THESSALONIKI.- The memory of Thessaloniki and other neighboring cities, such as Istanbul or Belgrade, the individual outline of each place through testimonies, overlaps, remnants and revelations, and the city itself as a mnemonic space and psychic landscape, comprise the basic axes of the exhibition Places of memory Fields of vision, organized by the
Contemporary Art Center of Thessaloniki at the Warehouse Β1, port area, from December 21, 2012 to February 24, 2013.
Sixteen paintings, prints, photographs, videos and installations some older productions of the Contemporary Art Center of Thessaloniki, as well as new productions that will be presented for the first time intertwine and focus on the citys experienced memory, the imagining of its past life and its dynamic projection in the future; they put on the map different regions from those usually celebrated through official, commemorative practices.
The exhibition is part of the main program of the Invisible Cities Festival. A Cosmography co-organized by the State Museum of Contemporary Art and the Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art. There will be also parallel events, educational programs and guided tours.
Syrago Tsiara, art historian and curator of the exhibition, mentions in her curatorial text: [
] Small, personal, unknown and long forgotten stories mingle with grand, national or universal narratives and form the core of artistic quests which do not embellish nor deny the innate contradiction of the ambiguous and potentially controversial narratives. [
] Time and human action alter the image of a place. Remembrance always has a distorting effect on the existing urban landscape by adding or removing older layers of representations, usages and experiences, rearranging and signifying the place over again on an emotional basis.
Topoi do not always have realistic references; they may consist of imaginary inventions, remnants of previous urban life patterns which ceased to exist, scenes which didnt have the time to be recorded down or were thrown out of the great narratives. They are places that may attract or repel the passerby, suggesting an alternative network of relationships.
Emotionally charged testimonies, realistic documentations, imaginary architectural concepts, visual, acoustic and verbal evidence of a rapidly changing city landscape, digital dystopias, and nightmarish paintings unfurl the experienced memories palimpsest and the traces left by the bodies shifting between existing or imagined places. These places-objects are individually claimed, recalled, desired and rescued from oblivion due to a conscious decision, methodical research or even random discovery. And when identified, they trigger new intervening collectivities attempting to define anew the meaning of precariousness, urgency and creativity, in todays contradictory and odd times.
Participating artists: Nancy Atakan, Yevgeniy Fiks, Genco Gulan, Vladan Jeremić- Rena Rädle, Vladimir Miladinovic, Milos Tomic, Richard Whitlock, Aikaterini Gegisian, Visual March to Prespes, Sotiris Lioukras, Leda Papaconstantinou, Paris Petridis Sakis Serefas, Marios Spiliopoulos, Vicky Tsalamata, Evanthia Tsantila, Stefanos Tsivopoulos.