Reviews

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Supportico Lopez, Berlin, Germany

BY Sarah E. James |

Sister, Los Angeles, USA

BY Andrew Berardini |

Museo Tamayo de Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City, Mexico

BY Jessica Berlanga Taylor |

Chisenhale Gallery, London, UK

BY Kate Forde |

Galería Oliva Arauna, Madrid, Spain

BY Ara H. Merjian |

Gallery Paule Anglim, San Francisco, ISA

BY Melissa E. Feldman |

Stephen Friedman Gallery, London, UK

BY Chris Fite-Wassilak |

RogueArt, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

BY Brian Curtin |

Mary Mary, Glasgow, UK

BY Sarah Lowndes |

Various venues, Thessaloniki, Greece

BY Sam Thorne |

Le Grand Palais, Paris, France

Figge von Rosen Galerie, Cologne, Germany

BY Catrin Lorch |

Lismore Castle Arts, Lismore, Ireland

BY Jennifer Higgie |

Maureen Paley, London, UK

BY Kathy Noble |

Gladstone Gallery, New York, USA

BY George Pendle |

With contributions from Jennifer Higgie, Dan Fox and Barbara Casavecchia, a full report from the 53rd Venice Biennale is included in the September issue of frieze and is also available to read in full online. It’s worth also adding that Galeria Fortes Vilaça recently added films by João Maria Gusmão and Pedro Paiva – whose Portugese pavilion was one of my highlights – to YouTube.

The 16 mm films, presented as part of the exhibition ‘Experiments and Observations on Different Kinds of Air’ at Venice, lose a little when shown online but they’re definitely worth a look.


Meteorítica (2008)


Pedras Rolantes (Rolling Stones, 2007)


O Oculto (The Occult, 2007)


Heráclito 1 (Heraclitus 1, 2007)

Read frieze‘s A-Z of the Venice Biennale here and Chris Sharp’s review of Gusmão and Paiva’s 2008 exhibition at Cordoaria, Lisbon here.

BY Sam Thorne |

The shortlist for the second annual Jarman Award has been announced. Launched last year, the winner of the inaugural award was Luke Fowler. The 2009 shortlisted artists are below; follow the links for more about each of them from the frieze archives:

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Anja Kirschner & David Panos (published in issue 125, Sept 2009)

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Simon Martin (first published in issue 113, March 2008)

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Lindsay Seers (first published in issue 124, June 2009)

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Stephen Sutcliffe (first published on frieze.com in April 2008)

Aside from a useful £10,000 cash prize, the winner of the 2009 award will be commissioned to make four films for Channel 4’s ‘Three Minute Wonder’ series, which will be screened next spring. (Luke Fowler’s can be watched here.)

Included in the recent group exhibition ‘Against Interpretation’ at Studio Voltaire, as well as Nought to Sixty at the ICA last year, Sutcliffe is perhaps the least known of the artists on the list – athough he has a solo show at Cubitt coming up later this year. Seers’ work was included in Altermodern and had a recent show at Matt’s Gallery, while Kirschner & Panos and Martin have had exhibitions at the Chisenhale in the past year.

The winner of the 2009 Jarman Award (coordinated by Film London) will be announced at the Whitechapel Gallery on 22 September, following a short series of screenings at the CCA, Glasgow (10 September), Picture This, Bristol (16 September) and Whitechapel Gallery (19 September).

BY Sam Thorne |

Summer is peak season at Kosovo’s Pristina airport as Kosovar Albanians return cashed-up from their international diaspora to holiday in their new Republic. Locals have a disparaging nickname for the dolled-up young among them – Schatze – a derivative of German for ‘treasure’ in the sense of ‘little darling’. They are perceived, whether fairly or not, to behave as if they are a little bit better than everyone else. At a table next to us in a café – there is little else to do here except sit in one of them for hours on end – a woman speaking with a Balkan-Chicago accent produces a crisp 50-euro note to pay for one of the inexpensive but extremely good cups of coffee. This means something in a place where that amount can easily be more than a month’s pension and where construction workers grateful for employment might work 12 hour days for 300 euro a month.

The dozens and dozens of new Euro-style cafés and bars with competing sound systems are just one of the things that show how much has changed here since the war and the still very much appreciated 1999 UN-sanctioned NATO military intervention. Not by any stretch architecturally beautiful, every building in every street is evidence of all of the socio-political contradictions as well as the hopes and aspirations of this country, which is still in a state of ‘exception’, ‘transition’ or ‘emergency’ depending on who you speak to. The main pedestrian boulevard is dedicated to one of the region’s most famous daughters, Mother Teresa. Walking along it you see evidence of confronting statistics: around 70% of the population of this predominantly liberal Muslim populace is under 30 years of age and that as many as 70% are unemployed. Here the nouveau riche (whose money raises worried eyebrows) and the poor rub shoulders. Amongst them are also what locals have dubbed ‘the internationals’—the Westerners working for the military and police as well as the multitude of other UN and EU offices, agencies and NGOs here in this foreign aid-dependent place. I met a committed human rights lawyer from the UK for instance, who in eight years had something like 12 different jobs in Kosovo but is now moving to Cambodia to work on the war crimes investigations there. Kosovo is apparently a ‘five star’ mission for most of them as it’s safe and well-paid and the rest of Europe is only a skip away.

Independence was declared in February 2008 but in various key matters the UN has been in charge since 1999 until recently with the handover to the EU law and order body EULEX, although their stated mission is not to govern but to assist. Again, depending on who you speak to, there is a growing sense of impatience about this state of affairs. Mainly because it can feel patronizing and they could do more, even though most are critical of their own politicians too whose motives and effectiveness are often questioned. Basics like electricity and roads are still building-sites in many places. And no one could explain to me what could be done to give the young people the jobs they sorely need. One young, female, unemployed law graduate told me: ‘That’s in God’s hands.’ Praying has become more fashionable. Understandably there is a particular resentment about the strict visa requirements to travel, let alone work aboard and because Kosovo’s independence is not recognized by some EU states its citizens are not part of the planned liberalization of entry visa requirements, which others in the region will soon benefit from. The highly visible protest organization Vetëvendosje (Self-determination) campaigns that the new overseeing EU body is not so much about a tutelage or transition as an extension of Fortress Europe.

Of course all of this and so much more – just to list the very recent past: the legacy of the 1990s when the Albanian majority endured a kind of apartheid, the horrors of the war and murders, mass flight and refugee camps, return and rebuilding, not to mention current regional, national and global politics – impacts directly and forcibly on critically minded cultural workers here. For artist and organizer Mehmet Behluli, art-making divides clearly between before an after the war. Before in the ’90s he and others were involved a politicized practice in the parallel cultural life. After might be signified by projects such as artists Erzen Shkololli and Sokol Beqiri’s space in Peja – EXIT, which the scene there called the only shop that never sold anything and was quite successful. These and a number of other artists have been involved in a series of projects ‘Missing Identities’. A publication of their activities is planned with the German art publisher Revolver.

Between the lines or even framed by this highly loaded context, two current contemporary art exhibitions spoke volumes, especially in a place in which contemporary art is thin on the ground and not much of an official priority. One was the exhibition held in The Kosova Art Gallery, ‘Artists of tomorrow’ (2009), which included the work of six finalists of a regional contemporary art prize, funded partly by a private US Foundation and the US Embassy – the prize being a six-week residency in New York City. The selection committee and jury – one and the same – included Sislej Xhafa, a Kosovar Albanian now based in New York. Xhafa seems to have diplomatically but unapologetically guided the selection of in some cases unlikely candidates, works and the installation process to produce a sparse post-conceptual show with a minimum of material at odds with all kinds of local expectations.

Indicative of the formal rupture that this exhibition represents for the conservatives amongst the public as well as those expecting direct illustration of tough political issues which abound here, was its highly effective emptiness and the decision to leave the battery of gallery spotlights running around the perimeter of the space off and to use the overhead fluorescent lights instead. A virtually unknown young painter, Miranda Thaqi won the prize with her work including Ëndërr (Dream, 2009) a simple but enigmatic nightscape in which a procession of red and blue abstract figures meet on the crest of a hill beneath polka-dot stars. The favorite was actually better known Lulzim Zeqiri who showed a group of fine pencil drawings including one of women washing their hair but who in the past has also produced videos in which he screams the Albanian National anthem at the top of his lungs to the point of total fatigue or even madness. Remaining in the new figuration vein was the work of Bahrijie Sahiti whose two works on paper showed versions feminine beauty or pin-ups in a clunky naïve style.
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The remaining three works pushed the show conceptually and gave it an ironic and sardonic edge – perhaps crucial to subjective survival here. Shkelzen Sejdiu offered a video animation Ritualet (Rituals, 2009) showing a figure sitting on toilet eating and shitting – perhaps a sacrilegious statement about consumption and production. A few text work print-outs from Kushtrim Zeqiri included The Dream, ironically suggesting the innovations of the greats of art history were akin to the discovery of hair curlers – giving hair like art a new direction and that: ‘Simply this is the dream of every artist, to be a ‘curler’ in the field of art and make a curve with his unique art […] it’s a dream’. Roland Masurica’s print-out work Kodi i Da Vinqit (The Da Vinci Code, 2009), showing a cheeky side view of Leonardo Da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man (c. 1487) suggesting to naked men up against each other, was also in an iconoclastic mode.

The here provocative gay innuendo of the last image brings me to the second exhibition ‘Two pieces of one exhibition’ curated by Albert Heta at the independent venue Stacion – Center for Contemporary Art Prishtina, which was established in 2006 and now has its own stone barn-like building in the old part of the town. There one of the two older works on display was Merita Koci’s video interview Life (2003). Its subject is Lorik – the only guy who made himself infamous for coming out in Kosovo and who later succumbed to hard drugs. (This is not a Little Britain-style ironic joke.) Although not technically illegal, people of any dissonant sexual orientation who make themselves obvious or don’t abide by the age-old rules of living a cautious and clandestine sex life, apparently should expect a beating. (In writing this I’m not thinking that this sorely tested new country is by any means an exception – quite the contrary.) Queer theorist’s Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s thesis about the way that male homosexuality is imagined and treated can say just as much about the die-hard patriarchal state of gender and power relations in the mainstream (which everyone suffers at one point or another from in one form or another, particularly women) as it does about the taboo-laden minority, came to mind.
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Speaking briefly to Heta, he made the point, which also came up in the seminar ‘Cultural Policies as Crisis Management’ and follow-up book: ‘The Way Between Belgrade and Prishtina has 28000 un-proper build objects. So, never will it be an autobahn!’ (_Stacion_, 2008) that in this place, which is built on the struggle for freedom, the question now is what freedoms, for what minorities will be included? Also on display was Driton Hajredini’s self-explanatory conceptual installation Who killed the painting? (2003), consisting of a chalk outline signifying an absent canvas cordoned-off by police tape in multiple languages. The work was originally made as his response to the art school traditionalism. Hajredini has also made a blackly humorous candid camera confessional video while at art school in Münster, Germany. In it he asks the priest if it is a sin to born in Kosovo. The priest says no, of course not, to which the artist rejoins but why does it sometimes feel like one? If I ended on that statement like I originally planned some of the people I met would probably take offense in the same way it’s ok to make a joke about your own family but not about someone else’s. Here everyone is potentially family.

Art works by Lulzim Zeqiri, Roland Masurica and Driton Hajredini. Photography by Avni Behrami.

BY Dominic Eichler |

This summer has seen an unusual amount of temporary projects springing up across London, from the grassroots pop-ups to the more usual corporate-sponsored affairs. Is it too early to say whether this represents the first stirrings of the DIY projects we’ve been assured would flourish in empty shop-fronts and offices? For the time being, here are some of the highlights:

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A temporary boat-like pavilion, built from reclaimed timber and tarpaulins, Frank’s Cafe and Campari Bar (pictured above) is nestled on the top floor of a multi-storey carpark in Peckham. Open until the end of September, the cafe has some of the best views in the city (see top), and has a small menu of cheap simple food – all the more impressive as it’s ten stories up. ‘Bold Tendencies III’, an outdoor exhibition of monumental sculpture organized by the Peckham-based Hannah Barry Gallery, is installed alongside.

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As part of the Barbican’s ‘Radical Nature’ survey exhibition (a full review of which will be in the October issue of frieze), Agnes Denes’ 1982 Wheatfield has been reconstructed at Dalston Mill, the first time that the pioneering work has been reconstructed in the UK.

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Though only a fraction of the size of the original, Wheatfield has been paired with a new commission from French architecture collective EXYZT, which comprises a scaffold windmill structure that promises to grind the harvested wheat for pizza dough.

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A more obvious effect of the recession is the reopening of Roger Hiorns’ 2008 Artangel project Seizure (for which he was nominated for the 2009 Turner Prize). For the commission Hiorns soaked a condemned council flat (151-9 Harper Road, SE1) with 90,000 litres of chemical liquid, leaving it three months until copper sulfate crystals grew, transforming the space into a bright blue cavern. The work was intended to be temporary, as the flats were scheduled for redevelopment, though the developers are stalled and the flats remain derelict. Seizure is open until 18 October.

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The Savoy Cafe (240 Graham Road, E8) opened in Hackney in late July and has a busy programme of screenings and talks every Saturday until the end of August. Look out for the UK premiere of Keys to my Heart by Kalup Linzy on 22 August. (Watch excerpts of and read more about Linzy’s work here, first published in the April issue of frieze.)

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Designed by Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa of Japanese practice SANAA (best known for the New Museum, New York), the Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2009 is intended to resemble a plume of smoke winding through Kensington Gardens.

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The pavilion is open until 18 October and, of the eight pavilions built so far for the annual commission, is certainly one of the loveliest. The Park Nights series runs throughout the summer – highlights include music from Tatsuya Yoshida and Charles Hayward this Friday and a screening of Hubert Sauper’s Darwin’s Nightmare in a few weeks.

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Antony Gormley’s One & Other project for Trafalgar Square’s empty fourth plinth – for which a randomly selected applicant from the UK occupies the plinth every hour, 24 hours a day for 100 days – is the most high-profile of these, having become an ongoing story in the broadsheets. Sky Arts is hosting a live feed from the plinth, the surprising success of which today prompted the Guardian to wonder whether this could mean something new for arts TV in the UK. As Sidney Smith pointed out in the March issue of frieze, something surely needs to be done about the current state of arts broadcasting here. Here’s hoping that this recent activity has a lasting effect…

BY Sam Thorne |

In this sober and studied show at Sfeir-Semler Gallery, Hamburg, and Beirut Art Center, the Lebanese artist engages with secret histories, revisited memories and personal lives 

BY Ghalya Saadawi |
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