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ANKARA: Sarkis's 'Ballads' Echo At Rotterdam's Submarine Wharf

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  • ANKARA: Sarkis's 'Ballads' Echo At Rotterdam's Submarine Wharf

    SARKIS'S 'BALLADS' ECHO AT ROTTERDAM'S SUBMARINE WHARF

    Cihan News Agency (CNA)
    August 1, 2012 Wednesday
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL (CIHAN)- The Submarine Wharf at Rotterdam's world-famous
    docklands is currently home to a gigantic installation by
    Turkish-Armenian contemporary artist Sarkis in what makes up one of
    the key events in an ongoing series of cultural events celebrating
    the 400th anniversary of diplomatic ties between Turkey and the
    Netherlands.

    Called "Ballads," Sarkis's installation is made up of a set of
    monumental sculptures over 16 meters tall and a carillon, also
    incorporating light, video and music by American composer John Cage.

    Cage's "Litany for the Whale" forms a permanent backdrop to the
    installation, spread over almost 5,000 square meters on the campus.

    The carillon continuously plays "Litany for the Whale" and takes the
    visitor on a journey into the realm where submarines and whales meet.

    The pendant to the monumental bell tower is a 16-meter-tall lampshade
    covered with white down feathers. Accompanying them in "The Futuro,"
    are Sarkis's videos about water.

    The wharf's original function and the surrounding water are central
    to the installation, which unites the building's past and present
    through monumental objects, music and colored films on its windows
    that filter the daylight like a modern variant of stained glass.

    Inspired by the church interiors of 17th-century Dutch painter
    Pieter Saenredam, Sarkis transformed the wharf into a "sacred meeting
    place," said the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, the Rotterdam-based
    commissioners of the work.

    The format of the space, the special lighting and the sound of
    the carillon with 43 bells create a hallowed atmosphere for the
    installation, evoking the form of the submarines once built at
    the wharf.

    The combination makes up a "poetic installation," as the Museum
    Boijmans Van Beuningen puts it. All the elements in Sarkis's work
    support the musical narrative, in which the visitor plays a leading
    role, the museum says on its website, www.boijmans.nl.

    "In 'Ballads,' Sarkis attempts to create a connection between the dark
    depths of the water and the majestic expanse of thin air," writes guest
    curator Nicolette Gast in the catalog that accompanies the exhibition.

    Born Sarkis Zabunyan in Istanbul in 1938, the Paris-based artist
    is known for his unique combination of the atmosphere of Oriental
    mysticism with Western conceptual art. The concepts "time" and "memory"
    play an important role in his work, exhibited since the early 1970s
    in such prestigious art events as the Venice Biennale and Documenta
    as well as the Istanbul Biennial.

    Sarkis's show is only the third exhibition presented at the Submarine
    Wharf in Rotterdam. In the summer of 2011, Elmgreen & Dragset staged
    their installation "The One & the Many" there, and in 2010 the space
    was the setting for a major exhibition of works by the Rotterdam-based
    Atelier Van Lieshout.

    To coincide with the installation, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
    presents a satellite exhibition of new work by Sarkis -- an
    interpretation in watercolor on 96 sheets of the score of "Ryoanji"
    by John Cage (1912-1992).

    "Ballads" runs until Sept. 30 at the Submarine Wharf.




    From: A. Papazian
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