Curatorview [Alfredo Cramerotti]

TVE Metropolis – Manifesta 8: Thierry Geoffroy / Colonel

Posted in nEws and rEleases by Curatorview on February 10, 2011

Special Metropolis TV format from TVE Spain about Manifesta 8 / CPS Chamber of Public Secrets / Thierry Geoffroy a.k.a. Colonel


” Empezamos la emisión con un fragmento del video de entrevistas de THIERRY GEOFFROY/COLONEL (Francia), en el que bajo un formato de reportaje televisivo, el personaje del inspector Colombo investiga si realmente existe diálogo entre Europa y el Norte de África, haciendo suyo el tema fundamental de la bienal: averiguar el estado de las relaciones entre ambas culturas. “

ArtForum: Manifesta 8 review

Posted in nEws and rEleases by Curatorview on February 2, 2011

8th Furla Prize 2011

Posted in nEws and rEleases by Curatorview on January 26, 2011

(Italian below)

 

The 8. Furla Prize 2011 evolved over its eight editions and is now recognised as the ultimate Italian prize in support of young Italian contemporary artists, with a format focusing on education and the production of new works.

The patron artist of the 8. Furla Prize 2011 is Christian Boltanski, who created the image and motto of this edition, Pleure qui peut, rit qui vet, a sort of oxymoron for the 5 finalists.

The artists are: Alis/Filliol – Andrea Respino (Cuneo, 1976) and Davide Gennarino (Torino, 1979), nominated by Simone Menegoi and Marianne Lanavère; Francesco Arena (Brindisi, 1978), nominated by Vincenzo De Bellis and Philippe Pirotte; Rossella Biscotti (Bari, 1978), nominated by Cecilia Canziani and Vincent Honoré; Matteo Rubbi (Bergamo, 1980), nominated by Lorenzo Bruni and Carson Chan; Marinella Senatore (Salerno, 1977), nominated by Alfredo Cramerotti and Emily Pethick.

The 5 finalists projects and a selection of artists’ works will be presented in Bologna at Palazzo Pepoli, in the exhibition Pleur qui peut, rit qui veut – a collaboration with Fondazione Furla and Fondazione Carisbo (29 January – 6 February 2011).

An international jury consisting of Christian Boltanski, Stefano Chiodi (art historian and critic), Vít Havránek (curator), Jörg Heiser (co-editor of frieze magazine), Miguel Von Hafe Pérez (director of the CGAC Centro Galego de Arte Contemporáneo in Santiago de Compostela, Spain) will choose the winner, to be announced on January 28, 2011 in Bologna, during the opening of the exhibition.

In addition to the opportunity to study and work abroad in an artist’s residency program (at Arizona State University Art Museum) the winner will also be invited to create a work financed by the Fondazione Furla and intended to be showing for a public exhibition thanks to a special agreement with the MAMbo – Museum of Modern Art of Bologna. The work of the winning project will premiere at the Fondazione Querini Stampalia in Venice in June 2011, during the 54 Biennale of Visual Arts.

The Furla Prize, created by Chiara Bertola, is today organised and promoted by Fondazione Furla, Fondazione Carisbo, Fondazione Querini Stampalia, and MAMbo – Museum of Modern Art of Bologna, with the support of Carisbo S.p.A. and with the collaboration of Viafarini and Arte Fiera.

Pleure qui peut, rit qui veut, shortlist exhibition
Alis/Filliol, Francesco Arena, Rossella Biscotti, Matteo Rubbi, Marinella Senatore.
Curated by Lorenzo Bruni, Cecilia Canziani, Alfredo Cramerotti, Vincenzo de Bellis, Simone Menegoi
29 January – 6 February 2011
Palazzo Pepoli, Via Castiglione 8/10 Bologna
Hours: 30 January – 6 February, 10 am – 7 pm | Saturday 29 January, 10 am – 24
Free Entry
27 – 28 January 2011 | 10 am – 12 noon| preview Arte Fiera press and professionals
28 January 2011 | opening 7pm – 9pm | by invitation only

Round Table “8th Furla Prize 2011”:
Friday, 28 January 2011, 11:30am – 1.30pm
as part of Arte Fiera 2011 Art Talks | Piazza Costituzione, Bologna, Italy

PREMIO FURLA

Il Premio Furla giunge all’ottava edizione con un padrino di eccezione Christian Boltanski, ideatore dell’ immagine guida e del motto di questa edizione Pleur qui peut, rit qui veut.
I cinque artisti finalisti sono: Alis/Filliol – Andrea Respino e Davide Gennarino, nominati da Simone Menegoi e Marianne Lanavère; Francesco Arena, nominato da Vincenzo De Bellis e Philippe Pirotte; Rossella Biscotti, nominata da Cecilia Canziani e Vincent Honoré; Matteo Rubbi, nominato da Lorenzo Bruni e Carson Chan; Marinella Senatore, nominata da Alfredo Cramerotti ed Emily Pethick.
Il vincitore sara’ annunciato durante l’inaugurazione della mostra Pleure qui peut, rit qui veut – una collaborazione tra Fondazione Carisbo e Fondazione Furla: esposti nella splendida cornice di Palazzo Pepoli i progetti dei finalisti e una selezione delle loro opere dal 29 gennaio al 6 febbraio 2011.

Ad Arte Fiera Spazio Art Talks venerdi 28 gennaio ore 11.30 – 13.30 una tavola rotonda con i curatori e gli artisti.
Arte Fiera e il MAMbo daranno inoltre visibilità ai progetti in un’area dedicata all’interno dei loro spazi.

Il premio consiste in una residenza d’artista all’estero organizzata in collaborazione con Arizona State University Art Museum (Tempe, USA) e nella realizzazione del progetto presentato. L’opera sarà esposta in anteprima alla Fondazione Querini Stampalia a Venezia a giugno 2011, durante la 54. Biennale di Arti Visive, e concessa poi in comodato al MAMbo – Museo d’Arte Moderna di Bologna.
Il Premio Furla ideato nel 2000 da Chiara Bertola a Venezia alla Fondazione Querini Stampalia, è oggi organizzato e promosso da Fondazione Furla, Fondazione Carisbo, Fondazione Querini Stampalia, MAMbo – Museo d’Arte Moderna di Bologna, con il supporto di Carisbo S.p.A e con la collaborazione di Viafarini e Arte Fiera.

Pleure qui peut, rit qui veut. Mostra degli artisti finalisti
Alis/Filliol, Francesco Arena, Rossella Biscotti, Matteo Rubbi, Marinella Senatore.
A cura di Lorenzo Bruni, Cecilia Canziani, Alfredo Cramerotti, Vincenzo de Bellis, Simone Menegoi.
29 gennaio – 6 febbraio 2011
Bologna, Palazzo Pepoli Via Castiglione 8/10
Orario: 30 gennaio – 6 febbraio ore 10-19; Sabato 29 gennaio ore 10-24
Ingresso libero
Giovedì 27 e venerdì 28 gennaio ore 10 -12, Press Preview
Venerdì 28 gennaio 2011 dalle 19.00 proclamazione del vincitore e inaugurazione mostra | su invito

Venerdì 28 gennaio 2011 ore 11.30 – 13.30
Tavola rotonda
8. Premio Furla 2011 con artisti e curatori
Spazio Art Talks – Arte Fiera Art First 2011
Piazza Costituzione, Bologna

info@fondazionefurla.org
http://www.fondazionefurla.org

Immagine: Christian Boltanski per 8.Premio Furla 2011

AGM – Call for host organisations

Posted in nEws and rEleases by Curatorview on January 20, 2011

AGM
agmculture.org


Image credit: AGM Conversation ‘On Translation’ saw the participation of Michael Takeo Magruder, Fay Nicolson,
Nada Prlja, Alfredo Cramerotti, Yesomi Umolu, Hannah Conroy, Jeffery Baker.

Contact
agm@agmculture.org
Hannah Conroy
Phone: 0044 (0) 7943639832
Fax: n/a

Address
agmculture.org
AGM
1 Thoresby Street
Nottingham, NG1 1AJ
England

Ongoing call for project partners

AGM accepts now proposals for future editions of its annual, international symposium, an itinerant and ‘expanded’ form of gathering that may include debate, exhibition, screening, performance and other formats.

Proposals from host organisations or project partners can be sent to agm@agmculture.org
Please include contact details, and an outline or relevance for collaboration. Further information can be seen on our website: http://www.agmculture.org

AGM is a curatorial project with some of the inbuilt features of a parasite. Each time, by changing partner, location, form and content, its primary focus is to explore the peculiarity of the hosting body – be it a site, an institution or a theme.

Through the creation of encounters and cultural exchange, AGM promotes the development of a network of cultural centres working around Europe. Our goal is to create and consolidate international collaboration, foster knowledge exchange and support international mobility of cultural workers, theorists and artists.

AGM is orchestrated by Hannah Conroy (UK), Iben Bentzen (Denmark), Yesomi Umolu (UK) and Alfredo Cramerotti (UK/Italy). Recent projects included the ongoing Conversation Series symposia, which provide an open forum for sharing and exchange with no underlying pretext but to consider the current state of affairs at various moments in the lead up to the exhibition or research process. Also, the collective presented AGM 10:Collectivus CPS, at Manifesta 8, Spain (2010) which sought to explore the collective process as emphasised in the selection of three collectives to curate the biennale this time around.

This year sees the beginning of a three year project AGM_Loci, which will facilitate public events that seek to encourage international collaboration and foster knowledge exchange between artist and theorists across Europe. Starting in 2011, curators and artists from Manifatture Knos, Lecce, Italy; One Thoresby Street, Nottingham, UK; Walden Affairs, Den Haag, Holland; Künstlerhaus Büchsenhausen, Innsbruck, Austria will initiate a dialogue to generate a public agenda and ignite discussions on the issue of shared memory of urban spaces.

Every AGM Culture edition poses a series of questions challenging pre-conceived ideas of the hosting body and the relative cultural productions taking place in/through that environment.

One Thoresby Street, 1 Thoresby Street, Nottingham, UK, NG1 1AJ
+44 (0)7941 470145 (Alfredo) or +44 (0)7943 639832 (Hannah)

Periodismo estético

Posted in nEws and rEleases, shortEssays/cortiSaggi [English/Italian] by Curatorview on January 19, 2011

Periodismo estético
Posted By Pedro Medina on 8 Enero 2011 (18:55) in Publicaciones
Published on http://www.abreelojo.com

[Spanish]

Periodismo, poder, sistema del arte y cómo se transmite la información hoy día son varios de los temas que aborda Alfredo Cramerotti al reflexionar sobre “periodismo estético” en su Aesthetic journalism. How to inform without informing.

La discusión sobre los formatos periodísticos y su papel en la construcción de una imagen del mundo está muy viva, como atestiguan las reflexiones de autores como Pierre Bourdieu, Ulrich Beck o Noam Chomsky, recuperando la noción de periodismo como servicio a una comunidad, al margen de la fáctica creación de poder a través de la influencia ejercida desde los medios de comunicación.

El libro de Alfredo Cramerotti, realizado desde la experiencia artística, sigue esta línea aportando una reflexión interesante ante lo que denomina “periodismo estético”, con la que pretende reivindicar un ámbito específico de las prácticas artísticas «en forma de investigación de la situación política, social y cultural». El análisis se centra pues en la información que se produce, si bien todos (autor y receptor) deberíamos preguntarnos desde dónde estamos considerando cada una de estas prácticas, e incluso conceptos muy cuestionados hoy día como el de “verdad”.

Se deben analizar las dimensiones de poder y autoridad que conllevan las imágenes y textos. Como dice Zizek, lo real se identifica con una forma de contar las cosas, y en esta práctica se reclama una responsabilidad del “artista-investigador” acorde con la autoridad e influencia que se puede ejercer, máxime en un tiempo donde el periodismo de investigación está francamente amenazado.

Lo más destacado es su interés por exponer la interacción entre las prácticas artísticas y periodísticas, labor que se revela especialmente en el estudio de obras del periodismo estético. En definitiva, cabe reconocer una cuidada investigación que nos lleva a pensar de nuevo la sociedad en términos culturales (y también estéticos), con el objetivo no tanto de transformar directamente nuestro entorno, sino los procesos que nos llevan a confeccionar el significado que tenemos del mundo.

Aesthetic journalism
How to inform without informing
Alfredo Cramerotti
Intellect, Bristol, Chicago, 2009, 135 páginas, 35 $

Unmapping the City: Perspectives of Flatness

Posted in nEws and rEleases by Curatorview on January 11, 2011

Unmapping the City
Perspectives of Flatness

Now Available
Price £14.95, $25

ISBN 9781841503165
Paperback 128 pages
230x230mm
Published January 2011
Imprint: Intellect

Edited by Alfredo Cramerotti

Unmapping the City, the first title in the new Intellect series ‘Critical Photography’, features photographs shot between 2004 and 2008 in fourteen different cities around the world. The images are linked by their shared attempts to define a two-dimensional approach to a three-dimensional built reality, and to address spatial representation and urbanity through art. In representing the cityscape through a flat texture of lines and minimal colour tones, they draw the reader into a conversation about the interplay between reality and its representation. This volume, by significantly challenging and expanding the discourse on photography and text and instigating a critical re-evaluation of the relationship between photography, perception and the city, will be of interest to artists, curators, photographers, architects, and critical theorists.

Introduction
Images by Alfredo Cramerotti and text by Jonathan Willett
Middleword by Inês Moreira

 

Reviews
‘Cramerotti’s new book is aptly committed to serial progression, minimal aesthetics and critical eye on our physical environment, in the same vein as artists such as Ed Rusha and Lewis Baltz. An important contribution for the next generation of artists engaged with Neo Topographics, embracing a graphic sublime while exploring the aesthetics of urban landscape.’ – Louise Clements, Director Format International Photography Festival

Variant: Manifesta 8 review | Aesthetic Journalism in Practice

Posted in nEws and rEleases, shortEssays/cortiSaggi [English/Italian] by Curatorview on January 10, 2011

Book Review: Aesthetic Journalism. How to Inform Without Informing

Posted in nEws and rEleases, shortEssays/cortiSaggi [English/Italian] by Curatorview on January 5, 2011

RFC Rapallo Fotografia Contemporanea – quinta edizione: RITORNO ALLA FOTOGRAFIA

Posted in nEws and rEleases by Curatorview on January 1, 2011

15 gennaio – 13 febbraio 2011
Antico Castello sul Mare, Rapallo, Italy

opening day – sabato 15 gennaio

tavola rotonda
h 15.00 Villa Queirolo_Casa della Cultura, via Aurelia di Ponente, 1 Rapallo
“Ritorno alla Fotografia. Scelte e necessità nel dibattito contemporaneo”
partecipano Andrea Botto, Alfredo Cramerotti, Charlotte Dumas, Francesco Zanot

Manifesta 8 verrassingen in Murcia

Posted in nEws and rEleases by Curatorview on December 27, 2010

Tableau Fine Art Magazine, The Netherlands.
MANIFESTA 8
by Jonathan Turner

A long-time collaborator with Manifesta since the mid-1990s, Tableau’s Rome correspondent Jonathan Turner gives an inside look into the current edition in Spain.

English text below

Il n’y a plus rien (There is nothing left) by  Céline Condorelli, Installation shot.

 

INTRO

In this era of mega-biennials, huge art fairs and ever-expanding modern art museums, Manifesta 8 – the roving European Biennial of Contemporary Art currently taking place in Murcia and Cartagena in south-eastern Spain – can be seen in terms of being a cultural  undertaking of grand proportions. Until January 9, Manifesta 8 takes place in two cities, organized by three curatorial groups, in 14 venues, with 65 parallel events, featuring more than 150 contributing artists, and accompanied by a 400-page book. However, it is also an event which focuses on intimacy and precise social themes, ranging from matters of surveillance, language, media interference, aspects of time, ethnic links, incarceration, blindness, and Europe’s present-day relationships to northern Africa, including such pressing issues as migration, refugee-status and integration. There are many surprises. Given the unusual context of Manifesta 8, set  in a variety of buildings including museums, military barracks, a former post-office, a casino, an abandoned hospital building and even San Anton Prison, many of the artworks provided poignant echoes of the sites where they are installed. After all, what could be more evocative than works of art based on oppression or paying homage to political prisoners, exhibited inside cells in a building that until last June still housed inmates.

The first edition of Manifesta was held in Rotterdam in 1996, and each subsequent edition has focused on different themes and exhibition models. An innovation at Manifesta 8 has been its selection of a curatorial team composed of three international collectives – Alexandria Contemporary Arts Forum (Egypt and U.S.A), Chamber of Public Secrets (Italy, Lebanon, Scandinavia and U.K.) and tranzit.org (Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary and Slovakia). It also specifically set out to explore the particular nature of the region of Murcia as a historical melting pot and border zone linking Europe to northern Africa (Cartagena itself was established on the Spanish coast after the sacking of the ancient Roman city of Carthage in present-day Tunisia) with many artists tracing various Catholic, Arabic and Jewish links over time. Spain’s Pedro G. Romero presents documents from his vast archives focused on anti-clerical movements in his native Spain while Kajsa Dahlberg’s conceptual work comprises a mirrored showcase containing 400 postcards sent from Jerusalem to Sweden over the past century. They are displayed according to the content of the hand-written messages they contain.
Pablo Bronstein (Argentina/U.K.) makes watercolours “documenting” fictional Islamic architecture “built” in Europe, Simon Fujiwara (based in Berlin and Mexico City) recreates a make-believe archeological dig whereby an ancient stone phallus was “discovered” during excavations in preparation for a new museum building somewhere in an unspecified Arabian desert, while Parisian artist Neïl Beloufa defines his film shot in Mali as “a science fiction documentary”. Set in a staged reality, and viewed from within a theatrical setting of a roughly constructed auditorium made by the artist from cheap materials, Beloufa’s film is shot at night-time using street lighting to accentuate its own fakeness, with the protagonists talking in a dream-like way about their hopes and desires. Probably the clearest example of an artist tracing the links between Africa and the West is the mini-exhibition of black and white photographs by New York-based Lorraine O’Grady. In her series of diptyches, striking portraits of her female relatives are juxtaposed next to iconic images of ancient Egyptian sculptures.
Many projects have been developed by artists as acts of infiltration into the local community through the use of television and radio programs, the Internet, newspaper stories and special publications. This includes the invasive television reporting of Thierry Geoffroy (France/Denmark). Dressed like a colonial African explorer, he takes to the streets, interviewing residents of Murcia about their Muslim friends, accompanied by a camera crew. In an aligned project to Manifesta 8, Tiong Ang (Indonesia/The Netherlands) has filmed a tv soap opera called “As the Academy Turns”. It is an over-dramatic hoax set in an art academy, where the students, professors and other characters subvert popular views on higher art education.
Film and video featured strongly. Willie Doherty (Northern Ireland) has chosen the underside of a motorway bridge as the location for his video. It is a study of homelessness, shifting light and the ebb and flow of the Murcia’s Segura River. In the lush surroundings of the Casino in Cartagena, Stefanos Tsivopoulos (Athens/Amsterdam) projects his bleak film documenting the ravaged, Mars-like landscapes left behind by the mining industry of the region. Meanwhile, using flared exposure and grainy black-and-white, the artistic duo Igor & Ivan Buharov from Budapest present “Rudderless”. This is a mock socio-political documentary about a mythic, mystic man, a degraded romantic figure who ends up as a corpse on a conveyor belt.

But there is also comedy. In a room in the former central post office, painted as black as a prison cell,  Michael Paul Britto (New York) studies the rhythms of aggression. In his double screen projection, the artist launches a litany of verbal abuse, attacking black politics, stereotypes and the viewer. The colourful language is sublime. The aggression and badmouthing reach a point of humour. Like in a movie by Quentin Tarantino, the violence is exaggerated to the point of satire. This work competes for attention with a video projection by Common Culture, an artist collective based in England. In this projection, three Spanish guys, dressed in loud clothes  and cheap wigs like gigolos, stand in a disco under a mirror ball drinking cocktails complete with tiny umbrellas. They speak over the music. Their conversation is psycho-babble, discussing the “trans-national European hegemony” and attacking the contemporary art public by calling them “the mobile zombie nation”. Their criticism ends in farce.
In the same way that Manifesta sets out to utilise non-traditional spaces for its exhibitions, and to restore unused buildings for future cultural use after the biennial has moved on to its next location, many artists in Manifesta 8 also incorporate less traditional artistic processes. Ryan Gander (England) includes an almost invisible work in which he has modified a tiled floor to create a shallow puddle of water. Sometimes without knowing, visitors who pass through the exhibition leave wet footprints as ephemeral reminders of their presence. Czech artist Tomáš Vaněk inflates giant balloons, then explodes them. He then staples the rubber remains to the wall in abstract compositions. Vaněk regards this act as a demonstration of the concept: “Think round, act square”. Based in Amsterdam, Metahaven has created a project inspired by the fact that 13% of the volume of fruit and vegetables distributed in Europe is produced in the region of Murcia, often grown thanks to irrigation systems introduced by Islamic settlers many centuries ago. At various farms in the region, a series of different stickers designed by Metahaven are being applied to citrus fruits before they are marketed locally, nationally and throughout Europe. This is also a way to monitor the reality of European regulations. According to the artists, “Fruit labels have become fetish objects for collectors, although much of the romanticism has given way to bar-codes and other technocratic devices.” In an unexpected collaboration which also presents a fetish attitude, Turkish artist Banu Cennetoğlu has created a sculpture together with London-based Shiri Zinn, an artist known for her customized erotic objects. Zinn’s glass piece has become a cremation urn carrying a sample of dust collected from its exhibition site in the former artillery barracks in Murcia. This glass object now exists as a monument to the historic function of the site, reflecting on the dual aspects of potency and power. It is an ode to impotence versus authority.
Unusual for any art event, Manifesta 8 also pays close attention to the theme of blindness. Working in Copenhagen and New York, the duo Wooloo is running the world’s first non-visual residency program for artists. One event is an exhibition consisting of a blacked-out space where the visitor holds on to a rope, and follows a circuit distinguished by the aromas and spices of different local cuisines. In another project, an artist takes her blind assistant through a gallery exhibition, carefully explaining the works on show. Later, the blind assistant takes the Manifesta visitor through the same space, now totally darkened. Remembering what she has been told by the artist, the blind assistant now explains each work to the visitor, although now neither of them can see. “We are interested in what is normally lost in translation,” says Wooloo artist Martin Rosengard. “We wanted to connect two diverse groups who rarely meet.”
In a similar way, the work of Ann Veronica Janssens (Brussels) creates a sense of disorientation. A room is filled with dense artificial fog and bathed in a strong red light. Apart from the all-encompassing red mist, the viewer is rendered sightless. In Cartagena’s Regional Museum of Modern Art (MURAM), blind Turkish artist Eşref Armağan displays his remarkable paintings of objects and landscapes, reconstructing outlines of the things he feels, touches and imagines, but has never seen. Without physical vision, he reinvents perspective. Another Manifesta project involves the publication of a book in Braille, and partly in recognition of the biennial’s focus on issues of blindness, the national lottery, operated by Spain’s blind community, dedicated one competition draw to the M8 exhibition itself.
In contrast to the theme of blindness, many artists instead undertook projects exploring the idea of modern surveillance. The video “Crossing Borders” by Anders Eiebakke (Norway)  is about aerial surveillance drones. It shows how anyone can build and operate a drone attached to a model airplane, similar to those deployed by military and police forces, without any previous knowledge of flying or radio technology. Remnants of wartime surveillance are still present in Cartagena today. Built in 1768 as part of the Royal Navy Hospital, the former autopsy pavilion in Cartagena plays host to a mesmerizing film by Laurent Grasso. The French artist reveals a sense of intrigue and lurking fear. He films the ramparts, abandoned turrets, cannons and air-raid shelters dotted along the cliffs near Cartagena. He films the coast guard and naval manoeuvres on the sparkling water, sometimes from within a boat rolling in the waves, to produce the effects of seasickness. Slowly, in Grasso’s film, the picturesque coastline becomes an ominous, dangerous landscape.
Since Murcia is also known for its jails, refugee-camps and detention centres, some artists chose incarceration and rehabilitation as their theme. David Rych (Innsbruck/Berlin) devised an experiment whereby a group of six juveniles from a youth custody centre met with six adult inmates serving long-term prison sentences. In an almost voyeuristic way, the audience gains an insight into individual perspectives, also thanks to videos made by the participants in this encounter between different generations.

Such profound projects are intrinsic and essential to the ongoing success of Manifesta. Manifesta 8 is not merely a series of exhibitions. Long-term projects include a future publication to be overseen by tranzit.org to research the cultural similarities between post-colonial and post-Communist communities in Africa, and a series of symposia and workshops devised by Alexandria Contemporary Arts Forum called the “Incubator”, to study the potential for a pan-African nomadic biennale of contemporary art. While Manifesta 8 works on a macro-scale, sometimes it is also good to focus on the smaller, personal details. Several former inmates of the San Anton Prison helped with the restoration of the building prior to Manifesta 8, and assisted with the installation of the artworks for the exhibition there. As a result of their close and positive interaction with contemporary art, two of the low-security inmates are working as guides to the various shows, and they have now decided to pursue studies in the fine arts.

Manifesta 8
Murcia, Cartagena and other cities in the region
Until January 9, 2011
http://www.manifesta8.es

Captions:

page 42
Il n’y a plus rien (There is nothing left) by  Céline Condorelli, Installation shot. The former Central Post Office in Murcia, designed in 1930 and abandoned since the late 1980s, has been refurbished as one of the main exhibition sites for Manifesta 8. Slated for demolition, the current owners have now decided to restore the building, maybe as a casino.

page 44
As loose as anything (2010), part of a ten-minute performance devised by English artist Ryan Gander, consisting of a contemporary dance choreographer miming the actions of a teacher of classical ballet.

page 45 top.
Il n’y a plus rien (There is nothing left) by Paris-born London-based artist Céline Condorelli, a sequence of slides projected on curtains and reflected in mirrors tracing the production of cotton grown in Alexandria in the early 20th Century and transported to the now-shut cotton mills of Lancashire, accompanied by an aligned tale of emigration from Egypt.
The fake archaeological laboratory complete with photographic records and working data, set up in the former central Post Office by Simon Fujiwara (born in London, lives and works in Berlin and Mexico City), supposedly researching a stone phallus discovered under the foundations of an unnamed museum somewhere in the Arabian desert.

page 45 bottom
Sun-dried EMPIRE bricks made in Murcia by Canadian artist Jean-Marc Superville Sovak at ARQUA (The National Museum of Underwater Archaeology) in Cartagena, as part of his conceptual research into the historical fact that identical bricks were used to build churches, mosques and empirical palaces. A room bathed in natural and coloured light, then filled with artificial fog, by Brussels- based Ann Veronica Janssens. The New Eldorado in Murcia, a comic HD video exploring the phenomena of cultural consumption and tourism by artist group Common Culture.

page 46
The spatial installation Suspended in which Austrian artist Nikolaus Schletterer turns a room at MURAM (Regional Museum of Modern Art) in Cartagena into a maze of glossy, coloured grids.

Page 47
Details from three works installed in Pavilion 2 of the former artillery barracks in Murcia. Particip No. 11 by Czech artist Tomáš Vaněk made from the rubber of burst giant balloons,
stapled to the wall in abstract compositions. Part of the multi-media, prison-like installation by German artist Stephan Dillemuth, focused on the regimes of surveillance. Symbolizing dislocation and entrapment, a shoe lodged in cement made using water from the Mediterranean, installed in the former shower-block, by Portuguese artist Carla Filipe.

page 48
A systematic arrangement of paintings, drawings, objects and windows, which together represent a rotating, self-portrait by Slovakian artist Martin Vongrej.
As part of Manifesta 8, Wooloo (a networked artist group based in Copenhagen and New York) is running the world’s first non-visual residency program for artists. “We see a problem when there really is a problem,” says one of their blind collaborators in a short video, in which art is described in non-visual terms.

page 49
Operating in Madrid, Granada, London and California, the artist group Brumaria presents Expanded Violences. Their videos of riots, war and police brutality, accompanied by a soundtrack of shouting and sirens, are projected in two adjacent cells in the former San Anton Prison in Cartagena. One cell is chilled by air-conditioning, the other made unbearable by heaters turned up high.