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ANKARA: Artist Buyuktasciyan's Query On 'Unsaid Words' In Athens Gal

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  • ANKARA: Artist Buyuktasciyan's Query On 'Unsaid Words' In Athens Gal

    ARTIST BUYUKTASCIYAN'S QUERY ON 'UNSAID WORDS' IN ATHENS GALLERY

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Feb 24 2015

    Contemporary artist Hera BuyuktaÅ~_cıyan, known for her eloquent
    site-specific installations on issues related to identity, memory
    and history, is currently showcasing a solo exhibition at the State
    of Concept gallery in Athens, the only non-profit contemporary art
    institution in the Greek capital.

    Titled "Fishbone," this is BuyuktaÅ~_cıyan's first solo exhibition in
    Greece, which has a significant role in the artist's life since she is
    Greek on her mother's side and thus Athens is a place where the artist
    can confront that part of her identity. "This is why I approached this
    exhibition differently and in time the work became site-specific,"
    BuyuktaÅ~_cıyan said during a recent interview with Today's Zaman.

    "In the beginning, I was making these small feet shapes out of a
    bronze material and when I put wooden parts onto them, I started to
    question what they were turning into. Then I remembered some of my
    childhood memories I had recalled in one of my previous visits to
    Athens. It was about the problems I had related to talking in Greek
    in my childhood. My father is Armenian and my mother is half-Greek,
    half-Armenian so as a consequence we spoke Armenian at home. My
    mother's relatives used to call me the 'quiet child' because I
    couldn't talk in Greek with them. Although I internalized the language
    completely and felt it to be something of my own, I always felt it
    was stuck in my throat and never came out. I can read and write and
    understand people speaking Greek but still cannot respond. I dealt
    with this issue in my previous works, too. The theme of having a lump
    in my throat is something I have been thinking about a lot. I'm trying
    to figure things out one by one," BuyuktaÅ~_cıyan said, noting that
    "fishbone" became a metaphor for this process.

    The main installation, titled "The Stranger in my Throat," is the
    centerpiece of the exhibition, held in a gallery that used to be a
    glove shop in the past. "There is a table which was used in this shop
    and many artists have included it in their exhibitions before me,"
    BuyuktaÅ~_cıyan noted. A line she created with small bronze leg-shaped
    statuettes resembles a huge fishbone extending from that table.

    The artist said she read a lot of books on fishing and related issues
    during the preparation process and finally found herself at the port of
    Piraeus near Athens. "I collected several crates fishermen use there
    and included them in the show," she said. A green curtain at the top
    of the table also evokes the idea of fishing, and together with the
    green stones on the floor gives the impression of being underwater.

    On the walls of the gallery are several drawings that are linked
    to the idea of things that cannot be uttered or come out. While
    BuyuktaÅ~_cıyan was artist in residence at the Delfina Foundation in
    the United Kingdom, she had the chance to visit the East coast. "While
    walking on the beach I saw giant iron ropes half buried in the sand.

    Later on I learned that these were the submarine cables installed
    between the UK and France [during the] 1800s. They are in fact the
    first telegram cables in the world. I was really moved by the idea of
    connecting two countries -- connecting lands underwater. I started to
    think about the invisibility of connection. They are disconnected on
    the surface of the water but are actually connected underneath." Her
    drawings in the exhibition are based on gravures she collected from
    libraries and archives that depict workers installing submarine cables
    in different countries in the past.

    In a press statement announcing the show, the gallery describes
    "Fishbone" as an "intervention of revealing hidden aspects of memory,
    stuck in the 'throat' of the mind."

    "Things that have been nailed and forgotten at murky corners of time
    do not allow the new to pass through in order to become visible. A
    fishbone may get stuck during a moment when an unexpected particle
    of language is about to flow out. It is like a wreck that carries
    the sharp edges of time, and scrapes everything whilst coming out
    from the spot it is plunged," the press release continues.

    "This exhibition is an attempt to remove those bits of sharp edges
    one by one in order to see what has been blocking the path of unsaid
    words and unspoken memories. The fragments in the show, such as the
    bronze-legged organisms, the works on paper -- in a dialogue with a
    saint and an angel who heal and bless throats that are blocked by
    aspects of time -- are a gathering of different memories from the
    artist's life."

    "Fishbone" is on display until April 4 at State of Concept in Athens.

    http://www.todayszaman.com/arts-culture_artist-buyuktasciyans-query-on-unsaid-words-in-athens-gallery_373485.html


    From: Baghdasarian
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