Archives par étiquette : Eleni Kamma

Eleni Kamma, Tuner’s monologue, Palais de Tokyo

Au Palais de Tokyo à Paris, Eleni Kamma participe aux Rencontres Internationales Paris Berlin Madrid 2012.  Sa vidéo « The Tuner’s Monologue » sera projetée dans le cadre du cycle « Documents / Documentaire ».

Palais de Tokyo, 5 décembre, Salle Jean Grémillon, 15-23h.

The Tuner’s Monologue, 2012

The Tuner’s Monologue Synopsis: If the idea of folding and unfolding depends on the structure and expectations a city arouses or suppresses, what images can be produced by the coexistence of sound and space, the space between lived experience and a simultaneous reflection of it? The Tuner’s Monologue A voiceover in the form of a monologue, in which a tuner of musical instruments describes aspects of the profession, is superimposed to B&W film footage of architectural facades of buildings under construction in the “new heart” of Rotterdam. Both text and footage have been subjected to an increased degree of abstraction.

HD video, B&W, stereo sound, 16:9, English spoken, NL, 2012, 13:09 min
Camera Boris Van Hoof
Video Editing Inneke Van Waeyenberghe
Voice Over: Tina Van Baren
Voice recording took place at WORM,Rotterdam,Lukas Simonis
Original Text : Pie Leyser,pianotuner,interviewed by Eleni Kamma
Text adaptation: Popahna Brandes & Tina Van Baren.

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Eleni Kamma, NAK Aachen, les images

The starting point for this exhibition, whose title is taken from the sonnet of Averardo Genovesi from 1838, is the film “Georgofili”*, a 27 minutes HD film produced in 2012, for the purposes of which Kamma conducted research during her residency at the Villa Romana, as an international visiting artist in 2010 and 2011. Throughout “Georgofili”, an assemblage of different in time voices of Italy takes place. The old genre of Tuscan “Contrasto” verbal duels, in which the performers-poets Emilio Meliano and Realdo Tonti use their arguing skills to debate the politics and morality of contemporary Italy, meets historical educational dialogues from the age of enlightened despotism, performed and commented by the young Italian actors Lavinia Parissi and Marco Rustioni. The exhibition “From Bank to Bank on a Gradual Slope” stages the premiere of the film among a selection of found objects placed on shelving structures developed specifically for the rooms of the Villa Romana in collaboration with the Belgian architect Breg Horemans. Windows and doors of the main exhibition rooms are projected along their own axis, until the point where they interfere. These crossing points shape the outline of the flexible and adjustable shelving structures. The exhibition is accompanied by a printed edition of the Georgofili script, designed by Salome Schmuki. “From Bank to Bank on a Gradual Slope” openly invites the viewer
to a spatial exploration between lived experience and a simultaneous reflection of contemporary Florence.

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Eleni Kamma, Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, vernissage 27.10

The NAK. Neuer Aachener Kunstverein is pleased to announce that Maastrict-based artist Eleni Kamma is the first winner of the PREIS FÜR JUNGE KUNST PRIIJS VOOR JONGE KUNST PRIX DE L’ART JEUNE. In addition to a cash prize of 3.000,- Euro, the artist will present her work in a solo exhibition at the NAK. Neuer Aachener Kunstverein in October 2012. The exhibition will be accompanied by a publication.

The PREIS FÜR JUNGE KUNST was awarded for the very first time in 2012 by the NAK. Neuer Aachener Kunstverein and STAWAG, Stadtwerke Aachen AG and is made possible through the generous support of STAWAG. The prize is given to artists under forty years old and who were born, educated, or live and work in the Meuse-Rhine Euroregion. STAWAG Executive Board Director Dr. Christian Becker explains the energy concern’s decision to sponsor the prize as follows: « Promoting young talent is a central focus of STAWAG’s community involvement. I am delighted that we can offer young and upcoming artists a chance to develop their work through the NAK art prize and contribute in this way to ensuring that Aachen remains a source of inspiration for innovative ideas. »

The jury consisting of Dr. Martin Schmidl, artist, Berlin and Aachen, Lisette Smits, curator, MARRES Center for Contemporary Culture, Maastricht, Dirk Snauwaert, director WIELS Contemporary Art Center, Brussels, Astrid Wege, curator and publicist, Cologne, and Dorothea Jendricke, director, NAK. Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, Aachen, selected Kamma from more than one hundred applications received from the three countries of the Euregio Meuse-Rhine, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany, for the following reason:

« Athens-born of Cypriot origin Eleni Kamma (*1973) focuses on the inherent gaps and contradictions within existing cultural narratives and structures. In her books, drawings, videos and installations she investigates possibilities for a future architecture that rejects binary oppositional systems of thought and accepts rather than tolerates « other » positions. Her interest lies in narrative representations of transformation.

Issues of memory, authenticity and identity take centre stage in Kamma’s artistic practice. It often takes the form of real objects or stories that are constituted as stereotypes through omission of their actual history. By revisiting systems of classification and strategies of description and taxonomy, Kamma examines the relation of the cliché, the banal and the stereotype, to the formation of history and the production of meaning.

Kamma’s work captivated the jury not only through the broad range of the media used and the wealth and diversity of its references, but also through its subtle reflection on space and the « appearance » of an object that suggests an in-between space.

With Kamma, the prize is awarded to an artist who maintains close ties to all three countries of the Euregio Meuse-Rhine. Currently living in Maastricht, she not only plays an active and integral part in the regional art scene but her international connections allow her to maintain a high profile within the international art field, providing visibility and evidence of the vitality of the regional art scene of the Euregio Meuse-Rhine. »

Eleni Kamma (*1973) was a Fellow Researcher at the Jan Van Eyck Academie in Maastricht in 2008-09. Moreover she is represented by Galerie Nadja Vilenne in Liège. In 2010, Kamma was an artist in resident at the WIELS Contemporary Art Centre in Brussels, and, in early 2011, she participated in the IASPIS Residency Program in Stockholm. In the same year, Eleni Kamma was also a guest artist at Villa Romana in Florence. Her works have been presented previously in Aachen in conjunction with the exhibition of the Liège-based SPACE Collection at the Atelierhaus Aachen e.V.

OPENING:  Saturday 27 October 2012 . 7 PM
OPEN:  28 October — 25 November 2012

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Eleni Kamma, Found in Translation, chapter P like Politics, P like Parrots, Maison Grégoire à Bruxelles

Qu’est-ce qui peut bien relier une conversation entre deux architectes suédois, discourant de tendances actuelles en architecture contemporaine, des extraits choisis tirés de discours de G.W. Bush, les réunions hebdomadaires d’une chorale d’amateurs du fin fond de la Suède ou encore des représentations de cet animal emblématique qu’est le perroquet? A première vue, bien peu de choses, répondrait-t-on. Et pourtant…

Ce qui pourrait passer pour un rébus se met tout naturellement en place quand l’on prend le temps nécessaire de s’attarder dans l’exposition d’Eleni Kamma à la Maison Grégoire. C’est que le travail d’Eleni Kamma est un travail qui se déploie, dans le sens étymologique du terme (porter au-delà), dans une logique de translation constante. Il procède souvent à la façon d’un discours fonctionnant par associations et inductions, et dont les vides, ellipses, silences ou manques apparents sont précisément au moins aussi signifiants que ses éléments explicites, exprimés.

C’est aussi une œuvre, qui, par delà son apparent éclectisme lexical de formes et de styles, procède suivant une logique interne extrêmement sélective.

Ses installations ou expositions sont donc à appréhender in toto, à la façon de phrases plastiques, libres et flottantes, recourant à un langage personnel où éléments visuels, plastiques ou linguistiques se complètent, construisant ainsi de véritables rhétoriques « installatives » participant d’une logique de gesamtkunstwerk.

Les œuvres qui forment le noyau de cette exposition sont deux vidéos que Kamma a réalisées en Suède à l’occasion de sa résidence à Iaspis en 2011, à savoir : « Malin and Tor: Two architects in conversation ». Et la vidéo éponyme: « P like Politics, P like Parrots ». Si ces deux vidéos peuvent à première vue, ou, plutôt, audition apparaître fortement ancrées par leur contenu rhétorique et discursif dans le contexte local, c’est sans doute précisément par leur propre déplacement, leur extraction du contexte d’origine que l’on peut le mieux apprécier le message méta ou infra linguistiques, les analyses sociopolitique et esthétique qu’ils véhiculent.

« Malin and Tor: Two architects in conversation » suit en deux épisodes l’échange que poursuivent ces deux architectes. Pour une première partie, l’entretien porte sur une analyse de la crise de la dimension spéculative de l’architecture contemporaine, au profit de la montée en puissance concomitante de l’aspiration au spectaculaire sévissant de nos jours. En guise de toile de fond de cette vidéo se déroule sous nos yeux l’architecture temporaire, très anti spectaculaire précisément, d’une salle en plein montage de l’Arkitektuurmuseet de Stockholm.  Filmé par une camera résolument exploratrice, en constant mouvement giratoire, le décor agit à la façon d’une membrane textile, souple, quasi organique et fragile, tel un contrepoint signifiant à la réflexion menée sur la vocation et la dimension spectaculaires de l’architecture dans le tissu social.

Dans la deuxième partie de l’entretien, les deux architectes, reprennent leur échange en évoquant le succès et la floraison des chorales au sein de la société suédoise offrant la possibilité d’une expression individuelle et collective indirectes, tout en exprimant le besoin de recréer un sens de communauté faisant sans doute défaut à l’espace public.

Cette partie de leur conversation offre une transition toute naturelle à la deuxième vidéo d’Eleni Kamma, qui nous restitue une répétition bien spécifique d’un chœur amateur de la paroisse de Bräcke. La structure du texte qu’Eleni Kamma propose à la chorale après l’avoir écrit à leur intention, reprend le rythme ternaire et répétitif du jeu bien connu « papier ciseau caillou ». L’élément subversif apparaît progressivement lorsque l’on s’aperçoit que le texte repose sur la succession de paroles à connotation politiques (people, pouvoir, public, privé, etc.), commençant toutes par la lettre P-, et toutes tirées d’un discours de 2003 de G.W. Bush. Leur répétition, comme fortuite, incontrôlée et accidentelle, induite par la structure même du jeu offre en soi une mise en abyme troublante et métaphorique sur le fonctionnement arbitraire de nos systèmes politiques.

La complémentarité des deux vidéos apparaît ainsi progressivement. Elles partagent l’usage giratoire de la caméra, explorant inlassablement des espaces décors quasi vides, qui ne sont habités que par la présence du son de la voix humaine. Si la forme discursive articulée de « Malin & Tor » cède la place dans « P like Politics…» à une expression polyphonique et apparemment plus erratique et confuse, dans les deux cas, les contenus textuels progressent et se développent par des translations / associations de sens ou de sons.

L’intérieur de la Maison Grégoire se prête à merveille à la présentation de ces œuvres. Combinant la pureté de ses lignes modernistes avec la dimension domestique de lieu habité de façon très minimale, il offre un écho direct aux décors utilisés par Kamma. En outre, conçu par van de Velde comme un statement résidentiel fonctionnel et anti spectaculaire, son architecture se déploie de façon organique à l’échelle de l’homme: le rez-de-chaussée en particulier s’appréhende comme un espace s’articulant autour d’un escalier central et qui induit une circulation giratoire qui n’est pas sans rappeler l’usage de la camera privilégié par Kamma.

A l’occasion de « Found in Translation, chapter P » une sérigraphie originale en 15 exemplaires, un livret et une série de 15 prints spécialement produits pour l’occasion viennent expliciter le lien entre les deux vidéos.

Texte de Emmanuel Lambion



Malin and Tor (Two Architects in Conversation), 2011
33:16 minutes, HD video, color, stereo sound, 16:9, English spoken, NL

P Like Politics, P Like Parrots, 2011
17:42 minutes, HD video, color, stereo, English and Swedish spoken, NL

 

What on earth would at first sight appear to connect a conversation between two Swedish architects reflecting on a current trends in architecture, excerpts from presidential speeches by G.W. Bush, the weekly practice of an amateur choir and the archetypal image of parrots in our Western imagination? Hardly anything, one would guess. And still… What would seem to be a kind of rebus comes into pieces when one takes the necessary “speculative” time to visit and envision thoroughly the installation devised by Eleni Kamma for Maison Grégoire.

For Eleni Kamma’s work is a work which unfolds itself in permanent translation (hereby intended in its etymological meaning of “bringing beyond”), much in the fashion of an associative and inductive discourse, where gaps and voids are precisely as meaningful as its formal constitutive and explicit, expressed elements. It is a work which, following a seemingly casual, but, at the same time, very specific and selective approach, resorts to visual, plastic and linguistic elements to articulate itself into gesamtkunstwerk installations. Kammas installations and or exhibitions are to be apprehended in totum, like a free floating sentence elaborated in a personal language, resorting to an eclectic vocabulary.

The works forming the chore of this exhibition are two videos, both realised in Sweden on the occasion of Eleni Kamma’s residency @ Iaspis in 2011, namely : Malin and Tor : Two architects in conversation and the eponymous : P like Politics, P like Parrots

Both videos are at first sight or, rather first hearing, strongly anchored by their discursive and linguistic content in the Swedish local context. Beyond, it is maybe this very displacement out of their context of origin which helps appreciate the general, meta-linguistic message and the socio-political and aesthetic comments they convey.

Malin and Tor : Two architects in conversation follows in two episodes the discursive exchanges between the two aforementioned architects. The fist part of their conversation articulates around an analysis of the crisis of the speculative element in contemporary architecture, paired with a reflexion on the “spectacular” fashion, as a current operational mode, mirrored by the very alteration of the meaning of their etymological radical. Background for this video is the mobile, evolving and precisely anti-spectacular setting of a room of the Arkitektuurmuseet, filmed while an exhibition is being mounted. As such, through the very explorative and rotating use of the camera, the decor functions as a sort of fragile organic filter, acting as a meaningful metaphoric counterpoint to a reflexion of the spectacular role / dimension of architecture in the social fabric.

In the second part of the video, the two architects resume their conversation by tackling i.a. the phenomenon of the success and flowering of singing choirs apprehended as a sort of social architecture, which may sometimes be seen as “absorbing the lack of talents”, whilst revealing the need of a sense of community and offering the possibility for a mediated discursive social expression.

This part of their conversation offers the natural transition for Kamma’s second video, reflecting a specific rehearsal of the amateur choir of the Parish of Bräcke.

The composition of the text proposed by Kamma and rehearsed by the singers, originates in the rhythm and structure of the famous hands game “Paper-Rock-Scissors” progressively subverting it through the inclusion of political P- words, all (not so) randomly chosen from a 2003 speech by George W. Bush and introducing the concepts of public, common sphere vs. private one, power vs. people etc.

The casually repetitive, alternating character of the seemingly endless game offers an indirect metaphor on the arbitrary functioning of our political systems, apprehended as a carousel-like vortex.

If their correspondences appear but progressively, the two videos function very well together.. They share the same use of an explorative camera, rotating around itself in a seemingly empty décor, just inhabited by the characters through speech or singing. An articulated but also free and associative discourse in the first video makes place in the second video for a more polyphonic and seemingly loose verbal exchange, nevertheless carefully devised and prepared by the artist. Both discursive contents progress and develop in associative translations of meanings and / or phonetics to eventually climax in the P like Politics piece in a parody of a subversive sung “game”. It there where one can feel that the formal and thematic choices made within each video (and in the link between the two of them) are deeply meaningful.

The domestic interior of Maison Gregoire appears to be the perfect setting for the presentation of the two videos. The premises combine the purity of their modernist lines along with a decidedly domestic, lived in (if sparsely furnished) interior, thus echoing the two distinctive backgrounds filmed in the Eleni kamma’s videos. Precisely conceived by van de Velde as an anti-spectacular statement, the architecture is organically articulated and based on human scale. A final touch is brought about by the fact that the ground floor used for the exhibitions is designed for a circular de-ambulation around a central staircase, thus much on the line of the circular rotating character of the filming in Kamma’s videos.

On the occasion of Found in Translation, chapter P, an original silkscreen print, booklet and a series of 15 prints further articulate the implicit connection between the videos.

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Eleni Kamma, Found in translation, Maison Grégoire

Eleni Kamma est l’invitée de la Maison Grégoire à Bruxelles. Vernissage ce 4 octobre. Exposition accessible jusqu’au 3 novembre.

Found in Translation, chapter
P like Politics, P like Parrots

What on earth would at first sight appear to connect a conversation between two Swedish architects reflecting on a current trends in architecture, excerpts from presidential speeches by G.W. Bush, the weekly practice of an amateur choir and the archetypal image of parrots in our Western imagination ? Hardly anything, one would guess. And still… What would seem to be a kind of rebus comes into pieces when one takes the necessary “speculative” time to visit and envision thoroughly the installation devised by Eleni Kamma for Maison Grégoire.

For Eleni Kamma’s work is a work which unfolds itself in permanent translation (hereby intended in its etymological meaning of “bringing beyond”), much in the fashion of an associative and inductive discourse, where gaps and voids are precisely as meaningful as its formal constitutive and explicit, expressed elements.

It is a work which, following a seemingly casual, but, at the same time, very specific and selective approach, resorts to visual, plastic and linguistic elements to articulate itself into gesamtkunstwerk installations. Kammas installations and or exhibitions are to be apprehended in totum, like a free floating sentence elaborated in a personal language, resorting to an eclectic vocabulary.

The works forming the chore of this exhibition are two videos, both realised in Sweden on the occasion of Eleni Kamma’s residency @ Iaspis in 2011, namely:
Malin and Tor: Two architects in conversation and the eponymous : P like Politics, P like Parrots

Both videos are at first sight or, rather first hearing, strongly anchored by their discursive and linguistic content in the Swedish local context.
Beyond, it is maybe this very displacement out of their context of origin which helps appreciate the general, meta-linguistic message and the socio-political and aesthetic comments they convey.

Malin and Tor: Two architects in conversation follows in two episodes the discursive exchanges between the two aforementioned architects.
The fist part of their conversation articulates around an analysis of the crisis of the speculative element in contemporary architecture, paired with a reflexion on the “spectacular” fashion, as a current operational mode, mirrored by the very alteration of the meaning of their etymological radical.
Background for this video is the mobile, evolving and precisely anti-spectacular setting of a room of the Arkitektuurmuseet, filmed while an exhibition is being mounted.
As such, through the very explorative and rotating use of the camera, the decor functions as a sort of fragile organic filter, acting as a meaningful metaphoric counterpoint to a reflexion of the spectacular role / dimension of architecture in the social fabric.

In the second part of the video, the two architects resume their conversation by tackling i.a. the phenomenon of the success and flowering of singing choirs apprehended as a sort of social architecture, which may sometimes be seen as “absorbing the lack of talents”, whilst revealing the need of a sense of community and offering the possibility for a mediated discursive social expression.

This part of their conversation offers the natural transition for Kamma’s second video, reflecting a specific rehearsal of the amateur choir of the Parish of Bräcke.

The composition of the text proposed by Kamma and rehearsed by the singers, originates in the rhythm and structure of the famous hands game “Paper-Rock-Scissors” progressively subverting it through the inclusion of political P- words, all (not so) randomly chosen from a 2003 speech by George W. Bush and introducing the concepts of public, common sphere vs. private one, power vs. people etc.
The casually repetitive, alternating character of the seemingly endless game offers an indirect metaphor on the arbitrary functioning of our political systems, apprehended as a carousel-like vortex.

If their correspondences appear but progressively, the two videos function very well together.. They share the same use of an explorative camera, rotating around itself in a seemingly empty décor, just inhabited by the characters through speech or singing. An articulated but also free and associative discourse in the first video makes place in the second video for a more polyphonic and seemingly loose verbal exchange, nevertheless carefully devised and prepared by the artist
Both discursive contents progress and develop in associative translations of meanings and / or phonetics to eventually climax in the P like Politics piece in a parody of a subversive sung “game”. It there where one can feel that the formal and thematic choices made within each video (and in the link between the two of them) are deeply meaningful.

The domestic interior of Maison Gregoire appears to be the perfect setting for the presentation of the two videos. The premises combine the purity of their modernist lines along with a decidedly domestic, lived in (if sparsely furnished) interior, thus echoing the two distinctive backgrounds filmed in the Eleni kamma’s videos. Precisely conceived by van de Velde as an anti-spectacular statement, the architecture is organically articulated and based on human scale. A final touch is brought about by the fact that the ground floor used for the exhibitions is designed for a circular de-ambulation around a central staircase, thus much on the line of the circular rotating character of the filming in Kamma’s videos.

On the occasion of Found in Translation, chapter P, an original silkscreen print, booklet and a series of 15 prints further articulate the implicit connection between the videos.
Opening on 4 october 2012, 6 30 p .m.
Exhibition open on Saturdays, 2-6 p.m. from 04 / 10 / 2012 until 03 / 11 / 2012
Maison Grégoire, 292 Dieweg, B 1180 Bruxelles

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Eleni Kamma, On dilletantism, Halle 14 Leipzig

Après la ACC Galerie de Weimar, c’est la Halle 14 de Leipzig qui accueille l’exposition « Über den Dilettantismus | On Dilettantism », conçue par Frank Motz. Elenni Kamma y participe et y montre l’installation  « En Parergo I (a bywork for Weimar) », 2012, conçue pour l’occasion.

The meaning of “dilettante” has undergone significant change over the centuries. Originally it described an untrained artist, a lover of the fine arts or a scientific amateur, who passionately, albeit inexpertly, pursued an interest for pleasure (from the Latin delectare = to please). Nowadays, its meaning is far less flattering, namely that of a “layperson” or – even worse – a clumsy boor.
However, the arts would not be as rife with ideas and discoveries if it were not for these amateurish, unstudied and autodidactic contributions. One need only to think of concrete poetry and music, Dada, punk and the Fluxus movement. This exhibition invites artists to play with the idea of dilettantism or dabble in a field in which they possess no expertise whatsoever. The curators hope to illustrate the possibilities and liberties of dilettantish approaches, especially when it comes to gaining new insights and experiences or unusual perspectives.
The event series Dilettante-Stadl will invite researchers, artists and art collectors, e.g. the collector Harald Falckenberg and the artist Mark Dion, who regard dilettantism as a central working method.

Artistic director: Frank Motz, Artists: Bernard Akoi-Jackson (GH), Hagen Betzwieser (GER), Ian Bourn (UK), Jeannette Chavez (CU), Mark Dion (US), Anna Gierster (GER), Kel Glaister (AU), Karl-Hans Janke (GER), Eleni Kamma (GR), Adam Knight (UK), Simone Bogner (GER), Paul Etienne Lincoln (UK), Laure Prouvost (FR), Rory Macbeth (UK), Per Olaf Schmidt (GER), Peter Haakon Thompson (US), Thomas Tudoux (FR), Nomeda & Gediminas Urbonas (LT/US) and others

Leipzig, Halle 14, 15 Sept. – 9 Dec. 2012

Eleni Kamma, En Parergo I (a bywork for Weimar), 2012

En Parergo I (a bywork for Weimar) displays reproductions of images linked to the history of paper folding and at the same time invites people to actively participate in the folding experience themselves. It consists of a table  around which people may gather and fold paper, as well as a board placed on the wall opposite the table.  The board is entirely covered by origami post-it paper blocks that serve both as a visual installation, as folding  material and as carriers of information. On the opening night and once a week during the exhibition, there will  be paper-folding gatherings.

Although En Parergo I (a bywork for Weimar) follows the discussion of amateurism versus professionalism through  a close look into educational systems and the activity of folding, it has no intention of being didactic. The knowledge  of paper folding belongs to everyone and to no one at the same time. Its origin arouses much speculation, touching  questions of authorship that extend national borders. The activity of folding is at the same time a spatial as well  as sculptural act. The form of the installation will develop and take shape according to the desire of the visitors to take out papers from the board, fold them and transform them into ephemeral sculptures during the exhibition. En Parergo I (a bywork for Weimar) is an attempt to put on the table questions that concern notions of community,  sharing and common place. Perhaps the traces and left overs from this activity may provide us with some answers.

Eleni Kammas künstlerische Praxis dreht sich um Leerstellen und Widersprüche innerhalb kultureller Geschichtsschreibungen. Indem sie selbst auf Klassifizierungen, Taxonomien und bestimmte Darstellungsmuster zurückgreift, beleuchtet sie die Rolle von Klischees und Stereotypen bei der Ausbildung von Sinn und historischem Bewusstsein. Neuere Arbeiten fokussieren auf die Koexistenz von Wort und Bild und erzeugen neue Bedeutungen, indem sie diese scheinbar kollabieren lassen. Mit «En Parergo I (a bywork for Weimar)» präsentiert Kamma einen visuellen Kosmos, der mit der Geschichte des Papierfaltens verbunden ist und lädt die Besucher ein, sich selbst in dieser Kunst zu versuchen. Deren Ursprünge sind vielfach mit Spekulationen verbunden, wobei Fragen der Autorschaft über nationale Grenzen hinaus berührt werden. Der 1989 in Bayern gegründete Verein «Origami Deutschland» verfolgt eine Bildungstradition, die bis in die Zeit des Schuldpädagogen Friedrich Fröbel (1782 – 1852) reicht. Dieser führte Origami als Teil eines ganzheitlichen Lernens ein und wurde u. a. zur -Inspirationsquelle für die Bauhausbewegung. Zwischen ephemerer Installation, Informations- und Ausbildungsstätte greift Kammas Projekt das Thema «Dilettantismus versus Professionalität» auf. Die Tätigkeit des Faltens sei gleichermaßen ein räumlicher wie skulpturaler Akt, so wird sich die Installation aus dem Umgang der Besucher mit dem angebotenen Material heraus entwickeln und kontinuierlich ihre Form verändern

Eleni Kamma, lauréate du Preis für Junge Kunst Euregio, NAK Aachen

Eleni Kamma est lauréate du Prix de l’Art Jeune, récemment fondé par le NAK, Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, prix récompensant un artiste résidant dans l’Euregio Rhin Meuse. Le prix consiste en une bourse et une exposition au NAK soutenue par une publication. Cette exposition aura lieu du 28 octobre au 25 novembre. Eleni Kamma réévaluera à cette occasion le travail réalisé lors de sa résidence à la Villa  Romana à Florence.

Le Communiqué

The NAK. Neuer Aachener Kunstverein is pleased to announce that Maastrict-based artist Eleni Kamma is the first winner of the PREIS FÜR JUNGE KUNST PRIIJS VOOR JONGE KUNST PRIX DE L’ART JEUNE. In addition to a cash prize of 3.000,- Euro, the artist will present her work in a solo exhibition at the NAK. Neuer Aachener Kunstverein in October 2012. The exhibition will be accompanied by a publication.

The PREIS FÜR JUNGE KUNST was awarded for the very first time in 2012 by the NAK. Neuer Aachener Kunstverein and STAWAG, Stadtwerke Aachen AG and is made possible through the generous support of STAWAG. The prize is given to artists under forty years old and who were born, educated, or live and work in the Meuse-Rhine Euroregion. STAWAG Executive Board Director Dr. Christian Becker explains the energy concern’s decision to sponsor the prize as follows: “Promoting young talent is a central focus of STAWAG’s community involvement. I am delighted that we can offer young and upcoming artists a chance to develop their work through the NAK art prize and contribute in this way to ensuring that Aachen remains a source of inspiration for innovative ideas.”

The jury consisting of Dr. Martin Schmidl, artist, Berlin and Aachen, Lisette Smits, curator, MARRES Center for Contemporary Culture, Maastricht, Dirk Snauwaert, director WIELS Contemporary Art Center, Brussels, Astrid Wege, curator and publicist, Cologne, and Dorothea Jendricke, director, NAK. Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, Aachen, selected Kamma from more than one hundred applications received from the three countries of the Euregio Meuse-Rhine, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany, for the following reason:

“Athens-born of Cypriot origin Eleni Kamma (*1973) focuses on the inherent gaps and contradictions within existing cultural narratives and structures. In her books, drawings, videos and installations she investigates possibilities for a future architecture that rejects binary oppositional systems of thought and accepts rather than tolerates “other” positions. Her interest lies in narrative representations of transformation.

Issues of memory, authenticity and identity take centre stage in Kamma’s artistic practice. It often takes the form of real objects or stories that are constituted as stereotypes through omission of their actual history. By revisiting systems of classification and strategies of description and taxonomy, Kamma examines the relation of the cliché, the banal and the stereotype, to the formation of history and the production of meaning.

Kamma’s work captivated the jury not only through the broad range of the media used and the wealth and diversity of its references, but also through its subtle reflection on space and the “appearance” of an object that suggests an in-between space.

With Kamma, the prize is awarded to an artist who maintains close ties to all three countries of the Euregio Meuse-Rhine. Currently living in Maastricht, she not only plays an active and integral part in the regional art scene but her international connections allow her to maintain a high profile within the international art field, providing visibility and evidence of the vitality of the regional art scene of the Euregio Meuse-Rhine.”

Eleni Kamma (*1973) was a Fellow Researcher at the Jan Van Eyck Academie in Maastricht in 2008-09. Moreover she is represented by Galerie Nadja Vilenne in Liège. In 2010, Kamma was an artist in resident at the WIELS Contemporary Art Centre in Brussels, and, in early 2011, she participated in the IASPIS Residency Program in Stockholm. In the same year, Eleni Kamma was also a guest artist at Villa Romana in Florence. Her works have been presented previously in Aachen in conjunction with the exhibition of the Liège-based SPACE Collection at the Atelierhaus Aachen e.V.

L’Agenda d’automne d’Eleni Kamma :

NAK Neuer Aachener Kunstverein (solo)
Preis für Junge Kunst Prijs voor Jonge Kunst Prix de l’Art Jeune
27 October – 25 November 2012
NAK Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, Aachen, Germany
www.neueraachenerkunstverein.de

L’ Observatoire – Maison Grégoire (solo)
04 October– 03 November 2012
Curated by Emmanuel Lambion
Maison Grégoire, Brussels
www.maisongregoire.be

On Dilettantism (Group exhibition)
15 September – 18 November 2012
Curator: Frank Motz
HALLE 14, Leipzig
www.halle14.org

Eleni Kamma, P like Politics, P like Parrots, Athènes

Eleni Kamma’s solo exhibition, P like Politics, P like Parrots, is the first part of a trilogy investigating possible and manifested contemporary European notions of common place created at the crossroads of music and architectural practices. Kamma examines the notion of spectacle in spaces of production such as the Lijnbaankwartier, the back stages of Architecture Museum in Stockholm, or public spaces like the piazalle Michelangelo in Florence. Through folding and  unfolding gestures in emblematic places and spaces, a series of paradoxical hypotheses and strange identification experiments develop in her latest videos, drawings, and objects. Each result of these experiments verifies a hypothesis, which enables the creation of relations that reveal hidden common ground between different models and systems in Kamma’s work.

The exhibition develops, extends, engages and connects the two videos the artist created in Sweden in 2011, with the architectural space of Museum Alex Mylona. Inspired by the social phenomenon of choirs in Scandinavian countries, the videos P like Politics, P like Parrots and Malin and Τor: two architects in conversation mark the starting points of a single installation, where the whole and its parts coexist in order to create an interlude. Kamma undermines identification mechanisms and concept- generating procedures, gradually revealing the manipulation and speculation of experience, opinion, aesthetics, knowledge and history.

In Greece, museums are usually defined as places of preservation and exhibition of Greek antiquities and Greek tradition. Kamma’s work strongly comments on the role of the museum as a dynamic social structure with an active social role, turning the museum into a place of social coexistence, where the creation of meaning and history is not due to a single man or authority. At a turning moment of big economic and social uncertainty in Greece, Kamma’s solo exhibition at Museum Alex Mylona-Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens and later at Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art, Thessaloniki, is an open invitation to the citizens of both cities. Self-mirroring, self-reflective processes  introduce the public to different social forms and practices, proving that ideas and interpretations emerge from the actions and choices taken by an open and wide society.

 

 

 

Eleni Kamma, P like Politics, P like Parrots, Macedonian Museum of contemporary Art, Athens

Museum Alex Mylona – Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art presents Eleni Kamma’s exhibition P like Politics, P like Parrots”, curated by Denys Zacharopoulos and Alexios Papazacharias and produced by Eleni Kamma in collaboration with the Museum Alex Mylona – MMCA.  The installation presented has been specifically developed for the Museum Alex Mylona – MMCA in collaboration with Belgian architect Breg Horemans and is accompanied by a special edition-200 copies only-catalogue designed by Salome Schmuki. The exhibition will remain open until the 23rd September 2012.

 “What is unlikely to happen never goes alone. With this happy closing phrase, a real golden key for a sonnet, breakfast came to an end.”
Jose Saramago, Seeing

Eleni Kamma’s solo exhibition, P like Politics, P like Parrots, is the first part of a trilogy investigating possible and manifested contemporary European notions of common place created at the crossroads of music and architectural practices. Kamma examines the notion of spectacle in spaces of production such as the Lijnbaankwartier, the back stages of Architecture Museum in Stockholm, or public spaces like the piazalle Michelangelo in Florence. Through folding and  unfolding gestures in emblematic places and spaces, a series of paradoxical hypotheses and strange identification experiments develop in her latest videos, drawings, and objects. Each result of these experiments verifies a hypothesis, which enables the creation of relations that reveal hidden common ground between different models and systems in Kamma’s work.

The exhibition develops, extends, engages and connects the two videos the artist created in Sweden in 2011, with the architectural space of Museum Alex Mylona. Inspired by the social phenomenon of choirs in Scandinavian countries, the videos P like Politics, P like Parrots and Malin and Τor: two architects in conversation mark the starting points of a single installation, where the whole and its parts coexist in order to create an interlude. Kamma undermines identification mechanisms and concept- generating procedures, gradually revealing the manipulation and speculation of experience, opinion, aesthetics, knowledge and history.

In Greece, museums are usually defined as places of preservation and exhibition of Greek antiquities and Greek tradition. Kamma’s work strongly comments on the role of the museum as a dynamic social structure with an active social role, turning the museum into a place of social coexistence, where the creation of meaning and history is not due to a single man or authority. At a turning moment of big economic and social uncertainty in Greece, Kamma’s solo exhibition at Museum Alex Mylona-Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens and later at Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art, Thessaloniki, is an open invitation to the citizens of both cities. Self-mirroring, self-reflective processes  introduce the public to different social forms and practices, proving that ideas and interpretations emerge from the actions and choices taken by an open and wide society.

Eleni Kamma was born in 1973 in Athens. She studied painting at Athens School of Fine Art (1995-2000) and at Chelsea College of Art & Design, London (MA Fine Art 2001-2002). Between 2008 and 2010 she was a Post-Graduate Fine Art Researcher at the Jan van Eyck Akademie in Maastricht, on a scholarship from the Dutch state.  She lives and works in Maastricht and Brussels, where she participated in the 2010 WIELS Artist-In-Residency Program.

In 2007, Eleni Kamma was a nominee for the 5th Deste Award and was awarded the Premio Stima Lissone Award. Solo exhibitions include:From Bank to Bank on a gradual slope ,Villa Romana,Florence (2012), Enlever et Entretenir IΙ, WIELS, Centre d’Art Contemporain, Brussels (2011), Enlever et Entretenir I, HEDAH,Maastricht (2010), Forgotten Ties, Nadja Villene, Lieges, (2009), Once past the years of green emotion, Lorainι Alimantiri/gazonrouge, Athens (2007). Her work has been included in numerous group shows, such as: On Dilettantism, ACC Weimar (2012), Found in Translation,Chapter L, Casino Luxembourg, (2011), Botanies of Desire, SALT Beyoglu, Istanbul (2011), Animacall-The Animation project, State Museum of Contemporary Art, Thessaloniki, (2011), Weaving In and Out, No Longer Empty/Tapestry, New York (2010), Visual Dialoges, Onassis Cultural Centre (2010), Expanded Ecologies, National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens (2009), Chanting Baldessari, Museum Bonnefanten, Maastricht, Holland (2008), 1stInternational Moscow Young Biennial, Moscow, Russia (2008), L’Art en Europe, Domain Pommery, Rheims, France (2008), In Present Tense. Young Greek Artists. National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens (2007), Lissone 2007 Award, Lissone, Museum of Contemporary Art, Milan (2007), 10th International Istanbul Biennial, Istanbul (2007), Other Spaces, 1st Thessaloniki Contemporary Art Biennial: “Heterotopias”, Thessaloniki (2007), 5th DESTE Prize, DESTE Foundation, Athens (2007).

In 2011 Kamma was a resident artist at the IASPIS Residency Program of Stockholm, at Villa Romana, Florence and at Duende, Rotterdam.

Eleni Kamma, From Bank to Bank on a Gradual Slope, Firenze, les images

Exposition de clôture de la résidence d’Eleni Kamma à la Villa Romana à Florence : From Bank to Bank on a Gradual Slope.

Eleni Kamma’s practice is informed by the inherent gaps and contradictions within existing cultural narratives and structures. By revisiting systems of classification and strategies of description and taxonomy, she examines the relation of the cliché, the banal and the stereotype, to the formation of history and the production of meaning. Her recent body of work examines how can words and images co-exist and create meaning by disrupting it; make sense by seemingly letting meaning collapse.

The starting point for this exhibition, whose title is taken from the sonnet of Averardo Genovesi from 1838, is the film “Georgofili”*, a 27 minutes HD film produced in 2012, for the purposes of which Kamma conducted research during her residency at the Villa Romana, as an international visiting artist in 2010 and 2011. Throughout “Georgofili”, an assemblage of different in time voices of Italy takes place. The old genre of Tuscan “Contrasto” verbal duels, in which the performers-poets Emilio Meliano and Realdo Tonti use their arguing skills to debate the politics and morality of contemporary Italy, meets historical educational dialogues from the age of enlightened despotism, performed and commented by the young Italian actors Lavinia Parisi and Marco Rustioni.

The exhibition “From Bank to Bank on a Gradual Slope” stages the premiere of the film among a selection of found objects placed on shelving structures developed specifically for the rooms of the Villa Romana in collaboration with the Belgian architect Breg Horemans. Windows and doors of the main exhibition rooms are projected along their own axis, until the point where they interfere. These crossing points shape the outline of the flexible and adjustable shelving structures.

The exhibition is accompanied by a printed edition of the Georgofili script, designed by Salome Schmuki. “From Bank to Bank on a Gradual Slope” openly invites the viewer to a spatial exploration between lived experience and a simultaneous reflection of contemporary Florence.

Eleni Kamma was born in 1973 in Athens and lives and works in Brussels and Maastricht. She was nominated for the 5th DESTE Prize and received the Lissone Award in 2007. Solo exhibitions include Enlever et Entretenir II, Wiels Project Room, Brussels (2011), Enlever et Entretenir I, HEDAH, Maastricht (2010), Forgotten Ties, Nadja Villene, Lieges, (2009). She has participated in numerous group exhibitions such as Found in Translation, Chapter L, Casino Luxembourg (2011), Expanded Ecologies. Perspectives in a time of emergency, National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens (2009), Freeze! Who is there? 1st International Moscow Young Biennial, Moscow (2008); Chanting Baldessari, Bonnefanten Museum, Maastricht (2008); 10th International Istanbul Biennial, Istanbul (2007); Other Spaces, 1st Thessaloniki Contemporary Art Biennial: Heterotopias, Thessaloniki (2007); Take My Breath Away, Galerie La Centrale-Powerhouse, Montréal (2006).

* The Accademy of the Georgofili was founded in Florence in 1757 in order to promote science in favour of agriculture.

Georgofili, 2012
25 minutes, HD video, color, stereo sound, 16:9, Italian spoken, English Subtitles, NL
Tuscan Contrasto in Ottava Rima Verbal Duel
performed by Emilio Meliano and Realdo Tonti
19th century Tuscan Agricultural Dialogues
read,performed and commented by
Lavinia Parisi and Marco Rustioni

V.R.62.LA.21, mixed media, 2012

V.R.41.65.SE, mixed media, 2012

V.R.12.40.S5, mixed media, 2012

V.R.13.I3, mided media, 2012

photos : Ela Bialkowska

Voir sur Vimeo l’interview d’Angelika Stepken, directrice de la Villa Romana