CACTicino -
Centro d’Arte Contemporanea Ticino - in Bellinzona
opens its 2005 season on Saturday March 12, 2005 at
17:30 with a theme exhibition entitled
COABITAZIONI COATTE/COMPULSORY COHABITATIONS
Mounir
Fatmi, Fabrizio Giannini, Damir Nikšić, Salis &
Vitangeli, Akram Zaatari
With
this first exhibition of the year, CACTicino
presents artists coming from the Mediterranean, the
Balkans and the Middle East, and the Arab world in
general. Underlying Coabitazioni coatte/Compulsory
Cohabitations, an exhibition primarily made up of
video works, is an accusation against the
contemporary world and, even more so, against the
political, social and ethical-moral practices that
belong to a precise geographical area.
We are
living in an important historical period where
changes in our relationship with history and the way
we work through history, as well as our relationship
with the society of institutions, betray the
increasingly wide gap between the real and the
institutional world. We are all witnesses to the
growing tendency towards eliminating both individual
and collective liberties, which are now being
forcefully replaced by manipulation, a violent
cultural colonialism and the exclusively
political-economic spread of a north-south concept.
The at times blatant demagoguery of political
operations is fuelled by a system of networks in the
hands of one class. The concept of dialogue is being
replaced by preventive war, moderation by forced
politicisation in a climate where it has now become
difficult to distinguish the true from the real.
How are
we to interpret the recent changes in contemporary
society? As an attempt to contaminate free thought,
culture and traditions, and to inhibit – if not to
eliminate completely – all personal judgement?
At this
delicate historical moment of perturbation and
crisis the artist takes on an almost shamanic role
as a transformer of political-monetary-carnal values
into totally spiritual values. He/she no longer uses
an exclusively expressive means but rather
re-appropriates his/her status as a comparative
agent at work in the media.
With his
video projection Manipulations (2004), the Moroccan
artist Mounir Fatmi (1970) presents the themes of
the game as a creative element, mental imagination
and the thousand combinations of life. This both
critical and self-critical work offers a vision of
the Arab world which is encapsulated visually in a
close-up of two hands playing incessantly with the
famous Rubik’s cube, trying to make each side of the
cube into a single colour. Soon, however, the
colours fade to make way for the non-colour of
black; the form of the black cube thus refers to the
Kaaba, one of the oldest Muslim shrines in the
world. The hands become dirtied and dripping with
paint to indicate not only split blood but also oil,
the economic bone of contention between West and
East.
Fabrizio
Giannini (1964), a Swiss multimedia artist, also
presents a video projection, a work which is, so to
speak, telematic or connected to the world of
technology and bears the title Coito.664 (2005). A
computer projects on to a wall a sequence of many of
the names of computer viruses present today on the
market of the computer diseases we are forced to
live with. The computer has become a means of
communication which brings together all the
geographies of the world, including cultural
geographies. It is a weapon of interactive
information which by definition reflects the concept
of globalisation. As part of a purely technological
reflection, Giannini brings the discussion onto the
level of issues linked to machines.
Damir Nikšić
(1970) is originally from Bosnia-Herzegovina and is
now resident in Chicago. He mainly uses the medium
of video to condense his favourite themes; division
and reunification. Oriental (2004) was presented for
the first time as part of Genoa 2004 European
Capital of Culture. In it the artist shows the
tragic relationship between West and East in ironic
and sarcastic form. Nikšić – artist and actor –
plays the role of singer, imitating one of the many
models taken from MTV. The song’s dramatic lyrics
clash with its saccharine and consumerist style,
calling into play the subtle and intelligent sarcasm
that is so typical of this interesting artist’s
work.
Morning Star
#2 (2004) is the evocative title of a short clip by
the couple Salis & Vitangeli (Giovanna Salis, 1970 &
Massimo Vitangeli, 1950) which consists of the
static image of a machine for killing the kind of
insects that swarm around public places especially
in summer. The machine uses electricity to burn and
kill nocturnal insects, in particular the moths that
are exclusive to the Mediterranean. The video
reveals the systematic and conscious intention to
kill these annoying creatures and is accompanied by
a soundtrack that mounts to a climax (which
heightens the drama) and then falls towards the end
to represent death.
Red Chewing
Gum (2000) by the Lebanese artist Akram Zaatari
(1966) is a work which tells the story of the
separation of two friends, worked out through the
almost random use of different temporal and spatial
planes. The impotence of the narrator in the face of
time that takes away the intimate experiences of
life is manifested in the attempt to nostalgically
reconstruct memory, to idealise experience. It is
one last vain and desperate cry to exhume and to
reactivate the past. Zaatari is a courageous
interpreter of Lebanese society, denouncing
political and cultural realities through themes such
as identity and sexuality.
The
exhibition can be visited by the public from Friday
to Sunday from 14:00 to 18:00 and will stay open
until April 30, 2005.
(Translation
Ian Harvey)