Novi Beograd, RS
phone: +381 11 3676293
http://www.zorantodorovic.com
http://katarinazdjelar.wordpress.com




