Bassam el Baroni on Thu, 17 Nov 2011 04:54:57 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Fifteen Ways to Leave Badiou |
Fifteen Ways to Leave Badiou Book Launch Program: Talks & Live Interviews - Alexandria Launch at ACAF: Saturday 19 November, 2011, Time: 6 ??? 8.30 pm - Cairo Launch at the Gezira Art Center: Wednesday 23 November, 2011,Time: 5 ??? 7 pm - Free Arabic/English Publication Available on Attending Launch ACAF cordially invites you to attend the launch program (in both Alexandria and Cairo) for its new Arabic/English publication Fifteen Ways to Leave Badiou. The publication invites fifteen artists, based in Egypt and the Middle-East, to interact with Alain Badiou???s Fifteen Theses on Contemporary Art. Each artist was asked to develop an artwork in response to one specific thesis that was pre-selected based on conjectured relevance to the artist???s work. The resulting publication brings to light the cross-struggles between hegemonic orders, art, philosophy, and universality. Artists contributing to the publication are: Mohamed Abdelkarim ??? Mohamed Allam ??? Doa Aly ??? Hamdi Attia ??? Hazem El Mestikawy ??? Adel El Siwi ??? Iman Issa ??? Mahmoud Khaled - Hassan Khan ??? Basim Magdy ??? Mona Marzouk - STANCE ??? Oraib Toukan ??? Akram Zaatari ??? Tarek Zaki The publication also includes an essay by theorist and Goldsmiths lecturer Suhail Malik in which he uses almost teacherly didactics, lucidly making us come to terms with the pros and cons of Badiou???s theses on contemporary art. Fifteen Ways to Leave Badiou is a project that wishes to make a fresh and interesting contribution to the current proliferation of discussions on the order of contemporary art. Order, as the eloquently spoken Uruguayan artist and writer Luis Camnitzer points out is "??? codified in laws, decrees, and protocols, or is simply expressed through abuse of power." Alain Badiou???s Fifteen Theses on Contemporary Art is the closest manifestation of ideas in which a living philosopher attempts to outline the laws, decrees, and protocols of contemporary artistic practice. From thesis one to thesis eight Badiou rolls out a descriptive blueprint for contemporary art in which he clearly describes its general characteristics and the codified protocols it usually abides by in order to be merited with the tag of ???contemporary???. From thesis nine to thesis fifteen Badiou changes the blueprint and his mission shifts from that of description and identification to that of the improvement and regulation of contemporary art and the advancement of a new order within the current order of things. This new order is what Badiou dubs "non-imperial art", contemporary art which is not in the service of empire. The publication attempts to create a junction where Badiou???s rendition of what contemporary art is and what it can or should be meets with the various positions, criticisms, and representations of contemporary art contributed by the artists. Badiou has stated that "philosophy should always think as closely as possible to antiphilosophy", we hope that this publication can bring art closer to philosophy and philosophy closer to antiphilosophy, making both philosophy and art more incisive and provoking along the way. The 'Fifteen Ways to Leave Badiou' publication is designed is by the St. Gallen (Switzerland) based designer J??rg Waidelich with Arabic typesetting by Engy Aly, the project is supported by Pro Helvetia Arts Council of Switzerland in Cairo in collaboration with Alexandria Contemporary Arts Forum (ACAF). Program Alexandria: 19 November at ACAF 6 ??? 8 pm ??? 6 pm: Brief Introduction on Fifteen Ways to Leave Badiou by Bassam El Baroni, Language: Arabic ??? 6.15 ??? 7.15 pm: Talk by Suhail Malik Art and Universality Conflict: A Didactic Exposition of Badiou???s ???Fifteen Theses on Contemporary Art???, Language: English ??? Refreshment Break ??? 7.30 ??? 8 pm: Contributing Artist Mohamed Allam interviewed by Bassam El Baroni taking his contribution to the publication as a starting point, Language: Arabic ??? 8 pm: Open Q & A with Suhail Malik and Mohamed Allam Cairo: 23 November at the Gezira Art Center 5 ??? 7 pm ??? 5 pm: Brief Introduction on Fifteen Ways to Leave Badiou by Bassam El Baroni, Language: Arabic ??? 5.10 ??? 6 pm: Talk by Suhail Malik Ape Says No: The Problem of Critical Virtue in Contemporary Art, Language: English ??? Brief Q & A ??? 6.10 ??? 7 pm: Contributing Artist Hassan Khan interviewed by Bassam El Baroni taking his contribution to the publication as a starting point, Language: Arabic ??? Brief Q & A Bios for Participants in the Book Launch Program Suhail Malik is a writer and teaches in the Department of Art, Goldsmiths University where he is Reader in Critical Studies and Co-Director of the MFA Fine Art. Recent writings include: ???The Politics of Neutrality: Constructing a Global Civility??? at ???The Human Snapshot???, Luma Foundation, Arles (2011); ???Why Art? The Primacy of Audience???, Global Art Forum, Dubai, and Art Tomorrow (2011), ???The Wrong of Contemporary Art: Aesthetics and Political Indeterminacy??? (with Andrea Phillips) in ???Reading Ranci??re??? (2011); ???Educations Sentimental and Unsentimental: Repositioning the Politics of Art and Education??? for Taipei Biennial (2010);???Screw (Down) The Debt: Neoliberalism and the Politics of Austerity??? in Mute (2010); ???You Are Here??? for Manifesta 8 (2010); ???Civil Society Must Be, Like, Totally Destroyed??? in ???Sanity Assassin??? (2010). Mohamed Allam (b.1984) in Assiut/Asyut, Egypt lives and works in Cairo. Allam studied at the Arts Education Faculty of Helwan University in Cairo. He uses different mediums such as video, performance and sound in his work where usually the surrounding environment ??? with its social and political constituents ??? provides the context and framework from which he derives a decisive irony. He has participated as an artist in numerous events and exhibitions since 2003. Allam is also concerned with arts management and has participated in organizing several art events in Cairo. He established the young Cairo-based artist initiative ???Medrar for Contemporary Art??? which aims to promote the contemporary artistic practices of young artists in Egypt. Hassan Khan (b. 1975) is an artist, musician and writer who lives and works in Cairo. He has had solo shows at, amongst others, The Queens Museum (New York, 2011), Galerie Chantal Crousel (Paris 2011), Kunst Halle Sankt Gallen (2010), Le Plateau (Paris, 2007), and Gasworks (London, 2006). Khan has also participated in Manifesta 8 (Murcia, 2010), Yokohama Triennale (2008), Gwangju Biennale (2008), Thessaloniki Biennale(2007), Sidney Biennale (2006), Seville Biennale (2006), Torino Triennale (2005) and other international exhibitions. His album ???tabla dubb??? is available on the 100copies label, and he is also widely published in Arabic and English. His text ???Nine Lessons Learned from Sherif El-Azma??? was published by the Contemporary Image Collective (2009), and his artist book ???17 and in AUC ??? the transcriptions??? was published by Merz and Crousel (2004). Bassam El Baroni is a curator and art critic from Alexandria, Egypt. He is the co-founder and director of Alexandria Contemporary Arts Forum (ACAF). Addresses: Alexandria Contemporary Arts Forum (ACAF) 10 Hussein Hassab Street, Flat 6, Azarita, Alexandria, Egypt www.acafspace.org Gezira Art Center 1 Marsafi Street, Zamalek, Cairo, Egypt?? # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org