sabato 13 aprile 2013

CHRISTIAN JANKOVSKI: THE EYE OF DUBAI - MUZEUM NARODOWEGO - SZCZECIN



CHRISTIAN JANKOVSKI
THE EYE OF DUBAI
Muzeum Narodowego w Szczecinie
ul. Waly Chrobrego 3 - Szczecin
dal 13/4/2013 al 18/5/2013

Trafostacja Sztuki, in collaboration with the National Museum in Szczecin, is pleased to present its very first exhibition project outside its future permanent location. Although the TRAFO building is still under construction, the collaboration with the National Museum in Szczecin and the 13 muz gallery enables the new Szczecin centre for contemporary art to officially become part of the new cultural landscape of the city as well as establish itself as an attractive new destination on the international art map.
For this occasion TRAFO will present Berlin-based artist Christian Jankowski, whose multimedia work has been exhibited worldwide, and “The Eye of Dubai” will be presented for the first time in Europe. Jankowski’s exhibition will be the first in a series of individual exhibitions planned by TRAFO. Its objective is to show the new cultural context which Trafostacja Sztuki creates on the Szczecin art map.
An impressive building housing the Museum was built 100 years ago thanks to the commitment of the Szczecin population. It was the first public institution in the history of the city showcasing contemporary art. The temporary exhibition space, where “The Eye of Dubai” installation is presented, is also the venue where various artifacts and wall inscriptions may be normally found.
They point to the fact that Szczecin, which has been distinct on the cultural map of the Baltic region for the past 1000 years, also existed in the minds of Arab merchants. It is Szczecin among all Polish cities that is nearest Berlin, Germany’s capital. The close proximity of the two cities and the resulting possibility of cooperation only recently became part of the awareness shared by some inhabitants of the two regions, as they generally remain separated by a significant mental divide.
The starting point for the work on “The Eye of Dubai” was an invitation Christian Jankowski had received from the BBC television network to participate in one of the episodes of the “Collaboration Culture” series. In this series creative individuals from different cultures get paired up to produce a new work of art. Following the “Collaboration Culture” series idea, the BBC connected Jankowski to a Dubai-based curator Rami Farook. The BBC did not accept Jankowski’s initial idea to blindfold the entire BBC crew during their stay in Dubai.
Regardless of that, Jankowski along with his own Berlin based film crew arrived in Dubai blindfolded. While acting as a guide to Jankowski and his team, Rami Farook became an emblematic figure of the entire process.
Jankowski did not want to influence the selection of locations in Dubai. Instead, he delegated this task to Farook, whose personal tour of Dubai started at Burj Khalifa, the highest building in the world (829 m). Among other places, he led the “blind” team to an artist studio, a gallery, and an indoor ski resort. After reaching each location, Farook left the German film crew without telling them where they were.
In the key scene in the desert blindfolded Jankowski tells a blindfolded falcon the story of Joseph Beuys and the coyote. At this point, there is a transition from black and white film to colour, and the position of the blind falcon is replaced by the entire BBC crew.
On the last night of their stay, a few seconds before the red carpet premiere of the film, Farook removed Jankowski’s blindfold so that the artist - and later his crew - could finally see the result of their work and the faces of their collaborators. During the premiere, the authors of “The Eye of Dubai” project were able to compare their “inner” images and non-visual impressions with the images in their film.
Now the project consists of two films. One made by Jankowski's blind film crew, the other a documentation of this project produced by the BBC, which has been broadcast to 330 million homes and more than 200 countries worldwide.
Christian Jankowski was born in 1968 in Göttingen, Germany, and lives and works in Berlin. His videos, films, and installations have been exhibited nationally and internationally in places such as Sala de Arte Publico Siqueiros, Mexico City, MX (2012), MACRO, Rome, IT (2012), Nassauischer Kunstverein Wiesbaden, DE (2009), Kunstmuseum Stuttgart, DE (2008), Miami Art Museum, Miami, FL (2007), and MIT List Visual Art Center, Massachusetts (2005). He has participated in numerous Biennials, including the Venice Biennial in 1999, the Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York in 2002 and the Taipei and Sydney Biennials in 2010.