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[ecrea] Invitation Iconoclastic Controversies - a visual sociology exhibition
Wed Jan 06 18:51:08 GMT 2016
Iconoclastic Controversies: A visual sociology of statues and
commemoration sites in the southern regions of Cyprus
-Venue: NeMe Arts Centre, Limassol, Cyprus
-Duration: 23/1-6/2/2016
The Iconoclastic Controversies exhibition, by Nico Carpentier, will take
place at the NeMe Arts Centre, from 23 January until 6 February 2016. On
Saturday 23 January NeMe invites you to opening the exhibition and to
the accompanying seminar, Monuments and Memorials as Rhetoric /
Objectivity as Male.
The exhibition which will take place at the NeMe Arts Centre contains 20
photographs, accompanying text panels and eight listening posts of
recorded interviews that investigate the monuments, landmarks and
statues that are part of the everyday life of Greek Cypriots. âThe
statues are vehicles of communication. They are vehicles of ideology
and of informationâ, explains Nico Carpentier, âand they allow us to
reflect about past, present and future.â
The photographs are used to analyse how statues and commemoration sites
in the Greek Cypriot community narrate and frame the Cyprus conflict,
and how they in many cases contain references to the âSelfâ
and the âOtherâ. They present a heroic âSelfâ to the âOwnâ
community, or show the suffering of the âSelfâ. But the exhibition
also investigates how some (exceptional) sculptures undermine this
traditional presentation of the âSelfâ and offer a different
narrative of the conflict, and of the identities of the people involved.
The photographs were taken during Carpentierâs stay on the island,
from September of 2013 to September 2014. This project moves away from
traditional academic texts to examine and analyse complicated social
phenomena, such as those produced by the political situation in Cyprus.
The idea behind this exhibition is that photographs can work just as
effectively to communicate an academic analysis. Quite possibly they
work even more intuitively.
Seminar
On 23 January 2016, at 18:30, before the opening of the exhibition, NeMe
has organised a seminar to stimulate further reflection. This seminar,
Monuments and Memorials as rhetoric / Objectivity as male will be in
English. It is open to the public and will take place at the Photography
Lab Room at Heroesâ square (at the corner of Pavlou Mela and Vasilou
Makedonos, Limassol). Speakers are Vayia Karaiskou, Aysu Arsoy and
Chrystalleni Loizidou. The moderator is Vicky Triga.
Dates
Exhibition: Iconoclastic Controversies: A visual sociology of statues
and commemoration sites in the southern regions of Cyprus
-Venue: NeMe Arts Centre, Limassol, Cyprus
-Opening: 23/1/2016, 8.30pm
-Duration: 23/1-6/2/2016
-Opening Times
****Tuesday-Friday: 17:30-20:30
****Saturday: 10:00-13:00
Seminar: Monuments and Memorials as rhetoric / Objectivity as male
-Venue: CUT Photography Lab Room at Heroesâ square, Limassol, Cyprus
-Date/Time: 23/1/2016, 6pm-8pm
++++++++++++++++++++
Seminar: Monuments and Memorials as Rhetoric / Objectivity as Male
At Cyprus University of Technology Photography Lab Room situated in
Heroesâ square, Limassol, Cyprus
23/1/2016, 6pm-8pm
âMemories are not ready-made reflections of the past, but eclectic,
selective reconstructions based on subsequent actions and perceptions
and on ever-changing codes by which we delineate, symbolise, and
classify the world around us.â (David Lowenthal, The Past is a Foreign
Country; Cambridge University press, 1985, p. 210.)
The recent renewed interest in what may be seen as augmenting a Cypriot
collective memory through examining our public history is fed by the
desire to improve the relations between the two main communities in
Cyprus. Negotiation and (possible) reconciliation about a shared past,
in combination with education, then become significant tools to turn
this desire into a cultural reality.
Understanding the loaded narratives of public monuments and memorials,
since mainly all are commissioned by political parties in power and not
private individuals, is a fundamental area for analysis and reflection.
It is worth noting that commemorating heroes of past conflict means
privileging some versions of history and discounting others. As such,
memorials and monuments are a means of forgetting as well as remembering.
Art historian and critic Arthur Danto states a relevant clarification
that the term âmonumentâ signifies celebration, positive
remembrance, and the eternal present, while the term âmemorialâ
denotes the sacred, mourning, and the finality of the past. Dantoâs
definition together with the 80âs feminist slogan: Objectivity is male
subjectivity frame the seminarâs discussion about the dominant ideas
on patriotism, heroism, service and sacrifice. In nearly all cases, the
masculine interpretation becomes the voice of our idea of history
because patriarchy had the means to create this visual legacy of public
commemoration. Traditional commemorative representational memorials,
using socially unconnected modernist formalism, promote a rhetoric which
is a synthetic version of a past reality. They are carefully crafted to
promote a heroic translation of events and are equally imbued with a
subtext expressing not the imitation of actual reality but a desired
reality or political outcome fraught with historical contingency.
Nietzsche in his âOn the Utility and Liability of History for Lifeâ
states that history inscribed in the physicality of monuments
represents âa belief in the coherence and continuity of what is great
in all ages, it is a protest against the change of generations and
against transitorinessâ. History, of course, and especially very
recent history in our immediate region, has proved that the concepts of
continuity and coherence of place or ideals have been replaced with a
forceful scale of insecurity and transitoriness.
Speakers: Vayia Karaiskou, Aysu Arsoy and Chrystalleni Loizidou.
Moderator: Vicky Triga
++++++++++++++++++++
In collaboration with:
the Association for Historical Dialogue & Research (AHDR), the Cyprus
Community Media Centre (CCMC), CUT-radio, and NeMe
Supported by:
the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB - Belgium), Uppsala University, the
Research Foundation â Flanders (FWO - Belgium) and the Cyprus
University of Technology
Thanks to:
Yiannis Christidis, Vaia Doudaki, Fatma Nazli Köksal
++++++++++++++++++++
See
http://nicocarpentier.net/icontroversies/
http://www.neme.org/1777/iconoclastic-controversies
++++++++++++++++++++
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Nico Carpentier
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Uppsala University
Department of Informatics and Media
Kyrkogårdsgatan 10
753 13 Uppsala
Sweden
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) - Free University of Brussels
&
Charles University in Prague
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Iconoclastic controversies exhibition:
A visual sociology of statues and commemoration sites in the southern
regions of Cyprus
http://nicocarpentier.net/icontroversies/
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New article (open access):
Differentiating between access, interaction and participation
Conjunctions, Vol 2, No 2 (2015)
http://www.conjunctions-tjcp.com/article/view/22915
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DESIRE
Centre for the study of Democracy, Signification and Resistance
http://researchcentredesire.eu/
----------------------------
International Association for Media and Communication Research
http://www.iamcr.org/
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ECREA mailing list
http://commlist.org/
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European Media and Communication Doctoral Summer School
http://www.comsummerschool.org/
----------------------------
E-mail (UUppsala): (nico.carpentier /at/ im.uu.se)
E-mail (VUBrussels): (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
T (UUppsala): +46 (0)18 471 6341
Room (UUppsala): Ekonomikum building E329
Web: http://nicocarpentier.net/
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