<![CDATA[The Guide Istanbul | Arts & Entertainment Articles RSS Feed]]> http://www.theguideistanbul.com/rss/ Tue, 22 May 2012 03:00:23 +0300 Tue, 22 May 2012 03:00:23 +0300 <![CDATA[Collection of the Arts of the Book and Calligraphy]]> Celebrating the tenth year of its existence, the permanent exhibition in the famous Atlı Köşk (Horse Mansion) of the Sakıp Sabancı Museum is entitled Kitap Sanatları ve Hat Koleksiyonu (Collection of the Arts of the Book and Calligraphy.) Consisting of Korans, prayer books, calligraphic compositions, albums and panels composed by renowned calligraphers, the collection also displays official documents with the imperial cipher of the Ottoman sultans, as well as the tools used by calligraphers, that all span from the end of the 14th century to the 20th century.

All displays include screens that show videos of the process involved in the intricate art of calligraphy production according to the traditional techniques. Apart from this a new technological experiment is being tested by museum-goers, in the form of “Augmented Reality” where museum-provided iPads are held up to markers in the exhibition that are recognized by the application and consequently open a system that give further detailed information about items on display. Users can, for example, turn the pages of the korans on display to see the entirety of the item. Downstairs, the original family rooms are also on display, and the Augmented Reality system allows for viewers to see old photos of Sakıp Sabancı and his family in the exact rooms that they are standing in for a kind of time-travel-like feel.

Sakıp Sabancı (d. 2004) began the collection in the 1970s, moving on to exhibit the items in major museums abroad in 1989 and on, where they were greeted with such wide enthusiasm that the idea of creating a museum in Istanbul sprouted. After expanding the collection, the family mansion was generously handed over to the Sabancı University in 1998 and was converted into a museum. In 2002 a modern gallery was added to the complex and opened to the public among a beautiful garden of exuberant green trees and a view of the Bosporus. Sakıp Sabancı Caddesi No. 42; P: (0212) 277 22 00

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<![CDATA[Festival Season is Here]]> Summer is the time for music festivals in Istanbul, and this year a full line-up of varying artists and genres will be arriving to fill the city with sound. Here is our list of upcoming music festivals:

Chill Out Festival

The twelve-hour Chill Out Festival will feature world-famous Senegalese songwriter and guitar player Baaba Maal, Alice Russell with the Colombian band Combo Barbaro, Quantic, Jazzanova, The Cuban Brothers, Italian lounge music pros the Montefiori Cocktail feat Amber Topaz, folk revivalist hippie trio Stealing Sheep, and local duo Mao Mak.

Babylon Soundgarden Festival

Among the natural elements of the Parkorman venue, this year’s Babylon Soundgarden Festival will feature four bands: The Parov Stelar Band, Oi Va Voi, Caravan Palace, and Büyük Ev Ablukada.

Burn Electronica Festival

This year’s Burn Electronica Festival will bring top level world class acts such as Markus Schulz, Crookers, Hercules and Love Affair, Who Made Who, W&W and Kaiserdisco who will be presenting their acts to more than 85,000 young fans ready to dance to the beats of their turntables and mixers

Pozitif Günler

Two Door Cinema Club and Metronomy will close the Pozitif Günler festival at the Küçükçiftlik Park, bringing some of the energizing indie rock sounds that have captivated audiences in some of last year’s biggest festivals, such as Coachella and Glastonbury.

Mono Festival

The Mono Festival, hosted by Pozitif Live, will have four different stages featuring Gogol Bordello,Metric, Oh Land, The Ringo Jets, and The Horrors on the first stage. Com Truise, Bok Bok, and Grup Ses Beats on the second, while the third stage will play a mix of reggae, lounge, and chillwave mix, and the last stage, will feature the famous Dinamo FM DJs.

Tuborg Goldfest

The Tuborg Goldfest will host a riveting mixture of bands that will inhabit the stage this year. Most notably, Guns N’Roses will perform the songs that made them one of the most important bands of the 1990s rock scene. The riotous female voice of Evanescence will also add another layer to the festival, which will go on for three days and feature a large selection of other bands.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/festival-season-is-here-633.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/festival-season-is-here-633.html Fri, 18 May 2012 11:46:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Ekümenopolis: A Documentary Portraying a Bleak Future for Istanbul]]> Those who have lived in Istanbul long enough, those who have been charmed by a Bosphorus ride or the beauty of the Golden Horn, know that despite the spectacular economic growth the city has experienced in the last thirty years, there is something that is not quite right. Sometimes this feeling comes in the form of a four-hour traffic jam, sometimes it’s a burning sensation in our lungs or eyes from breathing the smog cloud that sets over the city in windless days. If you’re nodding, then you’ll find young Turkish/German filmmaker İmre Azem’s documentary Ekümenopolis, which is now playing at Majestik Theater on Istiklal Street, compelling.

This multiple award-winning documentary traces Istanbul’s transformation in the last thirty years, beginning by explaining how various studies done in the 1980s by the World Bank and other international entities showed that government officials must limit Istanbul’s population to no more than 5 million and create various industrial centers in Turkey for migrants. The population of Istanbul at the time was of 3.5 million people. A general lack of urban and regional planning and a concerted effort of making Istanbul a world-class financial megacity led to the situation where millions of migrants are now settled in poorly constructed slums (gecekondu) around the city, dramatically increasing Istanbul’s population to a staggering 15 million. This put an unbearable pressure to the city’s resources, and from Azem’s perspective, this ticking time bomb of mounting social and economic pressures will lead to a situation of “chaos” in the near future.

From the construction of the undersea rail tunnel Marmaray and third bridge projects to the constantly decreasing green spaces, Ekümenopolis puts the finger on various ecological and social issues. The main argument is that the unbounded growth of the city is dangerous on many levels, and this is communicated by using two different levels of discourse. First, the filmmaker interviews city architects, urban planners, environmental engineers, economists, and sociologists to get an intellectual perspective on the city’s issues. They all explain, with examples and statistics, the collision course the city is headed to. Then, the film takes the audience to various city slums to talk with the many urban dwellers that are directly affected by many of the government’s poorly planned urban policies. The story of a group of 15 families living by the Atatürk Olympic Stadium in the neighborhood of Altınşehir who lost their homes to the government’s zoning policies is particularly interesting as it portrays the microcosm of the struggles and tribulations of migrants in a hostile environment.

With an imposing photography and a beautiful soundtrack that tries to be as encompassing as the interviews in capturing the sights and sounds of the city, Ekümenopolis does a pretty good job of raising awareness on Istanbul’s social and ecological future. The film invites the audience to rethink Istanbul in terms of renewable and sustainable development by stepping outside the profit-driven mindset that has governed city planning for the past three decades. For those who care about Istanbul and its future, this film is a definite must-see.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/ekumenopolis-a-documentary-portraying-a-bleak-future-for-istanbul-628.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/ekumenopolis-a-documentary-portraying-a-bleak-future-for-istanbul-628.html Thu, 17 May 2012 10:22:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Orhan Pamuk's Museum of Innocence]]> Kemal’s obsession with Fusun is deflected into the shapes and surfaces of the items he collects to somehow enliven her memory with inanimate objects. This is the story that drives the plot of Orhan Pamuk’s novel “Museum of Innocence,” and equally, the creation of the real museum now open to the public.

Fiction spilling into the real world is the theme, and apart from the objects in the museum, including household items and personal effects among others, it is also Kemal’s obsession that has become palpable in the man who created him. Pamuk’s own urge to collect objects related to the life of his novel is the driving force for the resulting space dedicated to a time that has long since passed and characters only readers know intimately.

The museum is composed of 83 glass displays of varying sizes that correlate with a chapter in the book, including a whole case displaying Fusun’s more than 4000 lipstick stained cigarette butts arranged in chronological order. The museum can be viewed Tuesday through Sunday between 10am and 6pm and is located in the Çukurcuma district. Çukurcuma Caddesi No: 24, Çukurcuma; P: 0212 252 9738

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/orhan-pamuks-museum-of-innocence-623.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/orhan-pamuks-museum-of-innocence-623.html Tue, 15 May 2012 10:16:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Classical Music Concert at a Construction Site in Levent]]> Anyone who’s interested in culturally-fulfilling activities would have noticed that Istanbul’s art and entertainment scene is growing by the day. We’re all aware of the new galleries that are popping up around the city, and the music scene is not far behind the art scene in terms of growth and change. Istanbul’s music scene is growing to such a point that street musicians, like Light in Babylon, are gaining considerable fan bases, and impromptu concerts are taking place in Istanbul.

A recent example of this was the classical music concert that was held on Monday, May 7th at the construction site of Nef Offices 05 in Levent. The soon-to-be plaza’s construction site was home to an orchestra that played pieces by Bach and Mozart to the public’s amazement. The event, which was free and open to the public, was received very well by the crowd of professionals working in nearby offices. In addition to those who came to the construction site to watch the concert up close, there were many who were watching from within the offices of nearby buildings.

During Monday’s concert, it was not just the music but the idea behind the event that made the extraordinary lunch break so special. The concert was organized in order to try and make up for all the unpleasant construction noise that’s been polluting the area for the past few months. We sure hope to see more examples like this in Istanbul.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/classical-music-concert-at-a-construction-site-in-levent-620.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/classical-music-concert-at-a-construction-site-in-levent-620.html Fri, 11 May 2012 15:43:00 +0300
<![CDATA[From Africa to Istanbul: The Drums and Dance of Dans Afrika]]> A Senegalese drummer steps forward and dives into a solo on top of the main rhythm held steady by the beat of the dundun. His long dreadlocks start to fall forward over his face. He brushes them back while bracing the djembe drum between his legs as sweat drips from his forehead to his forearm muscles that bulge under the strain of a purely musical trance. Two females break into a dance battle; one woman pumping her legs, jumping twice then dropping low and whipping her braided and beaded hair in circles only to then stare in rivalry at the other.

This is Dans Afrika, Istanbul’s first and only African drumming and dance group, mostly composed of members from Senegal and Guinea and entirely united by a mutual passion for the music. Surprisingly, the sole Turk of the group and the manager, Inci Turan brought the concept to Turkey after spending several years in New York City where she regularly attended African dance fitness classes. Upon moving back to Istanbul in 2005, she missed the classes so much she began teaching them herself.

The group's music director and Inci's partner, Guershon (Sean) Jocelyn, a New Yorker of Haitian and African descent, was introduced to the music through Inci. He quickly fell in love with the drums and the connection it provided to his roots. Jocelyn’s rhythmic passion led him back to Senegal in 2011 where, under the guidance of professional musicians such as master Balaphonist Kandioura Diabate, he acquired a deeper understanding of the music and a rejuvenated drive to make Dans Afrika a success.

Soon after returning to Istanbul, Sean extended a helping hand to the same drummers he had met back in Senegal, Kandioura, Salif Peker, and Ibrahim Iradiaw. They had come to Istanbul as part of a Senegalese day performance in Sultanahmet. Sean and Inci aided them in finding a home and gave them the opportunity to continue playing music with Dans Afrika. Later on, two professionally trained Senegalese dancers, Mimi and Zita, who came to Turkey to earn a better living, joined the group, adding mesmerizing visuals to the deep rhythm of the drums.

Another drummer, Alasanne Diop, a Rastafarian of Senegalese descent, lived in Paris, North Korea and Hong Kong prior to Istanbul, where he performed and taught African drumming. Hoping to one day support himself entirely from drumming, he simply said “for me, I just want all the Turks and people living in Istanbul to hear about us, come see what we are doing and appreciate what we are bringing here culturally.” The master balaphone player, Kandioura Diabate comes from a GRIOT family, who tell their history to the next generations through music and dance, and is the cousin of famous Kakosali Diabate. Kakosali, who trained Kandioura, is the famous balaphone player of the first African Dance company Les Ballet Africaines (Guinea National Dance Company) that made African dance and music popular around the world.

Today, given this pool of talent, Dans Afrika has reached a new level. They practice regularly, teach two classes per week, and are building a pipeline of upcoming performances. The group is doing something truly remarkable – importing African culture to Turkey in a raw, authentic and fun way. They do it out of love, not for money or out of necessity, making it something worth supporting.

Their next performance is on Tuesday, May 22 at Cuba Bar in Asmali Mescit. They also teach dance and drumming on Sundays in Taksim. You can find out more about classes and upcoming shows at www.afrikadansi.com or send an email to afrikadansi@gmail.com.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/from-africa-to-istanbul-the-drums-and-dance-of-dans-afrika-598.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/from-africa-to-istanbul-the-drums-and-dance-of-dans-afrika-598.html Mon, 07 May 2012 15:37:00 +0300
<![CDATA[The IKSV Jazz Festival]]> Sometimes a whirlwind of sound, other times a subtle and mutual progression of voice and instrument, jazz music is a genre that is not easily classifiable. One will either find love or hate in reaction to Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew or that moan exclaimed by Keith Jarrett at the height of every passionate piano-key-peak.

The IKSV Jazz Festival, sponsored by Garanti Bank, has chosen jazz for exactly these reasons, its innovative nature and multifaceted explorations in terms of both voice and instrument. The festival, which has taken place every year since 1994, not only focuses on jazz but also genres such as rock, folk, and popular music in its selection of artists. Since its inception, the festival has brought the likes of Herbie Hancock, Tony Bennett, Eric Clapton, Lou Reed, Elvis Costello, and Diana Krall to Istanbul among many others.

This year the festival has another fantastic selection of musical guests from varying genres and countries, all arriving to bring their unique auditory experiences to the Istanbul audience. Notable performances include:

Marcus Miller (July 5): Miller gained notoriety on a global scale as a bassist for important names such as Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, and Luther Vandross. The musician, who is also a talented jazz composer and producer, is also a multi-instrumentalist, classically trained in clarinet while also playing keyboard, saxophone, and guitar.

Till Brönner (July 6): Brönner has become one of the most important names among jazz trumpet players gaining notoriety with two Grammy nominations and a best selling album in his native Germany. Brönner, who has received the prestigious German Echo music award on five different occasions, has shared the stage with such big names as Dave Brubeck, James Moody, Natalie Cole and Tony Bennett.

Antony Hegarty (July 9): Hegarty’s voice is defined by a profound yet gentle melancholy that gives his songs a penetrating beauty. The English singer, composer, and visual artist who has collaborated with such important names as Lou Reed and Björk, will give a very special Istanbul concert with musical accompaniment by the 39-member Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra.

Caro Emerald (July 10): Samba, jazz, bossa nova, and catchy lyrics blend perfectly in Dutch jazz singer Caro Emerald’s music. The young sensation broke chart records with her debut album Deleted Scenes from the Cutting Room Floor (2010), which spent 30 weeks at number one on the Dutch album chart. You probably know her from “A Night like This” or “Back it Up.”

Erykah Badu (July 13): When Baduizm came out in 1997, neo-soul was born along with its queen Erykah Badu whose signature headwraps came across like a crown of color along with the beauty of her voice. Five albums and four Grammies later, Badu is still a name known all over the world and an essential part of the IKSV Jazz Festival.

Esperanza Spalding (July 16): Spalding won the Grammy for Best New Artist in 2011 which made her the first jazz artist to ever receive the title. The musician, who alternates between upright bass and bass guitar during her performances while also singing, has released four albums since 2006.

Keith Jarrett (July 18): One of the most important names among jazz pianists, Jarrett’s talent has given him roles both as a composer and pianist of jazz and classical music. Having played with such important names as Miles Davis, Art Blakey, and Charles Lloyd, the pianist will be joined by the rest of the famous trio members that have been defining the jazz music genre since 1983.

Morrissey (July 19): The Smiths, with lead singer Morrisey, were termed by critics as one of the most important alternative rock bands to emerge out of the British independent music scene in the 1980s. Now Morrisey, as part of the Istanbul Jazz Festival, will return to bring his dynamic voice and stage performance to an 80s nostalgic Istanbul.

The full listing of events can be found at the official webpage.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/the-iksv-jazz-festival-607.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/the-iksv-jazz-festival-607.html Thu, 03 May 2012 15:53:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Goya Exhibition at Pera Museum]]> Attending a retrospective of an artist’s work allows you to reconsider your opinion of a talent you may not have been able to appreciate fully. While the precise causes for such impairment usually remain mysterious, it is often a question of premature and/or insufficient exposure to the artist’s oeuvre.Pera Museum’s new exhibition,Goya: Witness of His Time, which is comprised of four complete series of Goya’s etchings (the Caprichos, the Disasters of War, the Tauromaquia, and the Follies or Proverbs) as well asa small selection of paintings, induces the viewer to see Francisco de Goya in a new light.

The earliest of the four series, 1799’s Caprichos (Caprices), is a mordant satire on societal hypocrisy and injustice, in which no one escapes the artist’s censure, least of all the corrupt and venal clergy of Goya’s day, or the monks represented as vampire-ish creatures who must go into hiding at sunrise. The nocturnal and the supernatural figure in the Caprichos, and the bats and owls of its best-known print, El sueño de la razón produce monstruos (The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters), crop up elsewhere in the series. Animals are a frequent vehicle for satire in the Caprichos, such as the parrot of ¡Que Pico de Oro! (What a Golden Beak!), lecturing upon a judge’s bench to a crowd of imbeciles, or the donkeys of Tú que no puedes (You Who Cannot), sitting on the backs of the human pack animals who struggle to hold them up. The Caprichos’ picture of male-female relations, while unremittingly bleak, is at least even-handedly so; in this mercenary world, men and women are equally likely to “fleece” and “pluck” each other – whether through prostitution, or through its scarcely more respectable equivalent, marriage.

Goya’s famous series The Disasters of War, created between 1810 and 1820, is far more earnest and direct in its approach. Shunning animal fables and half-human monsters for the real-life horrors of Napoleon’s invasion of Spain, these images and captions require little interpretation for the most part. A man, tied to a post before an unseen firing squad, waits to be executed – for the crime of possessing a penknife. French soldiers gun down unarmed Spaniards, both men and women. An execution by hanging takes a grisly turn when the tree is not high enough. Though Goya’s sympathies clearly lie with the Spanish victims of the war, his desire to expose human cruelty is unpartisan: the Spaniard in Lo Mismo (The Same), raising his axe above a French soldier pleading for mercy, is definitely a less than heroic figure.

While you might expect the inhumane sport of bullfighting to receive similar treatment at Goya’s hands, this is not the case. The Tauromaquia (1815-16), offering nothing less than a history of bullfighting from pre-Moorish and Moorish times down to Goya’s day, is openly admiring of the bullfighters who risk life and limb before these huge and terrifying beasts. The etchings portray the various innovations in bullfighting over the centuries, as well as bullfighting celebrities like the legendary Martincho, who in one print sits calmly on a chair before a charging bull, and in another awaits its approach standing on top of a dinner table placed in the arena.

The final series, the Follies or Proverbs (1815-24), partly returns to the moral world of the Caprichos, but here the tone is less didactic and less satirical than in earlier series, and the “message” of each print is not always as clear. The ring of women in Disparate femenino (Feminine Folly), carrying a sheet into which male bodies fall – as into a pit – recalls the mistrust of women found in Goya’s earlier etchings, and Disparate matrimonial (Matrimonial Folly) – in which husband and wife are fused together like Siamese twins – presents a similarly bestial view of humanity. Nonetheless, the symbols and subject-matter of other etchings – featuring circus animals, men strapped to Da Vinci-esque flying machines, or an old man wandering among phantoms and shadows – are as open to interpretation as those of a dream.

While Goya’s etchings are the main focus of the show, the dozen or so oil paintings on display are also worth viewing, with portraits of important personages like Goya’s best friend Martin Zapater, and surprisingly down-to-earth representations of King Carlos IV and Queen Maria Luisa. One unexpected delight in this show was a series of so-called tapestry cartoons – oil paintings Goya created while working at the Royal Tapestry Factory of Santa Barbara – portraying children climbing trees, scuffling in the street, or playing leapfrog or seesaw. In one painting a bunch of children play at soldiers; in another, a child carries on his back a wicker basket to which horns have been attached: it is a pretend bullfight. Poignantly anticipating the violence and brutality of the works you will see soon afterwards, these touching portraits of childhood innocence show Goya at his least misanthropic, and serve as a brief respite from the adult world of horrors to which he was such an eloquent witness.

Goya: Witness of his Time, curated by Maria Oropesa, runs at the Pera Museum through July 29th.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/goya-exhibition-at-pera-museum-601.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/goya-exhibition-at-pera-museum-601.html Fri, 27 Apr 2012 15:49:00 +0300
<![CDATA[IKSV Theater Festival 2012]]> The people of a small town turn into rhinoceroses one by one. A monkey pretends to be human to save its life. The love between a man and woman lasts for fifty years only through words expressed in letters addressed to one another. A rotating house with four rooms shelter its silent dancers telling a story of body language and music.

These are only small segments from the many plots that will come alive on stages big and small all over Istanbul for this year’s Theatre Festival hosted by the Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts (IKSV). The festival, marking the foundation’s 40th year of existence, will run between May 5th until June 5th featuring a rich mural of productions.

While leaning heavily on Turkish theatre, the festival will also include plays from a more international scope, including works from Germany, France, England, and Switzerland.

Plays from the international segment include:

Thomas Ostermeier, of the Schaubühne Berlin, interprets Shakespeare’s famous Hamlet with his avant garde style taking the form of a camera that allows viewers to keep track of all characters simultaneously. The play, which usually includes twenty characters, will only feature six actors, including the famous Lars Eidinger who will be playing Hamlet himself.

Famous French choreographers JoséMontalvo and Dominique Hervieu take Monteverdi’s Baroque Opera Orfeo combining music, dance, and painting with seven dancers and nine musicians from the world famous Cirque du Soleil. The main character of young Orfeo will be played by famous dancer Luca Patuelli who was born with a muscle disorder that affects his legs.

Franz Kafka’s short story Kafka’s Monkey (Kafka’nın Maymunu) about a monkey who aims to protect its life by trying to act human is successfully depicted by actor Kathryn Hunter, winner of the Laurence Olivier Award, who has worked with important directors such as Peter Brook. The play is directed by Walter Meierjohann.

Hans or Heiri (Hans yada Heiri) will be performed upon a 360 degree rotating stage, combining the circus, dance, and music. Swiss performers Martin Zimmermann and Dimitri de Perrot, and other stage members of equal agility, will perform silently in a rotating house composed of four different rooms.

The 1950s play by Eugène Ionesco entitled Rhinoceros (Gergedan) served as a criticism of the upsurge of Communism, Fascism, and Nazism after World War II. This time French director Emmanuel Demarcy-Mota will recreate the absurdity of a town where every person slowly turns into a rhinoceros.

Notable Turkish productions include:

Love Letters(Aşk Mektupları) a Pulitzer price nominated play by A.R. Gurney, revolves around two characters who live separated lives but read the notes, letters and cards they have written to one another for the past fifty years. The play is an unconventional love story, and will be performed by Turkish Theater legends Müşfik Kenter and Kadriye Kenter.

Anthony and Cleopatra(Antonius ve Kleopatra) the love story told by the words of Shakespeare is coming to Turkey for the first time with the very famous and talented actors Haluk Bilginer and Zerrin Tekindor as the main characters. Make sure to see the play, directed by Kemal Aydoğan, before it premiers in this year’s “Shakespeare’s Globe 2012 International Shakespeare Festival” in London.

I am Bertold Brecht(Ben Bertold Brecht) will be performed and directed by famous theater actor Genco Erkal where the poetry, stories, and songs of Bertold Brecht are visually explored, cabaret style. Along with actress Tülay Günal and Yiğit Özatalay on piano, the order of the world and the ravages of war will be questioned.

The festival will also highlight Chinese culture in Turkey with three special events:

The Shanghai Song and Dance Ensemble, one of the most prestigious of its kind, will be bringing the ethnic dance drama of China to Istanbul on the 5th and 6th of May.

The Beijing Opera Group, will blend singing, reading, acting, fighting, and dancing into one for its Istanbul audience on the 7th and 8th of May.

Beijing Dragon and Lion Street Theatre will bring the colors and characters of China to Istiklal street and Tünel for everyone to enjoy on the 8th of May.

There is of course much more. To view the entire festival program, head to the official website.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/iksv-theater-festival-2012-593.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/iksv-theater-festival-2012-593.html Tue, 24 Apr 2012 09:45:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Istanbul’s One and Only Expat Theater Group]]> There are two types of people in the world: those who wait for things to happen and those who make things happen. Heather Andersen, a Canadian English teacher, falls under the latter category. After various failed auditions and futile attempts to work as an actress in Istanbul, Heather got fed up with the lack of acting and performing opportunities for foreigners in the city. This was in late 2010. After a few phone calls, conversations over beer, and knocking on various doors, the decision was made: Heather and a group of her close friends would take matters into their own hands and start their own theater group. And that’s how The Square Peg Theatre Troupe was born.

The casting for their first show took place during the first weeks of 2011. “It was tough,” recounts Heather, “very few people showed up, so we had to hold three auditions in total to get the cast.” She used every resource available, from opening a Facebook page and constructing a webpage to bringing in friends of friends to get together a cast of “15 of the finest amateurs.” They finally had enough people to make their first production, Love and Other Nonsense in which five short plays, monologues, and original songs were presented at Hayal Kahvesi Bistro during the second week of April 2011. The tickets for the show were sold out, and the capacity of the rather small performance space was overflown with curious expats and locals who enjoyed the show, giving it positive reviews and demanding another one. Auditions for the second performance were held right away.

Many more people showed up to these auditions and a new crew was chosen for the second play. The initial rehearsals were often held at different bars in the Beyoğlu area. These meetings happen in a rather joyful environment where drinks and jokes flow all night, but it is Heather who keeps everyone in line. She is famous for being very strict with rehearsal schedules, and that’s simply because of her commitment to each show. During the past year,The Square Peg Theatre Troupe has gotten much more professional, and Heather acknowledges the learning curve based on her experiences of directing the crew. “Many mistakes were made during the first plays,” she remembers jokingly. “I had the crazy idea of buying everyone’s drinks during the first rehearsals. Most of the actors are heavy drinkers and it ended up putting a strain on my wallet.”

Their Latest Show

This week, The Square Peg Theatre Troupe will be presenting their fifth play,Typing In Stereo - Yabancılar Şubesiat Romeo and Juliet. Exploring the relations between Turks and foreigners living in Istanbul with comedic sketches and live music performances, this play will certainly make you laugh and reflect on cultural experiences of living in Istanbul. For more details and ticket information, click here.

Since their second show, the Troupe has been playing original sketches written and directed by some of the crew members. “We get together with Heather and a few others to have a couple of drinks and brainstorm ideas,” comments Jordan Duquette, who has been with the crew from the start. “We then vote with the rest of the Troupe and choose the best ideas to work on sketches. Also, we encourage all the other members of the crew to write their own material,” he says.

This collaborative effort changed the tone and rhythm of the performances, as many of the sketches are now based on the crew's experiences of living in Turkey with all its idiosyncrasies and peculiarities. Expats who go to the shows feel a strong personal connection with the stories, which closely relate to their daily lives. The expats’ shared adventure of life in Istanbul draws in bigger crowds of foreigners to each performance. That’s why, after their third show, the Troupe now presents their show at Romeo and Juliet, which has a much bigger space than Hayal Kahvesi Bistro.

Even though the Troupe is still a non-profit community group, their rehearsals and performances are getting much more professional. They are now able to incorporate audiovisual elements to their shows. For example, during their last show, they performed original songs with live musicians on stage. They have also integrated videos and short films into their shows, all created by the Troupe. More recently, they have introduced the concept of themed shows. For Halloween and Christmas, the Troupe performed small shows, complemented with parties where people dressed accordingly and from which the proceeds went to finance the group’s activities.

Get Involved

The Square Peg Theatre Troupe is open for everyone. Artistically and creatively inclined locals and foreigners who want to get culturally active and meet new people are always welcome to audition. The Troupe is always looking for new members so, if you’re interested in joining, get in touch with them to take part in their next show. For more information about their project and audition schedule, click here.

Perhaps most importantly, they no longer rehearse at Beyoğlu bars. They rented a rehearsal space, which used to be a sweatshop, in Tarlabaşı. The Space, as it has been named, is a place that Heather and the crew intend to turn into a cultural center that would be open for anyone who wants to hold writing workshops, small exhibitions, poetry readings, movie nights, open mic nights, or present small theatrical shows and other types of cultural activity. Right now, The Space is still in the making, and it heavily relies on donations from good souls that have seen the potential of the crew and their ideas.

Thousands of foreigners who live in Istanbul sometimes have a hard time finding activities suited for them, especially when it comes to performing arts. Theater is definitively one of those areas with a lack of options for people who don’t speak Turkish. For an ever-growing population of expats living in Istanbul, The Square Peg Theatre Troupe fills this gap. A profit-minded person might ask, “And what’s in it for them if they are not making any money?” But as one of the crew members said during the interview, “Instead of sitting around drinking beer and complaining about life, why not just do something productive to entertain ourselves, maybe entertain other people and make new friends on the way.”

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/istanbuls-one-and-only-expat-theater-group-584.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/istanbuls-one-and-only-expat-theater-group-584.html Tue, 17 Apr 2012 14:50:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Film Review: Ferzan Özpetek’s latest film Magnifica Presenza]]> The latest film by acclaimed Turkish-Italian director Ferzan Özpetek, Magnifica Presenza (Magnificent Presence) was released in Turkey on April 6th, and is now playing in theaters across the country. The Istanbul-born director, famous for films such as Hamam (Steam: The Turkish Bath) and La finestra di fronte (Facing Windows), brings this new comedy-drama with an excellent cast of Italian actors and the special participation of Turkish superstar comedian Cem Yılmaz. Perhaps not as groundbreaking as Hamam orMine vaganti(Loose Cannons), Magnifica Presenza certainly puts a smile on the viewer’s face and sends them home with a warm fuzzies.

The film is based on Petro (Elio Germano), a young aspiring actor who has just arrived in Rome in an effort to win the heart of the man he has had a crush on for a long time. His wacky cousin Maria (Paola Minaccioni) helps him find a beautiful old apartment where he settles to start his new life. His hopes are quickly crushed after a series of failed attempts, and he is soon left brokenhearted when the object of his affection rejects him. It is in his depression that he slowly uncovers the mystery behind his apartment. Voices in the night, odd shadows, and other strange phenomena haunt Petro, scaring him off and even making him consider his own sanity. After a few encounters, the ghosts reveal to Petro they are but a harmless group of actors who died in the same apartment Petro lives in now. They soon establish a friendship and the ghosts’ existence gives purpose and meaning to Petro’s disappointing life.

InMagnifica Presenza,the celebrated Turkish-Italian director pays tribute to master directors, such as Truffaut and Coppolla, in several scenes. For example, Petro remembers colonel Kurtz from Coppola’sApocalypse Nowwhen he goes to a sweatshop where transsexual seamstresses work.

Özpetek’s ability to craft delicate and intriguing stories out of seemingly ordinary characters is once again affirmed in this movie as we see poor Petro struggle with his problems in a rather particular situation. With humor and solid acting, the movie is able to make a surreal situation seem credible, a problem that many ghost stories have. The wonderful vaudeville costumes worn by the ghosts in the house plus the exquisite use of lighting add to the mystery surrounding the characters. Lastly, the beauty of Rome captured on film and the superb soundtrack provided by Turkey’s greatest pop diva Sezen Aksu keep the audience entertained throughout the entire film.

More about Ferzan Özpetek

Ferzan Özpetek was born in Istanbul in 1959. He moved to Italy, where he currently resides, as a student of Cinema History at the Sapienza University in Rome. In 1997 he released his debut film Hamam, which was screened in various film festivals around the world and gave the director a reputation for being daring by touching on social taboos like homosexuality in Turkey. The initial criticisms that he received in Turkey for Hamam was more than compensated when he won the Golden Orange Award for Best Film at the Antalya International Film Festival. In 2003, his fourth film La finestra di fronte was awarded various international prizes, such as the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival’s Crystal Globe Award, the Seattle International Film Festival’s Golden Space Needle, and the David di Donatello Award for Best Director. Magnifica Presenza is his ninth film as a director.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/film-review-ferzan-ozpeteks-latest-film-magnifica-presenza-576.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/film-review-ferzan-ozpeteks-latest-film-magnifica-presenza-576.html Tue, 10 Apr 2012 15:29:00 +0300
<![CDATA[City and the Everyday Exhibition at Pilot Gallery]]> Pilot Gallery’s latest exhibition, entitled City and the Everyday, which will be showcased between 3 April – 19 May, is a collection of multi-media artist Hamra Abbas’s works that have been created in different locations, including Greece, the United States, and Turkey. The exhibition includes works of photography, installation, sculpture, and video that deal with issues of identity and daily life in the city.

Who is Hamra Abbas?

Abbas is a Kuwait-born world-citizen, currently residing in Boston. You may know her fromLessons on Love(2004), the colorful Kama Sutra sculptures that was showcased at the 10th Istanbul Biennial orCityscapes 1(2007), the seemingly-ordinary series of Istanbul photographs with missing minarets that she exhibited at Outlet Gallery. The thought-provoking and often playful works of Abbas question a range of cultural and social issues, usually drawing from cultural iconography and imagery.

As you walk down the stairs of Pilot and walk into the exhibition area, you are greeted by the confrontational stained-glass work that reads, “The piece might be abstract but it’s made of rubber and looks like the male organ.” An interesting story lies behind this funny statement. A few years back, Abbas sent a piece to a gallery in Pakistan, but it got stuck in customs. When she inquired about her work, this statement was written in the letter that the customs officer sent her. Inspired by this event, Abbas created this piece, her first stained-glass piece since Woman in Black (2011), the stained-glass work that she made for the 2011 Abraaj Capital Art Prize. Abbas explains that this piece tackles issues of morality, differentiating between the good and the bad, especially because stained-glass is such a religious instrument. In fact, Abbas adds, “When I saw the stained-glass windows all around Sultanahmet, I decided that I wanted to work with it.”

Possibly the most captivating series in the exhibition is Idols, featuring photographs of plasticine sculptures made from photographs of working-class people on the streets of Boston, New York, and Istanbul over the past year. A total of 22 photographs are exhibited, 6 of them of Istanbul locals. Abbas created this series like this: she took photographs of ordinary people on the street (cashiers, pharmacists, policemen, random strangers) and then made 22 tiny sculptures out of the hundreds of photos. She then took macro-photos of these tiny sculptures. For Abbas, this series is about “tiny heads and their larger-than-life projections.”

During my brief chat with Abbas, I asked her how Istanbul influences and inspires her work, and she explained that the process is quite “natural” and that she has “an ongoing relationship with the city,” which is clearly reflected in her work. For example, the Idols series became a continuing project for Abbas when she came to Istanbul and realized that she needed to create some photos of people in Istanbul (until then, Idols only included photos of people in the United States). The series will probably be extended even further during the summer when Abbas heads to Pakistan.

In the middle of the exhibition area is an imposing inflatable sculpture, called Su’ar (2011), which tackles issues of impurity, greed, and shame. Su’ar means pig in Punjabi, and the animal represents impurity and also serves as a pejorative, especially in Muslim countries. At the same time, the image of the pig represents greed and money in the West. The piece, which features two humongous piggy banks making love, aims to bring together the different interpretations of this animal in one piece. Abbas’s paper sculptures, entitled Objects (2012), again deal with daily life. The hand-made sculptures, which are in the form of a disposable coffee cup, a can, a water bottle, coins, and an ashtray (with ashes and cigarettes in it), carry crescent motifs (that create beautiful shadows) and read “Please do not step,” which has sort of become Abbas’s motto or signature.

Several of Abbas’s works have this statement on them: “Please do not step.” Abbas explains that this statement was born out of the “Please do not touch” signs that are always found in museums. This sign, which serves as a separation point between the art and the viewer, turned into “Please do not step” during the time that Abbas moved to Berlin and was confronted with issues of boundaries, land, alienation, and displacement.

Paradise Bath(2009) features 9 photographs of Abbas bathing a Caucasian woman in an old Ottoman hamam in Thessaloniki, Greece built in 1444 known as Bey Hamam or Paradise Bath. The ritual makes reference to the oriental idea of a colored woman bathing a white woman, and highlights the issues of race and power. This was a performance that Abbas had to really study for, because she spent some time in Istanbul learning the tricks of the trade, and took the hamam equipment from Istanbul to Thessaloniki for her performance.

Abbas has been coming to Istanbul regularly since her first time here in 2007. On the one hand, she finds the city to be more familiar and comfortable. On the other hand, the Turkish audience becomes more familiar with her and her work. “Possibly due to this,” Abbas says, “Istanbul is the place where I get the most responses. The reason behind this I’m aware and unaware at the same time, but I get the best responses from the Istanbul audience, I’m overwhelmed with it.”

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/city-and-the-everyday-exhibition-at-pilot-gallery-564.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/city-and-the-everyday-exhibition-at-pilot-gallery-564.html Tue, 03 Apr 2012 18:03:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Ahmet Polat's Dream]]> You cannot miss Ahmet Polat. The Dutch-Turkish photographer, whose exhibition entitled Kemal’s Dream is on display at Depo Gallery until April 21st, is a very tall man with long curly brown hair and a beard that almost hides his ever-present smile. But even though he views the world from what seems to be an elevated perspective, Polat’s simple demeanor and warmth will capture you, like it captured the subjects of his black and white photographs. What you feel when you meet Polat is what you feel when you see his work - a love for a country that cannot be defined but can only be explored through the daily interactions and lives of its people, and most of all its youth. “Kemal’s Dream,” adding to Polat’s more than 20 previous exhibitions, is a profoundly striking and often amusing look into Turkey as it is today. Listening to Polat speak, with a most minimal hint of a Dutch accent decorating his English sentences, is a small journey on that visual path, curving and leading you to places you didn’t know existed.

The Exhibition

Ahmet Polat spent the last six years living in and traveling from Istanbul to the Black sea, to the southeastern and Aegean regions of Turkey with a camera in hand capturing the young people that surrounded him. What he also captured was the myriad and multifaceted spectrum of political, cultural, and economic elements of Turkish society represented by its youth and their everyday lives. The exhibition of 56 photos is the story of Turkey told through the faces of its young people.

Why is the exhibition called Kemal’s Dream?

I don’t come up with names for my exhibits from the beginning. I create a framework where I have questions and I find answers through my work. When I was traveling around Turkey, I started seeing more of these tattoos of Mustafa Kemal. I understand tattoos as being anti-establishment. They come from pirates and from people who are in jail and as such there is a certain culture attached to tattoos. But for a lot of people in Turkey tattoos are pro-republic. This made me question whether the founder of the republic foresaw that he would end up to be a symbol like this and whether Turkey became what he had expected or wanted it to be.

What is the theme of the exhibition?

One of the most important things in the exhibition is the interaction between tradition and modern society. But there are so many different elements within: there are religious parts, ethnic parts, parts about sexuality. But they are all very understated, because I think that in media and in photography everything is about shouting nowadays. Instead of this blatant imagery, I want people to become interested again in looking at very simple day to day things and then say “I really didn’t look at it that way.”

I also deal with youth a lot in this exhibition. Why? Because Turkey is very young and they represent the future of this country. So how the young people are dealing with their ancestors, history, and political situation, not only locally but within this region, is very important.

What did you want the viewer to take with them after seeing the exhibition?

I wanted people to recognize certain things, but I also wanted them to recognize new things. I wanted people to relate to a jump roping girl wearing a headscarf, because they understand “jump rope,” and understand the notion of that playfulness, but they have never seen an image of a girl with a headscarf jumping rope.

Now why is that? Because those two things are not connected. Viewers understand this language because it is composed of the same symbols and words that they have used before. But my work presents it in a different combination and because of this, things start relating to each other in a different and new way. For somebody outside of Turkey, I would hope that the exhibition would put their pre-conceived notions to the test because of these new and different combinations.

When Turkish people go to this exhibition I see them walking around and smiling because they recognize their own culture. I see that there is something clicking, but then I also see that there is something else happening within their minds. When they leave the gallery, my hope is that they have something newly added to the perspective of their own culture.

You traveled a lot around Turkey, and the pieces from the exhibit were taken in cities such as Zonguldak, Tekirdağ, İzmir, and Edirne. How is Istanbul different from the rest of the country?

Istanbul is a hub. There is a reason why Istanbul used to be the center of the Silk Road and why this city was built on this specific position, which has had significant historical impacts. But Turkey has been in a bit of a slumber, and I think right now this is changing because people are again coming to the city, not only from within Turkey but also from around the world. People are coming to the city and are enjoying the history and the mix match of all these different cultures within.

Now, when you compare Istanbul to the rest of Turkey, it’s as if the industrial revolution just finished out there, meaning that people have just recently begun to leave their villages and are moving to big cities. This is something that has already happened in all Western countries. This is very significant because now there are more people in cities than in rural areas and this is causing a very big cultural shift. So, you can see that for people who have just moved from their villages to the city everything is new.

What do you like most about the people you met during your travels?

I love the honesty of the people in the rest of Turkey, I love to connect to a lot of people, and it’s easy because people are so outgoing. I’m not a short guy, you can see me coming through the village, it’s not very easy for me to hide, but it’s very easy for me to be in contact with the people there.

Ahmet Polat’s Istanbul:

Favorite thing about Istanbul: Istanbul is like New York, like London, like Paris, but there’s also something different about this place where there’s a mixture of people coming, passing, or staying which makes it so interesting.

Favorite neighborhood:Fatih, Balat, Eyüp, and pretty much anywhere along the Golden Horn. I enjoy taking a walk from Balat all the way to Eyüp to experience the Greek Orthodox, Jewish, Christian, Catholic, Islamic periods in one stretch.

Favorite place to hang out with friends: Asmalı Mescit
Favorite Gallery: Galeri NON
FavoriteMuseum: Sakıp Sabancı Museum
Favorite bar: Şehir Meyhane(popular hangout of artists)
Lunch:Kantin in Nişantaşı
Who are your favorite up and coming Turkish artists: I love the performance group Hazavuzu

To get more information about the artist and the exhibition, visit Ahmet Polat's website

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/ahmet-polats-dream-550.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/ahmet-polats-dream-550.html Mon, 26 Mar 2012 17:02:00 +0300
<![CDATA[31st Istanbul Film Festival]]> The Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts (İKSV) will soon be hosting the Istanbul Film Festival, a two-week-long banquet of films which is undisputedly the most important annual film festival in the city.

This year the festival runs between March 31st and April 15th at the following cinemas, museums and cultural centers: Atlas Cinema; AFM Fitaş; Beyoğlu Cinema; Citylife; Rexx Cinema in Kadıköy; the Pera Museum; Salon İKSV; and Akbank Sanat.

In addition to the film screenings (which are divided into more than 20 different categories including the various competitions), there will be an array of concerts, guest speakers, seminars and workshops, film classes, and master classes by acclaimed filmmakers like Corneliu Porumboiu, Marjane Satrapi, and Terence Davies.

A major highlight of the festival is the International and National Golden Tulip Competitions. The films in the International Competition will compete for Best Picture, while those in the National Competition will compete in a number of different categories: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress, Best Actor, Best Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Editing, Best Music, and the competition’s Special Jury Award.

COMPETITIONS

International Competition

Headed by Palme d’Or winning director Nuri Bilge Ceylan, and also features Romanian New Wave director Corneliu Porumboiu. This year’s films include Die Unsichtbare (The Invisible) by German director Christian Schwochow, La Demora (The Delay) by Uruguayan director Rodrigo Plá, and Les Neiges Du Kilimandjaro (The Snows of Kilimanjaro) by French director Robert Guédiguian.

National Competition

Presided over by well-known Turkish author Murathan Mungan; competing films include Ümit Ünal’s Nar (Pomegranate), which won the Special Jury Prize at the 2011 Altın Portakal festival, and Yeraltı (Inside), by former National Golden Tulip winner Zeki Demirkubuz.

One film from each competition will also be chosen to receive an award by a jury of the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI); in addition, there will be an audience vote for the Radikal People’s Choice Award by Radikal Newspaper.

Out of Competition

Features five Turkish films not part of the International or National competitions.

New Turkish Cinema

Features ten films by up-and-coming Turkish directors.

Documentaries

A competition of 12 different documentary films by Turkish and foreign directors.

Cinema Honorary Awards

Three films will be competing for the Cinema Honorary Awards: Halit Akçatepe’s 1976 Süt Kardeşler (The Foster Brothers), Ali Özgentürk’s 1982 At (The Horse), and Ayşen Gruda’s recent film Hacivat Karagöz Neden Öldürüldü (Killing the Shadows).

Human Rights in Cinema Competition

With a jury headed by director Juanita Wilson, films will compete for the Film Award of the Council of Europe (FACE). Competing films include Bé omid é didar (Good Bye), by Iranian filmmaker Muhammad Rasoulof, about an Iranian lawyer’s attempts to gain a visa to leave Iran. Also in the competition is Turkish director Özcan Alper’s recent film Gelecek Uzun Sürer (The Future Lasts Forever), which deals with Turkey’s Kurdish conflict via the story of a young musicologist’s trip to Diyarbakır.

OTHER CATEGORIES AND SCREENINGS

İKSV 40th year – Cinema and Music

Commemorates İKSV’s 40th anniversary with screenings of five musical films from the past five decades including Martin Scorsese’s 1977 film New York, New York; Alan Parker’s 1982 Pink Floyd The Wall; and Moulin Rouge!

Akbank Galas

Consists of premieres of new films by important international directors including the comedy Two Days in New York by French actress-turned-director Julie Delpy. Chicken with Plums, by graphic artist Marjane Satrapi (of Persepolis fame) and Vincent Paronnaud; Trishna, Michael Winterbottom’s updating of Hardy’s Tess of the d’Urbervilles to present-day India; plus new films by Shakespeare in Love’s John Madden (who will be present at the festival), Martin Scorsese, and more.

Challenging the Years

Presents new films by veteran directors such as Werner Herzog, who returns to the festival with Into The Abyss, a look at those living on Death Row in US prisons. Other highlights include new films by Europa Europa’s Agnieszka Holland, Russian Ark’s Alexander Sokurov, Ermanno Olmi, André Téchiné, Tony Gatlif, and Terence Davies (the last two of whom will be in Istanbul for the festival).

From the World of Festivals

Consists of recent submissions to well-known film festivals and competitions such as Cannes, the Venice Film Festival, and the Academy Awards. Many of the films are by lesser-known directors, but also include selections like L’ordre et la morale (Rebellion) by La Haine’s Matthieu Kassowitz, and Detachment, by UK director Tony Kaye (of American History X fame), starring Adrien Brody as a substitute teacher at an American high school.

Young Masters

Contains first or second features by up-and-coming young directors from all over the globe (e.g. South Africa, Brazil, Iran, Bulgaria) and includes films like Helvécio Marins Jr. and Clarissa Campolina’s Girimunho (Swirl), a portrait of life in a village in Northern Brazil, featuring non-professional actors, as well as Atmen (Breathing), the directorial debut of Austrian actor Karl Markovics, about Roman, a young parolee from a juvenile detention center and his efforts to adapt to life outside.

Documentary Time with NTV

Offers a selection of some of the best recent documentaries out there, such as Mama Africa (about South African singing legend Miriam Makeba) by Mika Kaurismäki, the elder brother of Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki; Crazy Horse, about the Parisian nightclub of the same name, the latest work by prolific American documentary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman; and Micha X. Peled’s Globalization trilogy (China Blue, Store Wars: When Wal-mart Comes to Town, and Bitter Seed), which focuses on the negative aspects of global capitalism. Peled will be present at the festival.

Mined Zone

More experimental than those in the other categories, films in Mined Zone include such works as Hors Satan (Outside Satan), by L'humanité’s Bruno Dumont, the story of a mysterious loner living in the French countryside, and a young woman who becomes his companion; and Belgian choreographer Wim Vandekeybus’s Monkey Sandwich (which ran at last year’s Venice Film Festival), a surreal “portmanteau film with a captivating tangle of stories involving the search for an unborn child, a disturbing hunting trip, a haunted LP, a screaming piglet and a river gone rogue.”

Antidepressant

Promises comic uplift with films like Canadian Ken Scott’s Starbuck, about a sperm donor who learns that he has fathered no fewer than 533 children; Egyptian-French filmmaker Namir Abdel Messeeh’s La Vierge, les Coptes et Moi (The Virgin, the Copts, and Me), about a skeptic’s investigation of sightings of the Virgin Mary among Egypt’s Coptic community; and Whit Stillman’s new film Damsels in Distress, which showed at last year’s Venice Film Festival, about the romantic misadventures of a trio of college girls.

Within the Family

Deals with family drama and intergenerational conflict, via such films as Mika Kaurismäki’s Veljekset (Brothers), inspired by Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov, about three half-brothers, Ivan, Mitja, and Torsti, who meet for the 70th birthday of their father, a man “who they all blame for the failures in their lives”; Israeli director Joseph Cedar’s He’arat Shulayim (Footnote), nominated for a Best Foreign Language Oscar, about an elderly Talmudic scholar’s rivalries with his colleagues – including his own son; and Wymyk (Courage), by Kieslowski acolyte Greg Zglinski, a tale of courage, cowardice, and survivor guilt.

The World of Animation

A selection of some of the best recent work in animated film, including 3D films like Tales of the Night, a story of fairies, magicians, and princesses by Kirikou and the Sorceress’s Michel Ocelot, and Peter Lord and Jeff Newitt’s The Pirates! Band of Misfits, the story of a Pirate Captain’s quest to win the Pirate of the Year Award, with voiceovers by Hugh Grant and Salma Hayek.

Kids’ Menu

Offers four kids’ films from the Netherlands, as part of this year’s celebration of the 400th anniversary of Dutch-Turkish relations. The program includes works by filmmakers Joram Lürsen, Vincent Bal, and Simone van Dusseldorp.

Midnight Madness

A series of midnight screenings of recent horror/suspense movies, such as Dominik Moll’s Le Moine (The Monk), a recent adaptation of Matthew Gregory Lewis’s 18th century Gothic novel about Satanism (with Vincent Cassel in the title role), and Ben Wheatley’s Kill List, about a soldier turned contract killer.

What’s Happening in Greece?

A selection of five recent films from Turkey’s crisis-stricken neighbor, such as Christos Karakepelis’s documentary Proti Ili (Raw Material), focusing on the lives of immigrants in Athens who eke out a living by collecting scrap metal. Filippos Tsitos’s Adikos Kosmos (Unfair World), which won prizes for Best Director and Best Actor at last year’s San Sebastian Festival, is the story of a police interrogator’s disillusionment with societal injustice. Istanbul-born actor Antonios Kafetzopoulos, who plays the role of the policeman, Sotiris, will be present at the festival.

A Chinese Cinema Tradition: Wuxia

Features wuxia (martial arts) films by Chinese, Taiwanese, and Hong Kong directors like Zhang Yimou, Ang Lee, and Wong Kar-Wai, including Ang Lee’s Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, which was hugely successful in the international box office.

Filming Revolution

Deals with recent political upheavals in the Arab world and elsewhere, with offerings like Andrei Zagdansky’s Orange Winter, about Ukraine’s Orange Revolution; Fragments of a Revolution, consisting of amateur videos of the 2009 election violence in Iran; and Stefano Savona’s Tahrir – Liberation Square, about the historic 2011 Egyptian Revolution. There will also be a screening of Gillo Pontecorvo’s seminal 1966 film La battaglia di Algeri (The Battle of Algiers), about Algeria’s struggle for independence.

In Memoriam

Honors the work of recently deceased filmmakers such as Theo Angelopoulos, Ken Russell, and Ömer Lütfi Akad, with screenings of movies like Angelopoulos’s O Thiasos (The Traveling Players), about an itinerant theater company in wartime Greece; Russell’s over-the-top Tchaikovsky biopic The Music Lovers; Akad’s classic 1966 film Hudutların Kanunu (The Law of the Border), starring Yılmaz Güney as the smuggler Hıdır; and more.

Special Screening: Turkish Classics Revisited

Provides audiences the chance to see a restored copy of Halit Refiğ’s 1964 film Gurbet Kuşları (Birds of Exile), the winner of the very first Altın Portakal Film Festival, which tells the story of a family’s migration from Southeastern Anatolia to Istanbul.

Other Special Screenings

Includes UK filmmaker Mark Cousins’s 15-hour documentary The Story of Film: An Odyssey, which is nothing less than a history of filmmaking from its earliest beginnings to the present day.

Atlas, İstiklal Caddesi No. 209, Beyoğlu; P: (0212) 252 85 76

AFM Fitaş, İstiklal Caddesi Fitaş Pasajı, Beyoğlu; P: (0212) 345 62 45

BeyoğluSineması, İstiklal Caddesi No:62, Beyoğlu; P: (0212) 251 32 40

Citylife, City’s Nişantaşı, Teşvikiye Caddesi No:162, Kat 6, Nişantaşı; P: (0212) 373 35 35

Rexx, Sakızgülü Sokak No. 20-22, Kadıköy; P: (0216) 4181084

Pera Müzesi, Meşrutiyet Caddesi No. 141, Tepebaşı; P: (0212) 334 99 00

Salon İKSV, Sadi Konuralp Caddesi No.5, Şişhane; P: (0212) 334 07 00

Akbank Sanat, İstiklal Caddesi No. 14-18, Beyoğlu; P: (0212) 252 35 00


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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/31st-istanbul-film-festival-545.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/31st-istanbul-film-festival-545.html Mon, 19 Mar 2012 18:17:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Rembrandt and his Contemporaries: The Golden Age of Dutch Art]]>

In commemoration of the 400th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Turkey and the Netherlands, the Sakıp Sabancı Museum (which is also celebrating its own 10th anniversary) has undertaken to put on nothing less than “the first large scale exhibition of Dutch Art in Turkey,” in the words of the museum’s director, Dr. Nazan Ölçer. The works in this show, Karanlıkla Işıgın Buluştuğu Yerde…Rembrandt ve Çağdaşları: Hollanda Sanatının Altın Çağı(Where Darkness Meets Light…Rembrandt and his Contemporaries: The Golden Age of Dutch Art) are on loan from Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum, as well as from other museums and private collections inside and outside the Netherlands. The phrase “Where Darkness Meets Light” is a reference to the technique of chiaroscuro – the depiction of contrast between light and shadow – for which Rembrandt’s paintings are noted.

The show contains over a hundred works of art – paintings, drawings, etchings, and more – by nearly five dozen different artists (including well-known figures like Frans Hals, Jan Steen, and Jacob van Ruisdael) from the 17th century, a period widely regarded as the “Golden Age” of Dutch art. When exactly the Golden Age ended is a matter for debate; the information panels at this exhibition (which provide abundant historical background both about Holland and about concurrent historical events elsewhere in the world) suggest that by 1672, Holland’s so-called “Year of Disaster,” the handwriting was on the wall.

As the show explains, the chief source of artistic patronage in the 17th century Netherlands was not the Church or the (non-existent) monarchy, but rather the townspeople known as burghers. The subject matter of many of the works in this show – whether portraits, landscapes, or still lifes – is accordingly realistic, with pictures of tradesmen like bakers and fishmongers taking the place of saints, archbishops, or dukes. In these paintings you can see homely, prosaic details such as laundry baskets full of laundry, nutshells lying on the floor of a drunkard’s room, blood dripping from newly-slaughtered animals, and still lifes featuring half-peeled oranges and peppercorns (the latter newly available in the Netherlands thanks to the Dutch East India Company’s commercial empire.) Even some of the paintings on Biblical subjects (e.g. Hendrick ter Brugghen’s 1619 “The Adoration of the Magi” or the paintings “King David” and “Isaac Blessing Jacob” by two of Rembrandt’s students) are conspicuous for their lack of grandiosity, and their down-to-earth treatment – bordering on irreverence – of their subjects.

The first Rembrandt work you will encounter in the show is his celebrated 1634 portrait of Haesje van Cleyburgh, which you will probably recognize as the image used to advertise this exhibition on billboards around Istanbul. Rembrandt’s portrait of Haesje is renowned for its veracity of detail (capturing the tiniest wrinkles and lines in her face), to demonstrate which the curators have hung the painting side by side with Frans Hals’s ostensibly similar portrait of Maritge Voogt Claesdr, painted five years later but decades behind Rembrandt in technique. Rembrandt’s un-photoshopped yet never unsympathetic treatment of his subjects is also apparent in his famous miniature portrait of his friend, the Jewish physician Dr. Ephraim Bueno. (The show, incidentally, provides a fascinating look at the flourishing Sephardic Jewish community of the Netherlands, with a painting of the famous Portuguese synagogue in Amsterdam – a tourist attraction even in its own day – and artifacts like a menorah of pure silver.) There is also an excellent selection of Rembrandt’s etchings and drawings, which are notable for their masterful use of cross-hatching. These include 1632’s “The Raising of Lazarus” (also the subject of an oil painting which is not in this show), and an oil sketch entitled “Joseph Telling His Dreams,” whose muted colors only stoke our curiosity about what the finished product would have looked like.

Of course, Rembrandt is only one, albeit the most famous, of the artists in this diverse and wide-ranging show. The reviewer’s own favorites included a number of lesser-known landscape paintings such as Aert van der Neer’s “River View in Winter” (1655-60), portraying a party of ice-skaters on a frozen river, in which the artist’s skill at rendering the texture and color of the ice through swirls of white and blue was quite striking, as was his Impressionistic ability to suggest human forms through the tiniest specks of paint. Gerrit Adriaensz Berckheyde’s “The Golden Bend in the Herengracht in Amsterdam” (1671-2) was also striking for its Magritte-like creation of darkness in the daytime, as well as the startlingly lucid reflection of the canal houses in the water of the Herengracht. The hazy, brown-yellow tones of Jan van Goyen’s “View of a Town on a River” (1645) seemed to pervade everything in the painting (sky, sea, trees, houses, church, and ships), but with an end result of unity rather than monotony.

Many tourists in Europe have had the memorable experience of wandering down a narrow alleyway, emerging onto a big square, and unexpectedly finding themselves face to face with a sight they have only seen, till then, in a book or on a computer screen: the Pantheon, say, or Notre Dame. The same kind of experience awaits you on a smaller scale at Rembrandt and his Contemporaries, where two-thirds of the way through the first gallery, you will suddenly find yourself looking at Vermeer’s “The Love Letter.” This remarkable little painting, one of less than three dozen extant works by the artist, invites you to observe its subjects (a young woman and her maid, who is handing her the letter of the title) through an open doorway, in pseudo-voyeuristic fashion. The painting offers tantalizingly few clues to the questions we would like answered: who is the woman? Does she and/or her maid know the author of the letter? At what precise stage of their courtship has this snapshot been taken? This is one place, incidentally, where you’ll be glad you’ve used the show’s audio guide, from which you’ll learn that the painting of a ship at sea on the wall of the woman’s room would have been an “instantly recognizable” symbol of romantic passion to a contemporary of Vermeer.

After you’ve seen all the works in Gallery One, a flight of stairs takes you down to the show’s second gallery. It must be said that the paintings in this section were of less interest to the reviewer than those in Gallery One. The large, pompous canvases in Gallery Two, depicting trade missions and sea battles, seemed at time like borrowings from a naval museum rather than an art museum. Willem van de Velde the Elder’s 1637 “The Battle of the Downs against the Spanish Armada” was perhaps interesting for being the largest ink-on-canvas work the reviewer had ever seen (and for being displayed side-by-side with a similarly themed painting by van de Velde the Younger) but not for much else. You should, however, come down to Gallery Two to see the short film about Rembrandt playing there, which is informative and worth your time.

All in all, this is a superb exhibition, and as no review can do it justice, the best thing is simply to get on a bus to Emirgan and see it yourself. Rembrandt and his Contemporaries, which is being shown with the sponsorship of the governments of Turkey and the Netherlands, as well as numerous corporations including Sabancı Holding, ING Bank, and Philips,runs at the Sakıp Sabancı Museum through June 10th.

Sakıp Sabancı Müzesi, Sakıp Sabancı Caddesi No. 42, Emirgan; P: (0212) 277 22 00

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/rembrandt-and-his-contemporaries-the-golden-age-of-dutch-art-538.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/rembrandt-and-his-contemporaries-the-golden-age-of-dutch-art-538.html Tue, 13 Mar 2012 09:26:00 +0200
<![CDATA[An International Feast: 4 Film Festivals in Istanbul]]> March is here and it feels like winter is never going to end. But at least a vast selection of films in four separate film festivals this month will warm our hearts (if not our bodies), keep our minds sharp, and provoke us with inquisitive perspectives into world affairs.

Regime change in the Middle East, the world economy in dire straits, youth protests everywhere, and a general dissatisfaction with the political and economic system has opened the door for revolutionary potential and that seems to be the general topic of many festivals this year. The four film festivals this month (Dağ Film Festival, Filmmor Women’s Film Festival, Istanbul Film Festival, and Akbank Short Film Festival) bring to Istanbul some of the top recent productions in a wide array of topics but with a distinct call for change for the nature of the convoluted world we live in today.

Firstly, a small selection of films will be presented at the Dağ Film Festival at the French Cultural Center between 7-11 March. Since 2006, this film festival has been a favorite among environmentalists and all those who care about the future of our planet. Now, in its seventh year, the Dağ Film Festival puts together a series of nature-themed films and documentaries as well as exhibitions, panel discussions, interviews, and seminars in order to raise awareness on the necessity to take care of our environment. As the planet continues heating and as politicians continue to inadequately address the pressing issues of our planet (as it was evident in the last Copenhagen climate summit), the future of our planet rests in the hands of those with the revolutionary spirit to change the path that we are in. (Click here to see the full program.)

This yearFilmmor Women’s Film Festival, which travels around Turkey,is celebrating its tenth year. The festival, which will be held between 9-19 March in Istanbul, has put together a well-chosen program of feminist cinema from the vaults, starting with films from pioneer filmmaker Alice Guy-Blaché and many other successful female filmmakers and artists that have contributed to the world of motion pictures with films like Europa, Europa, The Piano, andOrlando. This year’s slogan “Damn the Evil Eye” intends to project the revolutionary potential of women in our societies, declaring war against a past where culture and tradition determined the female role. With conferences, workshops, distinct theme selections on gender and sexual identity issues, and the special appearance of a group of Tunisian film directors (who were actively engaged in the deposition of their dictator last year and were called “The Tunisian Jazmines”), this year’s festival certainly puts forward a provokingly clear message that change is a must. (For more details on Filmmor, click here.)

Likewise, the Akbank Short Film Festival put a special focus on documentary films this year in an effort to put social reality on the agenda. This year’s festival, which will be held between 19-29 March, will showcase young local and international filmmakers and serve as a platform for new talents. Free screenings, workshops, panel discussions, and conferences, such as the one with master documentarian Can Dündar, will aim to create an environment in which those interested in filmmaking can have a space of dialogue with filmmakers. (Click here for the full program.)

Last but not least, the 31st Istanbul Film Festival, organized by IKSV, will begin at the end of the month bringing the best of world cinema to a city of voracious movie-goers who have been waiting all year for these two weeks when the city smells like celluloid. This year, the festival (which will be held between 31 March – 15 April) will again be the highlight of Istanbul’s cultural scene with more than two hundred films, workshops, seminars, master classes by world-famous filmmakers, special guests, and awards to the best of international and Turkish cinema. This year, two new sections (“Filming Revolution” and “What’s Happening in Greece?”) will explore the issues troubling our times as well as investigate the themes of upheaval and revolution in an effort to explain the parallels between what is happening in the Middle East and Europe. (For more details on the festival, click here.)

Cinema certainly reflects the pathos of an era. During a time of widespread revolution and upheaval around the world, maybe this series of film festivals will help us understand why the world is in the state that it is. Either way, one thing is for sure: film lovers in Istanbul are going to watch some of the most interesting films we’ve seen in recent times.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/an-international-feast-4-film-festivals-in-istanbul-536.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/an-international-feast-4-film-festivals-in-istanbul-536.html Fri, 09 Mar 2012 21:56:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Celebrating Women’s Day through Art]]> International Women’s Day is celebrated all around the world on March 8th aiming to increase appreciation for women while also highlighting their achievements of political, economic, and social significance. In Istanbul, this celebration will possess an artistic disposition, with exhibitions and a film festival that put forth the work of female artists or simply take on the theme of womanhood and its many difficulties and equal mysteries. Femininity is a complex task to explore, yet equally beautiful and surely worth the time to go and see for yourself.

Nasra Şimmes

Nasra Şimmes is a woman of contradiction. Even though she is illiterate, she has a true talent for spelling out the colors of her emotions and dreams upon the textiles she paints on. Even though she does not speak any Turkish, she has lived in the city of Mardin since she was born there in 1924, living in the same house and using the same brushes and paints her father left her with so many years ago.

Şimmes’ beautiful textile prints have been decorating Assyrian churches all over Europe, America, and the Middle East in the form of drapes, table cloths, and tapestries for the last fifty years. Now her colorful designs will be on display for the enjoyment of her audience with a special focus on the theme of women and art.

When: 6 March-6 April

Where: Koleksiyon Tarabya Merkezi, Hacıosman Bayırı, Cumhuriyet Mahallesi Bağlar Caddesi No. 35, Tarabya; P: (0212) 363 63 63

How much: Free

Women, Beautiful but Alone

In Women, Beautiful but Alone (Güzel Ama Yalnız Kadınlar), six artists will explore the complicated female identity through the filter of their own personalities. The exhibition, which features works of photography and video installation, explores the absence of women in history and their constant rejection of male-induced rationality. The artists’ work challenges viewers to question their own internalized cultural cues, while exploring femininity through a philosophical and visual mode.

Featured artists are: Arda Yalkın, Baran Tokmakoğlu, Bennu Gerede, Cen Büyükhanlı, Emine Ceylan, and Volkan Ergen.

When:7 March-1 April

Where:ALANistanbul, Asmalımescit Caddesi Atlas Apartmanı No. 5/2, Tünel; P: (0212) 252 94 53

How much: Free

Filmmor

The Filmmor Women’s Film Festival, currently in its tenth year, was established by the Filmmor Women’s Collective to increase women’s participation in cinema and other mass media, and promote films that help achieve its goal of “a life free of sexism, violence and discrimination in cinema, media and eventually in every field...”

The films in the Filmmor festival (short films and feature-length films, black & white and color, silent films and talkies, documentaries, animated films and experimental films), have been made by independent directors from every corner of the globe, and are divided into the following categories: Women’s Cinema; 100 Years of the Feminist Cinema, 10 Years of Filmmor; Retrospective: Jasmins of Tunisia; Retrospective: Marie Mandy; and Sex-ual-ity. The films include both recent offerings as well as films from earlier times, such as cinematic pioneer Alice Guy-Blaché’s prophetic 1906 film The Consequences of Feminism.

In addition to the film screenings, there will also be guest speakers, conferences, panels (on Feminist Cinema and Queer Cinema), and workshops (where attendeees will have the chance to meet prominent directors of women’s films), plus the “Golden Okra Awards” (to take place on the last day of the festival) which seek to recognize those who have made contributions to women’s cinema.

For a complete program of screenings and related events, see the Filmmor website.

When:9 March - 19 March

Where: AFM Fitaş Beyoğlu Salon 7; Fransız Kültür Merkezi; Istanbul Modern; Pera Müzesi

How much: From Ticketturk: 30 TL (festival ticket); 3 TL (individual films)

Language: Various languages with ENG subtitles (check program for details)

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/celebrating-womens-day-through-art-526.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/celebrating-womens-day-through-art-526.html Wed, 07 Mar 2012 09:41:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Art 350: The Newest Gallery on the Asian Side]]>

Art 350 is the newest art gallery to open on Bağdat Caddesi in Erenköy on the Asian Side. It was established as the extension and permanent gallery space of Galata House of Art, an artist collective that was founded in 2011 to serve as a space for exchanging ideas between artists from Istanbul and Berlin. The gallery, which is managed by Christa Frieda Vogel and Şebnem Kutal, will host exhibitions of contemporary painting, sculpture, and photography by Turkish as well as international artists. The venue will also be home to live music and artists’ discussion programs on a regular basis.

Art 350 opened its doors on February 23 with the exhibition “Transfigurative” by Turkish artist Arzu Başaran and German artist Ruth Biller, two artists whose main interest is the human figure and impermanent nature of the human body and thoughts. The title of this exhibition refers to a common concern on the part of Başaran and Biller with “human transfigurations”; Başaran’s work reflects her preoccupation with inequality, societal pressure, and repression, while Biller’s work is more sensuous and lyrical.Both artists use the canvas to communicate their thoughts, while at the same time making use of mixed techniques and tools, such as photographs, thread, and collage.

ART 350, Bağdat Caddesi No. 350, Erenköy; P: (0216) 369 80 50

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/art-350-the-newest-gallery-on-the-asian-side-522.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/art-350-the-newest-gallery-on-the-asian-side-522.html Mon, 05 Mar 2012 12:27:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Sculpture Picks from The Guide]]> Among the profusion of art shows one can see this month in Istanbul are four sculpture exhibitions at four different galleries by artists Andrew Barton, Federico Severino, Mona Hatoum, and Ebru Özseçen. The work of these four artists – differing greatly in both technique and subject matter – represents a good cross-section of what is on offer this month at Istanbul’s art galleries. Entry to all of these exhibitions is free.

Andrew Barton: Final Frontier

“A dystopian future of possible religious conflict in the heavens” is the subject of sculptor Andrew Barton’s show at Nişantaşı’s SODA, Final Frontier (Son Bilinmeyen in Turkish), whose title recalls the opening credits of the television program Star Trek. Pop culture normally takes for granted the notion of humanity united against the perils of outer space; the sculptures in Final Frontier, by contrast, present the ironic spectable of space helmets custom-tailored to the three major monotheistic religions of Europe and the Middle East: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Drawing on a host of imagery, from Crusader helmets to the Islamic niqab to Hasidic Jewish attire, Barton suggests that an end to humanity’s internecine quarrels is nowhere in sight.

When: March 1 – April 14

Where: SODA; Şakayık Sokak No. 37/1, Nişantaşı; P: (0212) 231 89 88

Federico Severino: Sculptures

Italian sculptor Federico Severino is well-known in his native Italy, where his artwork is on display at many churches and basilicas, including the Pantheon in Rome, and the Cathedral of his native Brescia. Severino’s work – which was briefly exhibited at Galeri Selvin’s stand at Contemporary Istanbul this past November – now comes to Galeri Selvin for a month-long show. Severino’s bronze sculptures at times imitate the conventions of Graeco-Roman art (Piccole Grazie and Silenzio), while the entwining bodies in his “Amanti nella tempesta” or “Amanti nella finestra” – or the Minotaur’s erotic pursuit of Ariadne in his “Minotauro che insegue Arianna” – recall works like Bernini’s “Apollo and Daphne,” and “Rape of Proserpina.”

When: March 20 – April 15

Where: Galeri Selvin; Dere Sokak No. 3, Arnavutköy; P: (0212) 263 74 81


Mona Hatoum: You Are Still Here

You Are Still Here, by Mona Hatoum, is the first solo show in Istanbul by this Palestinian/Lebanese artist, who works in a wide variety of media including installations, sculpture, video, photography and works on paper. The pieces in You Are Still Here (curated by Emre Baykal), as often with Hatoum, consist of everyday objects with sinister overtones, such as 1993’s “Jardin Public,” a slightly crooked chair made out of “painted wrought iron, wax, and pubic hair,” or 1996’s “Deep Throat,” in which a dinner plate doubles as an endoscope. Hatoum’s more recent, post-September 11 works are even more unsettling: a bench or bed in the shape of a cheese grater (2008’s “Daybed”), or an apparently electrified rug whose strands end in light bulbs (2008’s “Undercurrent”). This show at Beyoğlu’s Arter, representing two decades of Hatoum’s work, should not be missed.

When: March 17 – May 27

Where: Arter; İstiklal Caddesi No. 211, Beyoğlu; P: (0212) 243 37 67


Ebru Özseçen: True Love Soul Mate

Munich-based Turkish artist Ebru Özseçen’s exhibition Gerçek Aşk Gönül Eşi (True Love Soul Mate), at Akaretler’s Rampa, contains works from three periods. The earliest, 1997’s Toplar (Balls), consists of a series of balls and pendants hanging from a chandelier, and was photographed at a London antiques store; this motif would later figure in other works by Özseçen, such as Şeker Avize (Sugar Chandelier), which was exhibited at the 6th Istanbul Biennial in 1999. Kısmet (Destiny), created in the following decade, was likewise inspired by another of the artist’s finds, this time in an antiques store in Amsterdam: an ivory lantern filled with beans, from which a French countess allegedly would select one every night as a way of choosing her lover. Özşecen’s own work consists of a keyhole-shaped piece of ivory filled with a bull’s testicle. Finally, 2011’s Gerçek Aşk Gönül Eşi (True Love Soul Mate), from which the show as a whole takes its name, is made up of more than a hundred pieces of hand-crafted glass, made with the assistance of the renowned glass studios Mayer of Munich and Glasshütte Lamberts.

Explaining the title of the exhibition, Özseçen has said, “the concept of ‘true love, soul mate’ employed in the title should be sought, not in the realm of romantic love, but in the friendship and companionship alluded to by the craftsman’s tender treatment of the objects to which he lovingly devotes himself.”

When: March 2 – April 7

Where: Rampa; Şair Nedim Caddesi No:21A, Akaretler; P: (0212) 327 08 00

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/sculpture-picks-from-the-guide-519.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/sculpture-picks-from-the-guide-519.html Tue, 28 Feb 2012 17:21:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Rediscover Van Gogh at Van Gogh Alive]]> Many of Van Gogh’s paintings have unfortunately suffered the same kind of overexposure that has been the fate of the “To be or not to be” speech from Hamlet, the first movement of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, or Leonardo’s “Mona Lisa.” However much you may admire “Starry Night” or “Sunflowers,” it’s foolish to imagine you could ever have the same response to them on the hundredth viewing as on the first. The reviewer is embarrassed to admit that he once had, not one, but two Van Gogh posters (“Sunflowers” and “Cafe Terrace at Night”) on the walls of his apartment at the same time, thus joining the ranks of those for whom the works of this famously tormented artist have become icons of complacent familiarity.

The aim of Van Gogh Alive, at Antrepo 3 in Tophane, is to shake us out of such complacency. In this dark, cavernous space (the venue for last year’s 12th Istanbul Biennial, along with neighboring Antrepo 5), 3,000 images created from 1,000 Van Gogh works (paintings, watercolors, and drawings) are projected onto the four walls, columns, and floor through a system of 40 HD projectors known as Sensory 4. Seeing these works (or portions of them) on screens nearly 25 feet high not only is a startling experience, but also allows you to focus in great detail on paintings you may have only seen before in miniature on the pages of an art history textbook. A classical soundtrack runs in sync with the projected images, with pieces by Handel, Lalo, Saint-Saëns, Arvo Pärt, and more, in addition to traditional Japanese koto music.

The works featured in Van Gogh Alive date from 1880 to 1890 (effectively the entire career of this late-blooming and short-lived artist), and are grouped into three symphonic “movements”: Van Gogh’s early period in the Netherlands (until 1886), his Parisian years (1886-8), and his final years in the South of France, where he made his best-known paintings. You’ll see old favorites like “Vincent’s Bedroom in Arles,” “Self-portrait with Bandaged Ear,” “Portrait of Dr. Gachet,” “Starry Night,” and more; unless you are a Van Gogh expert, there are also sure to be paintings you haven’t seen before, and one startling image that you never would have guessed was by Van Gogh – see if you can spot it.

In addition to Van Gogh’s artworks, there are brief animation sequences relating to events in the artist’s life, copies of his handwritten letters, and screens with quotations in Turkish offering Van Gogh’s thoughts on his life and career. (Not providing English subtitles for these quotes was the one oversight in an otherwise excellent show). The artworks themselves are not always projected statically: there are details superimposed as you watch (thus mimicking the process of painting a new work), zoom-ins and zoom-outs, fade-outs, and other cinematic tricks – think animated film rather than slide show.

With Van Gogh’s works surrounding you in all directions, and no two areas of the exhibition hall showing the exact same images at the same time, it’s impossible to “do” Van Gogh Alive – to start at the beginning and workyour way through to the end. There is no path to follow, much less the strictly regulated senso unico of a place like the Vatican Musem: you are free to stay put, or wander around at will. (Many of the audience members at Van Gogh Alive chose to watch the show while sitting on the floor, a sight one doesn’t often see in Turkey). The experience of watching Van Gogh Alive is a bit like attending a cocktail party in a movie theater – a very large movie theater to be sure (this is, after all, the place where the reviewer got lost at the Istanbul Biennial last year).


Van Gogh’s paintings become “alive” at this show in the best sense of the word, refusing to lie down, be nailed down, or be neatly filed away and catalogued. Just as you can never hope to overhear every word spoken in a crowded room, or capture every nuance of a conversation, or parse every line of dialogue in a live performance of a play, so a visitor to Van Gogh Alive shouldn’t try to view every image in this 360-degree son et lumière, where the pictures come thick and fast. (You should of course see the whole show – which is about 45 minutes long – at least once in its entirety: unlike a movie theater, Antrepo 3 won’t kick you out at the end of each screening). Needless to say, the reviewer saw many audience members taking photos and/or videos of Van Gogh Alive with their cell phones, cameras, and iPads, an unfortunate symptom of our present-day belief that an experience has not truly taken place until it has been digitally recorded.

The one potential danger of a show of this sort is that it will up the technological ante for exhibitions of other artists’ works, leading to a demand for Rembrandt Alive, Monet Alive, and Cézanne Alive, and a corresponding indifference to Rembrandt, Monet, and Cézanne. Such a theoretical concern should not deter you, however, from attending this striking and original show, a visit to which is highly recommended.

Van Gogh Alive is designed by Grande Exhibitions Australia, with the participation of Turkish pharmaceutical company Abdi İbrahim, celebrating its 100th anniversary this year.

Antrepo 3, Meclis-i Mebusan Caddesi Liman İşletmeleri Sahası, Tophane

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/rediscover-van-gogh-at-van-gogh-alive-512.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/rediscover-van-gogh-at-van-gogh-alive-512.html Fri, 24 Feb 2012 10:29:00 +0200
<![CDATA[A Grab-bag of Anatolian Dance at Hodjapasha Culture Center]]> Turkish dance is generally encountered by tourists in two forms: whirling dervishes and belly dancing. One doesn’t have to look very far in Sultanahmet to find places to see belly dancing; the dance ritual known as the sema (practiced by devotees of Mevlana Rumi) is also performed regularly throughout the year at a number of venues throughout the city. While the sema may have a longer pedigree in Turkish culture than the Arab import of belly dancing (the Turkish term for which, oryantal, suggests a non-indigenous origin), both are a pleasure to watch when well-executed; still, they are hardly the last word on Turkish dance.

Since 2008, the Hodjapasha Culture Center in Sirkeci has offered regular performances of both these dances, and more. The Center is located in a hamam built by Hoca Sinan Paşa, the vizier of Mehmet the Conqueror; constructed in 1470, it is one of the oldest in the city, but fell into disuse several decades ago. What used to be the women’s section of the hamam is now the Center’s exhibition hall, with information panels about the different styles of Anatolian dance. The former men’s section hosts the actual performances, which come in two varieties: a sema performance as well as a Turkish Dance Show. We opted to attend the latter, reasoning that this would be the best way to learn about the range of different Turkish dance forms.

The Turkish Dance Show is indeed a smorgasbord of different dances. Accompanied by a group of live musicians playing the saz, davul, fiddle, garmon (accordion), bass guitar, tambourine, and other instruments, a team of dancers performs a dozen different dances – solo, in pairs, in single-sex and mixed ensemble – from the different parts of Anatolia and the former Ottoman Empire. Here you can see little-known native Anatolian dances such as the misket (from Central Anatolia), the halay (from Eastern Turkey), and the zeybek (from the Aegean); dances that shade off into dramatic performances (such as the Henna Night number from Elazığ, simulating a Turkish bride’s pre-wedding preparations); dances from the Balkans, from the Black Sea region of Turkey, and from Azerbaijan; gypsy dancing from Turkish Thrace; and of course, plenty of belly dancing (both solo and in ensemble) with a surprising twist or two.

The stage in this small, domed space is circular (resembling the stone massage platform called the göbek taşı which was formerly found in the hamam). The audience sits in rows surrounding the stage, with less than two feet between the front row and the edge of the stage (and the dancers), creating an absolute minimum of distance between performer and audience. Given these constaints, the range of motion found in these dances is necessarily restrained (don’t expect somersaults in the air) but the dances are lively, and are skillfully executed. Each dance features its own unique costume, from red flounced Gypsy skirts, to Balkan tunics and puttees, to the riding boots worn by the broad-striding male member of the “Azerbaijani” duo (which the reviewer at first took to be a Cossack dance).

Highlights of this diverse performance included a “Shaman dance” by a solo female dancer dressed in a long white robe, who supplied a periodic cadence to her flowing dance movements by falling backwards onto the ground. In the dark, with fluorescent highlights on her robe, the dancer appeared to be collapsing – or vanishing – into a heap of clothes. If audience response is anything to go on, one of the most successful performers was the solo female belly dancer, who seemed able to manipulate every individual muscle fiber in her torso, and drew great applause (and a few good-humored wolf whistles). The loudest applause of the evening, however, was won by the male belly dancer, who despite his larger frame was nearly a match for his female colleague in suppleness and flexibility, and who – surprisingly – performed with a full beard.

Those seeking indoor entertainment while the weather is still cold could do far worse than attend the Hodjapasha Turkish Dance Show, which affords a good opportunity to learn about the local dance traditions of Turkey and the surrounding regions.

Hodjapasha Culture Center, Ankara Caddesi Hocapaşa Hamam Sok No: 3.B, Sirkeci; P: (0212) 511 46 26 / 36

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/a-grab-bag-of-anatolian-dance-at-hodjapasha-culture-center-509.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/a-grab-bag-of-anatolian-dance-at-hodjapasha-culture-center-509.html Wed, 22 Feb 2012 17:06:00 +0200
<![CDATA[A Home for Contemporary Art at art ON]]> In recent years, the neighborhood known as Akaretler has become downtown Beşiktaş’s answer to gallery havens such as Nişantaşı or Beyoğlu. With branches of already-existing galleries like Galerist and C.A.M, as well as Akaretler-specific galleries like Rampa, Autoban, and Artlimits, Akaretler possesses at least half a dozen (and counting) vibrant new galleries, nearly all of them within shouting distance of each other in the picturesque row houses of Şair Nedim Caddesi.

One of the more recent additions is art ON, which has been at Number 4 Şair Nedim Caddesi since March 2011. The gallery was originally supposed to be located at Number 10 (on in Turkish), which is how it acquired its name; by coincidence, O and N are also the first initials of gallery owners Oktay and Nil Duran – and of course spell the English word “on.”

As a gallery, art ON is small (compared, for example, to its neighbor Rampa), consisting of a single floor with four rooms. Of these, one is used as office space (as is the basement floor) and one as a project room, leaving a small front room with a display window, and a larger room behind it, as gallery space. art ON’s small size and intimate atmosphere make it possible to focus carefully on, say, half a dozen works, without feeling impelled to stay in constant motion as one does at museums and large shows. (That’s not to say that art ON can’t host more than one artist at a time: four of the seven shows that have taken place at the gallery since its opening have been group shows). art ON has exhibited artworks in many different media – painting, photography, sculpture, and new media; the gallery’s director, Sinem Yılmaz,particularly aims to showcase the work of early-career artists.

Our visit to the gallery coincided with the current exhibition For a Moment by young artist Sümer Sayın, also one of the participants in the group show CROSSROADS at art ON last year. (Yılmaz prefers to have artists take part in group shows at first, prior to having their own solo shows). The fewer than a dozen pieces in For a Moment have been well chosen and afford ample material for careful reflection. One section features acrylic on canvas works that play games with geography, such as the ironically-titled “The World is Round,” featuring an incomplete segment of a globe perched cerebellum-like upon a pedestal for our apparent edification, or “The Country of Transition,” in which a long strip of territory shaped like an ECG readout suggests gerrymandering or Bantustan-ing taken to an extreme. The wall drawing “Within the System 2” also brilliantly summons the image of a world map through nothing more than a series of quadrilaterals of varying size, as well as fluid outlines that – on closer inspection – have nothing in common with the actual coastlines of the world’s continents.

There are also a number of other sculptures and prints, plus Sayın’s signature “kinetic installations.” One of these, the cryptically-titled “Yes,” occupies the small display-window room, and consists of what look like the twitching segments of a digital clock. If one waits long enough, however, these segments are transformed into the word YES for a brief moment. This, according to art critic Andreas Schlaegel, is the “moment” referred to by the show’s title: “one surprising and brief moment…when things just click, and everything seems to make sense, the individual elements align and form the ultimate affirmative…it makes you want to wait, like a bride at a wedding, for the magical word to appear.”

The presence of an artwork in a gallery display window, where it can be viewed just as easily from outside the gallery as inside (or, in some spaces, more easily), raises provocative questions about the role of art in public life. Admission to art ON, as with the vast majority of galleries, is free, thus making this enclosed space – partly visible from the street, yet distinct from it – something not quite private and not quite public. It should be said in this connection that art ON’s staff are extremely welcoming, friendly, and willing to answer questions, and on the evening we visited, the gallery door was literally open to the street, despite the cold. Yılmaz has spoken with praise of the 2010 European Capital of Culture Agency’s Portable Art project, which brought contemporary art to cultural centers in neighborhoods like Ümraniye, Tuzla, Fatih, and Küçükçekmece, districts normally considered beyond the artistic pale.

Thanks to the efforts of galleries like art ON, contemporary art is gaining wider recognition in Turkey – and also becoming a lucrative business. In Yılmaz’s opinion, the most significant event of the past 10 years in the Istanbul art world was the sale of Burhan Doğançay’s Mavi Senfoni (Blue Symphony) for well over a million dollars, reflecting Turkey’s burgeoning national economy, with its collectors who are willing to pay large sums for art. Just ten years ago, says Yılmaz, most Turkish artists needed to have day jobs simply to make ends meet, a fact which was the subject of a 2007 show Art & Money curated by Marcus Graf. Nowadays, producing works of art is a career, not just “a hobby or part time job.”

art ON, Şair Nedim Caddesi No.4, Akaretler; P: (0212) 259 15 43

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/a-home-for-contemporary-art-at-art-on-496.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/a-home-for-contemporary-art-at-art-on-496.html Fri, 17 Feb 2012 13:47:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Istanbul Fashion Week Heats Up Freezing Winter]]> Istanbul Fashion Week is a hot ticket event, gaining a wider global audience with each passing season, helped in part by more international celebrities hitting the runways. While the winter shows don’t tend to attract as much international media as the summer shows, the Fall/Winter 2013 collections nevertheless reflected Istanbul’s growing importance on the global fashion stage. The opening show for the season was Gamze Saraçoğlu, while the Atıl Kutoğlu show on that same evening was the focus of the most media attention thanks to celebrity factor.

Other designers who showed their collection include Tuvana Büyükçınar, Niyazi Erdoğan, Erol Albayrak, Nejla Güvenç,Cengiz Abazoğlu, Mehtap Elaidi, Özlem Kaya, and Arzu Kaprol. There were also several mixed shows, giving younger and up-and-coming designers a chance to showcase their collections.

There was a lot of buzz surrounding Atıl Kutoğlu’s opening night show, thanks in no small part to model Lizzie Jagger (daughter of Rolling Stone’s Mick Jagger) and singer Jermaine Jackson taking the stage to model Kutoğlu’s designs. Kutoğlu has gained an international following with his designs, and this collection once again featured his trademark sexy and hyper-feminine looks, with lots of leather, satin, and plunging necklines, with feathers and geometric rhinestones adding embellishment.

Gamze Saraçoğlu’s show started with sound of footsteps crunching in the snow and panting, which then turned into a beat. The first model appeared on the runway in a long and tight teal green dress, with a deep open V-neck and equally plunging neckline at the back. The sole embellishment was a brown leather belt, an outfit that set the tone for the rest of the collection. The colors started with deep teal green, then deep orange, neutral plaids, poppy orange, camel, and finally cream, all accentuated with brown leather belts and straps,and fur trim on collars, arms and even hips.

Many of the pieces in Saraçoğlu’s collection featured intricate paneling, while the sharp tailoring and use of gold buttons gave many of the outfits a military or equestrian feel. This collection had a lot of long tight dresses, with many of the looks serving as a departure from Saraçoğlu’s previous works. While Saraçoğlu has used paneling in the past, it was never with such geometric shapes. Some of the strongest pieces in the collection were outerwear, such as a grey wool coat with a brown leather belt and arm straps, and another similar hooded version, with fur finish around the sleeves, pockets, and hood.

Another standout collection was presented by SimayBülbül, the local media darling who is known for her work with leather and monotone neutral colors. Her Winter 2013 show reflected a change in direction for the designer - the silhouettes were much more refined and ladylike than what we are used to seeing from Bülbül. While her signature leather was still present, there was now also a lot of satin, fur, and sequins, creating a very retro look reminiscent of the 1930s. Indeed this collection was a lot more glamorous in a more traditional sense, with Bülbül taking her inspiration from Keriman Halis Ece, the Turkish fashion model and beauty queen who was crowned Miss Turkey in 1932 and passed away earlier this year.

All in all, last week’s IFW was an important step in Istanbul’s fashion evolution, establishing Turkish designers yet again as talents to watch out for.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/istanbul-fashion-week-heats-up-freezing-winter-497.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/istanbul-fashion-week-heats-up-freezing-winter-497.html Tue, 14 Feb 2012 19:18:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Istanbul Fashion Week is Coming Up!]]> The last Istanbul Fashion Week (IFW), which was held between 7-11 September 2011, marked the fifth IFW that took Istanbul by storm with the dazzling and daring designs of Turkish designers. (Take a look at our picks from the catwalk here).

The next Istanbul Fashion Week will take place between8-11February 2012, showcasing the 2013 Fall/Winter collections of a number of Turkish designers and ready-to-wear brands.

The 4-day marathon will kick off with Gamze Saraçoğlu at the IFW Tent in Odakule (at the parking lot of the TRT Building in Tepebaşı), followed by Berinza, Tuvana Büyükçınar, and Atıl Kutoğlu. The first day will end with Zeynep Erdoğan and Günseli Türkay’s show at the W Hotel. The second day will start off with a group show (Nihan Peker, Beste Gürel, and Tuba Benian) at the IFW Tent, and continue with Simay Bülbül, Özlem Kaya, and end with Niyazi Erdoğan’s show at the W Hotel. Erol Albayrak will kick-start the shows on the third day, followed by Studio Kaprol and adL + Cengiz Abazoğlu. A workshop by Machka will also be held on the day for those interested in hearing the brand’s story from its owners. On the final day of IFW, the catwalk will host a group show (Şafak Tokur, Çiğdem Akın, and İpek Arnas), followed by Nejla Güvenç, Avva, Mehtap Elaidi, and Giovane G. Designers.

To see the complete catwalk schedule, click here.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/istanbul-fashion-week-is-coming-up-480.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/istanbul-fashion-week-is-coming-up-480.html Fri, 03 Feb 2012 15:13:00 +0200
<![CDATA[From Konstantiniyye to Istanbul]]> A panel on the upper floor of the Pera Museum’s new show, From Konstantiniyye to Istanbul: Photographs of the Anatolian Shore of the Bosphorus, contains a quotation from Turkish novelist Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar’s 1946 work Beş Şehir (Five Cities), in which Tanpınar reflects on memory, the past, and the changing physical faces of cities. According to Tanpınar, in the normal course of events “each city is transformed every three to four hundred years.” In the case of Istanbul, however, this transformation has occurred prematurely: “we have managed to lose even the most recent of pasts[.]” The metamorphosis already apparent to Tanpinar at mid-century has greatly accelerated since then, with many once rural or semi-rural neighborhoods on Istanbul’s periphery now become overpopulated cities-within-cities.

The show, with its collection of black-and-white photographs ranging in date from the 1860s to the early years of the Republic, reveals just how much the city has changed over a century and a half. Photos by approximately a dozen different photographers are on display, in addition to a large number of anonymous images; the work of Ottoman photographer Pascal Sebah (of Sebah & Joaillier) is particularly well-represented. The show, which makes no attempt at covering all areas of Istanbul, focuses exclusively on the Asian shore of the Bosphorus, from Paşalimanı/Kuzguncuk all the way to the mouth of the Black Sea at Anadolu Kavağı. The curators’ decision to begin here (and not further down the coast) is an appropriate one, since it is only north of downtown Üsküdar that one begins to feel one is not quite living in the city.

Information panels provide generous amount of detail about the history of these neighborhoods, many of which (e.g. Beykoz) were semi-independent from the rest of Istanbul until well into the 19th century.The exhibition is particularly informative about the names of the different neighborhoods (there are no fewer than 18 of these between Kuzguncuk and Anadolu Kavağı) and their origins. Anadolu Kavağı apparently refers not to the modern Turkish word kavak (poplar), but to an older kavak which meant “a place where customs duties were collected.” Beykoz, which looks like it means “the Bey’s walnut,” may in fact be Bey kos, “the Bey’s village” – kos being the Persian word for “village.”

Yet it is the photographs themselves – depicting long-vanished modes of life – that evoke the city’s past most tellingly. Ottoman-era ağaç evleri (wooden houses), one of the saddest casualties of Istanbul’s urban transformation, are thankfully much in evidence in these photographs. In a pair of 1865 photos by Pascal Sebah, a trio of veiled female picnickers are conveyed to the top of Yuşa Hill...by ox-drawn carriage. A photo of the Mihrişah Valide Sultan Çeşmesi in Küçüksu contains a shepherd with his sheep – which you probably won’t find there today – and a man selling simit (which you will). Paddle-steamers, the ancestors of today’s Bosphorus ferries, feature in a number of photos; a picture-postcard of the Kuzguncuk İskelesi, like the old postcards sold at second-hand bookshops, has captions in the standard trio of Ottoman Turkish, English, and comically transliterated French. (The French title for this one is Débarcadère de Couscoundjouk).

An amusing pastime at a show of this kind is toexamine a photo– ignoring technical issues like black-and-white versus color – and, without peeking at the caption, ask yourself: what is the earliest or latest date this photograph could have been taken? The presence in a Sebah photo of men in şalvar trousers and fezes dates the image to the pre-Atatürk period, as surely as a public inscription in the Latin alphabet would have dated it to after 1928. A view from Paşalimanı across the water to Beşiktaş and Taksim shows only the horizontal bulk of the Taşkışla – now a campus of Istanbul Technical University – on the hillside, without the Marmara Hotel or Ceylan Intercontinental. Cutoff date: late 1960s. The better your knowledge of Istanbul’s history, geography, and culture, the more precise your estimates will be.

The thrill of recognizing a familiar place in a photo taken decades earlier is akin to the thrill of seeing its satellite image on Google Earth: it is the same, and yet different. Of all the neighborhoods in the show, the reviewer was most curious to see the photographs of Kuzguncuk, where he had once lived himself. Though there were no pictures of İcadiye Caddesi, and very few of central Kuzguncuk in general, it was pleasing to find one of the waterside Üryanizade Mescidi, with its unmistakable gazebo-like minaret. Unfortunately, the show contained no photos of the gargantuan, centuries-old plane tree in Çengelköy, which may date back to before the conquest of the city.

While not all the photographs in a show of this size can be of equal interest, a number of them stood out in the reviewer’s mind, such as Sebah’s photo of the Beykoz Kasrı, looming above a Bosphorus so still as to look like a meadow of grass; Guillaume Berggren’s picture of the Kıbrıslılar Yalısı in Kandilli, in which the fading of the print made the opposite shore appear as though in a foggy haze; and a group of sailboats in Beykoz that looked for all the world like Viking ships. Go see From Konstantiniyye to Istanbul, and you are sure to come up with half a dozen of your own favorites. The show – with its nostalgic and at times striking images of a now-vanished city – forms the perfect accompaniment to a booklike Orhan Pamuk’s nonfiction workIstanbul: Memories and the City (which should ideally be read beforehand) and is well worth a few hours of your time.

Pera Müzesi; Meşrutiyet Caddesi No. 141, Tepebaşı; P: (0212) 334 99 00

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/from-konstantiniyye-to-istanbul-476.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/from-konstantiniyye-to-istanbul-476.html Tue, 31 Jan 2012 11:32:00 +0200
<![CDATA[!f Istanbul 2012]]> Since 2001, the !f Istanbul International Independent Film Festival has provided Istanbul cinephiles with the opportunity to see independent films from all corners of the globe, by well-known and emerging directors alike. The !f Festival – which also occurs yearly in Ankara, and, starting this year, in İzmir as well – will be running in Istanbul between the 16th and the 26th of February.

The categories for the films in !f Istanbul are different every year; this year’s categories are as follows: !f Inspired, Hit Films, !f Music, Fantastic Films, People Power, Rainbow Films, Home, Trip, e-xperiments, !f Cult, Insomnia, !f Special Screenings, ACID 20BDay, Spotlight on Sundance, and !f Shorts.

Highlights of the festival include UK filmmaker James Marsh’s 2011 documentary Project Nim, about the famous signing chimpanzee Nim Chimpsky; Tamer Ezzat, Ayten Amin, and Amr Salama’s Tahrir 2011: The Good, the Bad and the Politician, about last year’s political upheaval in Egypt; past films by award-winning directors like Thailand’s Apichatpong Weerasethakul; and many more.

The eight films in the !f Inspired category, all by emerging directors, will also be in competition for a prize for Most Inspired Director, judged by a jury consisting of Turkish director Yeşim Ustaoğlu, film critics Andrea Picard and Mark Adams, critic/director Jonathan Caouette, and Egyptian actor/activist Khaled Abol Naga; the winner will receive a prize of $15,000.

This year the main films in the !f Festival will be screened at the following Istanbul cinemas: AFM Budak Caddebostan, AFM Fitaş (Salons 1 and 4), AFM İstinyePark, and Cinebonus Maçka G-Mall. A full program is available on the !f Istanbul website, along with detailed descriptions of the films being screened. In addition, there will be a series of special screenings, talks, panels, workshops, and concerts over the course of the festival, at various Istanbul clubs, restaurants, galleries, and cultural centers. Information about these events can be found on the !f Istanbul website.

Tickets range from 7 TL to 16 TL, and can be purchased starting February 3rd at www.mybilet.com (where there is a 10\\\\\% early bird discount from the 3rd to the 5th); by credit card starting February 6th at Turkuazzo and most AFM locations throughout the city; and by cash or credit card starting February 11th at the cinemas where the films will be screened (except for Cinebonus Maçka G-Mall, where they will be sold on the day of screening).

AFM Budak Caddebostan; Caddebostan Kültür Merkezi, Haldun Taner Sok. No:11, Caddebostan; P: (0216) 358 02 02

AFM Fitaş; İstiklal Cad. Fitaş Pasajı, Beyoğlu; P: (0212) 345 62 45

AFM İstinyePark; İstinye Bayırı Cad. İstinye; P: (0212) 345 62 45

Cinebonus Maçka G-Mall; Kadırgalar Cad. No.3 Vişnezade Mahallesi, Maçka; P: (0212) 232 44 40

SALT Beyoğlu; İstiklal Caddesi 136, Beyoğlu; P: (0212) 377 42 00

Babylon; Asmalı Mescit Mh. Şehbender Sk 3; P: (0212) 292 73 68

Ghetto; Kamer Hatun Caddesi 10, Beyoğlu; P: (0212) 251 75 01

Kiki; Sıraselviler Cad. No: 42, Cihangir; P: (0212) 243 53 73

Tütün Deposu; Lüleci Hendek Caddesi Koltukçular Çıkmazı No.1, Tophane; P: (0212) 292 39 56

Zencefil; Kurabiye Sok. No:3, Beyoğlu; P: (0212) 243 82 34

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/f-istanbul-2012-473.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/f-istanbul-2012-473.html Thu, 26 Jan 2012 14:55:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Istanbul Music Festival Turns 40!]]> Since 1973, İKSV’s annual Istanbul Music Festival has given classical music lovers a chance to attend live performances by renowned soloists like Itzhak Perlman, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Joshua Bell, Cecilia Bartoli, and Lang Lang, and by international symphony orchestras under the direction of conductors like Lorin Maazel, Daniel Barenboim, and Christoph Eschenbach.

This year – the 40th anniversary of İKSV – the festival will feature 23 unique concerts from May 31st to June 29th, at eight different locations. In addition to the Aya İrini Müzesi (Hagia Irene Museum), which has been a venue for the festival since its inception, the concerts will take place at the Haliç Congress Center, the Lütfi Kırdar International Convention and Exhibition Center, the Dutch Consulate, the Süreyya Opera House, Cemal Reşit Rey Concert Hall, the Rectorate of Istanbul University, and the Istanbul Archaeological Museums.

The special theme for this year’s festival is “Hope and Heroes,” with performances of works like Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto and Eroica Symphony, Strauss’s Don Quixote, and Ravel’s Piano Concerto for Left Hand, specially composed for pianist, WWI veteran, and right-arm amputee Paul Wittgenstein. Another special concert, “Women Heroes of Music,” will feature pieces by female composers both Turkish and international, past and present, from Clara Schumann and Fanny Mendelssohn to Sofia Gubaidulina.

Other highlights include world premieres of original works commissioned for the festival: Turkish pianist/composer Fazıl Say’s Mesopotamia Symphony and Georgian composer Giya Kancheli’s New Symphonic Opus. There will also be a concert of pieces by Berg, Bartók, and Liszt by French pianist Hélène Grimaud, who will be making her first appearance at the festival. The festival’s opening concert at the Haliç Congress Center will feature a performance of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony by the Borusan Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra under the direction of Sascha Goetzel.

The full program of concerts is now available online on IKSV’s website. Tickets, ranging in price from 30 TL to 400 TL, can be purchased from Biletix and IKSV, and will also be available for purchase during the festival at booths on the grounds of the Hagia Irene Museum.

Festival Highlights:

Women Heroes of Music

On June 8, a concert dedicated to pioneering female musicians in Turkey as well as those lighting up the international music scene will take you through the sentimental pieces of Dilhayat Kalfa, Ethel Smyth, Fehime Sultan, Fanny Mendelssohn, Neveser Kökdeş, Leyla Saz, Amy Beach, Clara Schumann, Radife Erten, Lili Boulanger, Sofia Gubaidulina, and Kevser Hanım at the Süreyya Opera House.

Conducted by Hakan Şensoy, the Istanbul Chamber Orchestra will be playing with a female-only cast, consisting of Cihat Aşkın on violin, Cana Gürmen on piano, Şehvar Beşiroğlu on qanun, Neva Özgen onkemenche, Birol Yayla on tambur, İvan Çelak on accordion, and Yaprak Sayar and Pervin Çakar on vocals.

Giya Kancheli: A World Premiere

Pioneering Giorgian composer Giya Kancheli will present the world premiere of his symphonic piece, commissioned by the festival, on June 11 at the Hagia Irene Museum. This concert was supposed to feature the late cellist Benyamin Sönmez, who passed away towards the end of 2011, but will instead be dedicated to Sönmez. The long-awaited symphonic piece will be presented by the Borusan Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Andres Mustonen. The Warsaw Philharmonic Choir, Georgian countertenor Mamuka Gaganidze, soloist Gidon Kremer on viola, and soloist Giedre Dirvanauskaite on cello will also take part in the concert. The night’s program will include Giya Kancheli’s Diplipito for Cello, New Symphonic Opus, and Styx for Viola.

Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin

On June 16, the Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin, conducted by Sir Roger Norrington, will take the stage at the Lütfi Kırdar Convention & Exhibition Centre with piano virtuoso Hüseyin Sermet, under the “Hope and Heroes” theme of the festival. The night’s program will consist of Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy’s Overture to Ruy Blas, Op.95, MWV M11, Maurice Ravel’s Piano Concerto for the Left Hand in D Major, and Ludwig van Beethoven’s Symphony in E flat Major, No.3, Op.55, “Eroica”,which impeccably communicates the idea of heroism through victory and tragedy.

Don Quixote From ISSO & Daniel Müller-Schott

On June 20,the Istanbul State Symphony Orchestra, conducted by ChristophAltstaedt, will perform with Daniel Müller-Schott, the new cello star who frequently performs in the world’s most prestigious festivals. Performed at the Hagia Irene Museum, the night’s repertoire will includeRichard Strauss’s EinHeldenleben, Op.40 and Don Quixote, Op. 35.

Hélène Grimaud

Hélène Grimaud is one of the most prominent pianists of our time. She will perform in Istanbul for the first time on June 22, at the Hagia Irene Museum, as part of the Istanbul Music Festival. Grimaud regularly takes the stage at important international festivals, performs with prominent orchestras, such as the Berlin Philharmonic and the Munich Philharmonic, and collaborates with some of the greatest conductors, including Kurt Masur, Bernard Haitink, and Esa-PekkaSalonen. Due to health issues, Grimaud couldn’t make it to Istanbul in 2006 and 2008, but she is finally here to play Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Piano Sonata in A minor, No.8, KV310/300d, Alban Berg’s Piano Sonata, Op.1, BélaBartók’s Romanian Folk Dances, SZ56, and Franz Liszt’s Piano Sonata in B minor, S178.

A World Premiere by Fazıl Say

Turkish piano virtuoso and composer Fazıl Say will be performing with the Borusan Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Gürer Aykal on June 23 at the Haliç KongreMerkezi. The concert program will consist of Beethoven’s Piano Concerto in E flat Major, No.5, Op.73, “Emperor”, and the world premiere of Say’s Symphony, No.2, Op.38, “Mesopotamia”, which was commissioned by the Istanbul Music Festival. Say will be accompanied by Bülent Evcil on bass flute, Çağatay Akyol on bass recorder, and Carolina Eyck on theremin.

This article was updated on 4 May, 2012.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/istanbul-music-festival-turns-40-471.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/istanbul-music-festival-turns-40-471.html Wed, 25 Jan 2012 18:29:00 +0200
<![CDATA[IKSV Celebrates 40 Years of Excellence]]>

The Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts (IKSV) is celebrating its 40th anniversary this year with an exciting line up of special performances and projects. Apart from its usual extensive list of festivals, including the film, theatre, music and jazz festivals, IKSV has also planned some special performances and projects to honor this milestone.

IKSV is an independent, non-profit organization founded 40 years ago by 17 businessmen and art appreciators under the leadership of Dr. Nejat F. Eczacıbaşı with the goal of presenting the finest examples of global culture and arts to Istanbulites, and to transform the city into a center for international arts and culture.

IKSV’s first arts festival, then called the International Istanbul Festival, was held in 1973. While the focus was on classical music in the early years, over time and as public interest grew, the festival expanded to include film screenings, theatre productions, jazz and ballet performances, and art exhibitions held in historic venues. Today IKSV organizes four international festivals, two biennials, and many more exclusive events throughout the year. This year IKSV will also introduce Istanbul’s first Design Biennial.

In honor of their 40 year anniversary, IKSV is preparing a special book that will outline IKSV’s transformation and important milestones in its development, as well as memories of the organization. Contributors to the book will include IKSV’s founders, employees, supporters, and artists. There will also be two special events. The first will be a performance by La Furadels Baus, the renowned Catalan theatrical group who will perform the world premiere of their new project “Istanbul, Istanbul” commissioned by IKSV, on June 21 and June 22. The second performance will be held on September 27; the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra will perform at the Haliç Convention Center, conducted by Sir Simon Rattle with internationally-acclaimed Turkish musicians Efe and Fora Baltacıgil partaking in the performance.

In parallel to these events, IKSV will also organize events in honor of the 400th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties between Turkey and the Netherlands. These will include performances by the Nederlands Dans Theatre group, known as one of the most innovative modern dance companies in the world, on June 14 and 15. There will also be special initiatives throughout the year celebrating “2012 Year of Chinese Culture in Turkey” including a special selection of Chinese films that will appear in the film festival and a performance by the Beijing Opera at the 18th Istanbul Theatre Festival.

While the initial goal of IKSV was to organize an international arts festival in Istanbul, it is clear from its very long list of achievements and current festivals and events that it has far surpassed this first goal. Looking back over the past 40 years, it is clear how instrumental IKSV has been in putting Istanbul on the global cultural map.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/iksv-celebrates-40-years-of-excellence-466.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/iksv-celebrates-40-years-of-excellence-466.html Mon, 23 Jan 2012 12:10:00 +0200
<![CDATA[A Captivating Realism @ Rahmi Koç Museum]]> This exhibit of paintings by Greek painter Georgios Maroudas, at the Rahmi M. Koç Museum, takes as its subject the colorful and intricately-patterned textiles of Anatolia. The 21 canvases in the exhibit – featuring carpets and kilims draped over tables, or hanging from a clothesline next to a pair of jeans – constitute a beautiful series of still lifes, whose unconventional choice of subject matter is testament to Maroudas’s ingenuity. The title of the exhibit, Büyüleyici bir Gerçeklik, means “A Captivating Realism,” perhaps reflecting Maroudas’s belief that the artistry of the carpets and kilims he has painted – woven by nomad women from Anatolia – outdo any of his own accomplishments. In Maroudas’s words: “In my opinion these woman are the true artists. All I have done is copy them.”

When: December 20 – February 19

Where: Rahmi Koç Museum;Hasköy Caddesi No 27 Sütlüce; P:(0212) 369 66 00

How much: From the venue: 12.50 TL; 6 TL (students).

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/a-captivating-realism-rahmi-koc-museum-465.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/a-captivating-realism-rahmi-koc-museum-465.html Thu, 19 Jan 2012 16:53:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Turkey and Holland: 400 Years]]> 2012 marks the 400th anniversary of the arrival of the firstDutch ambassadorto the Ottoman Empire, and of the beginning of diplomatic and commercial ties between these two world powers. To commemorate this anniversary, there will be a number of important exhibitions at Istanbul galleries and museums over the next few months, which will afford Istanbulites an opportunity to view priceless artworks from collections in the Netherlands, by artists living today as well as by Old Masters like Rembrandt and Vermeer.

Sultans, Merchants, Painters: An Overview of Ottoman-Dutch Relations in its 400th Year

Sultans, Merchants, Painters: An Overview of Ottoman-Dutch Relations in its 400th Year, organized in collaboration with the Amsterdam Museum, will examine the political, social, and cultural ties between Turkey and the Netherlands, with paintings and other artworks depicting both Istanbul and Amsterdam at many stages of their respective histories, as well as important historical figures from both places. The exhibition will include a reconstruction of the Levandse Handel (Levant Trade) chamber in Amsterdam – once the focal point of much of the Netherlands’ trade with the Ottoman Empire – with many of the paintings and charts (on loan from the Rijksmuseum) that were displayed there. After running at the Pera Museum, Sultans, Merchants, Painters will travel to the Amsterdam Museum later in the year.

When: January 21 – April 1

Where: Pera Müzesi (Pera Museum)

How much: From the venue: 10 TL; 5 TL (students).

Willem Harbers: Labogrigneur and Satellite Works

The exhibit entitled Labogrigneur ve Uydu İşleri, by Dutch artist Willem Harbers, is currently running at Galeri Zilberman with the support of the Embassy of the Netherlands. The miniature sculptures in the exhibit, made out of various materials like steel, plastic, and marble, all vaguely resemble scientific instruments or apparatuses of some kind, yet are just on this side of abstraction and non-functionality, underscoring the fact that they have been made for observation rather than actual use. Of these ponderous, somewhat clumsy-looking, yet elegant works, Harbers has stated: “A sculptor is by definition slow, the material with which they work is slow, and the beholder can only enjoy the work if he or she takes their time, stays with the sculpture, walks around it, slows their step, views the the work from all angles, or otherwise: becomes slow themselves.”

When: January 6 - 28

Where: Galeri Zilberman

How much: Free

La La La Human Steps: A Selection from the Boijmans Van Beuningen Collection

Istanbul Modern will be hosting a selection of artworks from the Rotterdam’s Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum, renowned for its extensive collection of art ranging from the 16th century to the present day. The exhibition, curated by Sjarel Ex (the director of the Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum), will be in three parts. “Encounters in History” is comprised of artworks depicting commercial, diplomatic, and military encounters between the West and the Ottoman Empire, in addition to works like 16th century painter Joachim Patinir’s stunning Bosch-like canvas “The Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah.” “Personal Encounters” contains works, chiefly in the medium of film, dealing with comic as well as serious aspects of contemporary life as experienced by individuals, with contributions by Finland’s Salla Tykka, South Africa’s Zwelethu Mthethwa, Bruce Nauman and Vito Acconci from the USA, and others. Finally, “Public Encounters” deals with political and other conflicts in today’s world, such as the recent war in the former Yugoslavia (by Albanian Anri Sala and Bosnian-Herzegovinian Šejla Kamerić); the situation of intellectuals in China (by Yang Fudong); gang violence (by Frenchman Cyprien Gaillard), and more. There will also be a video of a performance by the Canadian dance company La La La Human Steps, from which the exhibition takes its name.

When: February 17 – May 5

Where: İstanbul Modern Sanat Müzesi (Istanbul Museum of Modern Art)

How much: From the venue: 14 TL; 7 TL (concession).

İstanbul Eindhoven – SALTVanabbe: Post ‘89

The exhibition İstanbul Eindhoven – SALTVanabbe is a joint venture between SALT and the Van Abbemuseum in the Netherlands. The first part of the exhibition will focus on artwork produced in the post-Cold War years following 1989; it will be followed later this year by a second installment focusing on art in the period from 1968 to 1989, and then a third dealing with pre-1968 art. All artworks in İstanbul Eindhoven – SALTVanabbe: Post ’89, with the exception of those by local Turkish artists İnci Eviner, Leyla Gediz, Özlem Günyol & Mustafa Kunt, and Cevdet Erek, are on loan from the Van Abbemuseum collection. Highlights of this exhibition, comprising works in a wide range of different media and techniques, include the photographic portraits by Rineke Dijkstra and portraits in painting by Leyla Gediz; Allen Ruppersberg’s fluorescent Singing Posters (as well as his textual art project concerning Allen Ginsberg’s Howl); the eery multiple-exposure images of Douglas Gordon; and much more.

When: January 27 – April 6

Where: SALT Beyoğlu, SALT Galata

How much: Free

Rembrandt and the Golden Age of Dutch Painting

2012 is also the 10th anniversary of the opening of the Sakıp Sabancı Museum to the public. To mark this double anniversary, the museum will be hosting a major art exhibition entitled Rembrandt ve Hollanda Resminin Altın Çağı (Rembrandt and the Golden Age of Dutch Painting). Focusing on the works of 17th century masters like Rembrandt, Vermeer, Frans Hals and Jan Steen, the exhibition will contain paintings as well as sculptures; the majority of the pieces in the exhibition will be on loan from Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum, but there will also be works from other museums and private collections in the Netherlands and the United States. In the words of Dr. Nazan Ölçer, the director of the Sabancı Museum, “Holland is a nation which made its first trial of democracy and a republican system of governmentin the 17th century. During this period Holland became extremely wealthy through trade, and the reforms brought about by that trade benefited artists. Incredible family and group portraits, nature paintings, and landscape paintings were created. Most of these were hidden away in homes, or adorned the walls of city councils. Today, these are the chief resource of Holland’s major museums.”

When: February 22 – June 10

Where: Sakıp Sabancı Müzesi

How much: From the venue: 10 TL; 7 TL (groups of 10 or more); 3 TL (students and teachers); free (children 14 and under, senior citizens, etc.)

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/turkey-and-holland-400-years-454.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/turkey-and-holland-400-years-454.html Tue, 10 Jan 2012 18:36:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Newest Art Exhibits of 2012]]> This promises to be a great year for art-lovers in Istanbul. Here are five exhibits that will be opening within the first two months of 2012 at local art galleries and cultural centers.

Julian Rosefeldt: Asylum

German artist Julian Rosefeldt’s short film entitled Asylum deals in often tongue-in-cheek fashion with the issue of guest workers in Germany, and the treatment to which they are subjected by society at large, in this comic, sometimes absurd portrait of “the losers and the left-out individuals of modern societies.”

When: January 5 – 27

Where: Dirimart Garibaldi

How much: Free

Daniel Canogar: River of History

Spanish artist Daniel Canogar’s exhibit at Borusan Contemporary (entitled Tarih Nehri in Turkish), consists of five multi-media installations focusing on the theme of water, in particular its use and over-use in today’s resource-scarce world. River of History is curated by Kathleen Forde, Curator for Time-Based Arts at the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC) in Troy, NY.

When: January 14 – April 15

Where: Borusan Contemporary

How much: 10 TL; 7 TL (groups of 10 or more); 5 TL (discount)

Jose Maria Mellado: Enigmatic Landscapes

Spanish photographer Jose Maria Mellado’s Enigmatic Landscapes, at Elipsis Gallery in Tophane, is his first solo show in Turkey. The color photographs in this appropriately-titled exhibit are a breathtaking collection of natural vistas in which humanity – or whatever scant traces exist of human habitation – is dwarfed by Mellado’s towering hillsides, deep ravines, and vertiginous plateaus. Even in a photograph of an ostensibly ordinary gas station / convenience store, the lowering clouds above are the photographer’s true focus.

When: January 12 – March 1

Where: Elipsis Gallery

How much: Free

Michael Snow: Solo Snow

The multi-media exhibition at Akbank Sanat punningly entitled Solo Snow, by versatile Canadian artist and avant-garde filmmaker Michael Snow, is co-curated by Ali Akay and Louise Déry, with the collaboration of Akbank Sanat and Le Fresnoy (Studio national des arts contemporains), one of the most prestigious art spaces in France. Over the course of his long and productive career, Snow has had his art exhibited at venues like the Sidney, São Paulo, and Whitney Biennials; his work, which typically performs experiments with form and temporality, has been described as “illusionistic.”

When: January 18 – February 25

Where: Akbank Sanat

How much: Free

Matthieu Paley: Those Forgotten on the Roof of the World

Photographer Matthieu Paley, known for his work for magazines like Géo and National Geographic, takes a voyage to the Pamir Mountains of Afghanistan – known as the “Roof of the World” – in this exhibit at the Fransız Kültür Merkezi. Paley’s wide-angle lens produces stunning shots of the Little Pamir landscape, and his portraits of the Kyrgyz tribespeople who inhabit this inhospitable region are no less impressive. The pieces in this exhibit form the basis of what will become a book of photographs to be published in November of this year.

When: February 22 – March 31

Where: Fransız Kültür Merkezi

How much: Free

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/newest-art-exhibits-of-2012-448.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/newest-art-exhibits-of-2012-448.html Fri, 06 Jan 2012 18:09:00 +0200
<![CDATA[And the winners are…]]> Congratulations to the 50 lucky winners who won a free guided tour of Istanbul Modern. If you see your name in either of the lists below, it means you’ve won! To secure your space, send us an email at info@theguideistanbul.com by Wednesday, January 11. For more information about the tour, click here.

Winners of the free guided tour on 15 January 2012 at 01:00pm:

ALPER UĞURAL

ARDA AYÇELİK

ANN MORGAN

DEMET YILMAZ

DENİZ SEZER

DİDEM YAYA İNCE

DİLEK ÖZKAN

EDA AYDOĞAN

EDA KAMHİ

JANA GROH

JUANI PIQUERAS

KEVIN MERRICK

GÜLRU GÖKER

GÜNEŞ ÖZKAN

İNCİ ÖZAY HATİPOĞLU

LARA KARASO

LESLEY DUDDEN

MAJ-BRITT RIIS-HANSEN

MANJA DENISE KOLLMAN

TÜLİN YALÇINALP

ÜNAL ŞENGÜN

YASEMİN UYGURMEN

YEŞİM OYMAK

YEŞİM TURANLI

SEVGİ DUMAN

Winners of the free guided tour on 22 January 2012 at 01:00pm:

AYŞE GÜLAY HAKYEMEZ

AYŞE YILMAZ

AYŞIL ZERRİN GÜNGÖR

BERİL DİKMEN

BUKET OĞUZ

BURAK ÖZDELİCE

BURCU KARAKELLE

CEREN ÖZOL

CEYDA CEYLAN

ÇİĞDEM ALPAKGİR

ESRA PAMUKSÜZER

EYUO TALİP

İZZETTİN AKÇAY

IRINA GOUT

IŞIL KILKIŞ

KADİR TAYFUN ÖKTEM

MIREL FANSA

ÖZLEM ENGİN

PELİN ATAY KURAN

PELİN ÇALIŞKAN

ROSLYN ELLEN

SELİN ABERA

SELİN KARAOSMANOĞLU

ŞEYDA CET

TUĞBA ESEN

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/and-the-winners-are-451.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/and-the-winners-are-451.html Fri, 06 Jan 2012 18:00:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Istanbul’s “Naive And Sentimental” Galleries]]> Boasting more than 300 galleries, Istanbul is truly a gem for art lovers. Apart from the Maçka– Nişantaşı– Teşvikiye triangle, the Beyoğlu, Tophane, and Akaretler neighborhoods have long been considered top art destinations. Next in line are Kadıköy and Sıraselviler.

“The feeling of destruction of the Ottoman Empire, the poverty and melancholy caused by the ruins have been things that defined Istanbul for me my entire life. Like every citizen of Istanbul, I spent my life either battling or eventually embracing this melancholy,” says Orhan Pamuk in his book Istanbul: Memories and the City. Indeed, every Istanbul resident, no matter if they were born here or settled her much later in life, is doomed to such melancholy, coupled with a constant desire to leave. But before you can lift a finger, this desire is overshadowed by the awareness that you could not live anywhere else. As Orhan Pamuk writes in the same book, not far from the first quote, “Life can’t be that awful. After all, you can take a walk by the Bosphorus.”

But Istanbul is much more than the Bosphorus, and you can discover a whole new world at any moment — by stepping into a gallery, arts institute, or museum, for example. No need to look further. In certain parts of town you will come across a museum, gallery, or arts initiative on every corner.

In 1933, the artists Zeki Faik İzer, Nurullah Berk, Elif Naci, Cemal Tollu, Abidin Dino, and Zühtü Müridoğlu formed the D Grubu (D Group) and set up their first exhibition at the hat shop under the historic Narmanlı Yurdu building in Beyoğlu. If these artists saw the city now, they would undoubtedly be joyfully surprised. While it must have been a totally different and potentially inspiring experience to set up an exhibition in a hat shop, galleries are necessary nowadays for artists to express and share their works and worlds.

FROM HUMBLE HAT SHOP BEGINNINGS…

Even though Turkey’s first gallery was opened by Isamil Hakkı Oygar in 1945, most art lovers consider Maya Sanat Galerisi(1951-1955), established by Adalet Cimcoz, the first spark in Istanbul’s art scene. This short-lived and legendary gallery not only exhibited and traded art, but also hosted countless inspiring gatherings in its time. Isn’t this what galleries are all about? They provide a space to exhibit, share, and discuss works of art, shaping the relationship between artists and the public.

In the 70s and 80s, artistic aspirations were burgeoning at the same time as the concept of “an industry of culture” began making its way into popular terminology and the country’s artistic works endeavored to reach audiences in the outside world: a dilemma fit for a naive and sentimental novelist. (One should read Pamuk’s last book The Naive and Sentimental Novelistto look further into this dilemma!) The 90s, to quote the curator René Block, were a true “Istanbul miracle”. The approach of this miracle could be sensed at the first Istanbul Biennial in 1987 and at the galleries in the Maçka– Nişantaşı – Teşvikiye triangle. Maçka Sanatand Galeri Nev, in particular, deserve extra credit for their contributions. So does the private sector: Garanti Platform, Proje 4L, Akbanksanat, Siemens Sanat, Kasa Galeri,and others used their capital to support contemporary art, Robin Hood-style. Although museums such as Sakıp Sabancı, Istanbul Modern, Pera, santralistanbul,and Borusan Contemporary have made the biggest impact in the last decade, our hearts are still with the independent galleries.

The 2001 economic crisis was an impetus for the new generation of galleries to support contemporary art and open up to the global art scene. Murat Pilevneli founded Galerist in 2004 in Teşvikiye, then moved the gallery, unwillingly, to Mısır Apartmanı. Here’s how he explains the situation: “The 2001 economic crisis toppled the established arts market. Works that had been sold for thousands of dollars became worthless overnight. This was a point of departure for contemporary art.” Curator Beral Madra sees it differently: “Art is sailing in the turbulent waters of global politics and economics. We are faced with a much more shrewd and elitist approach than the naive, idealist, and romantic atmosphere of the 1980s and 1990s.”

FROM TAKSIM SQUARE TO GALATA

Packed with food, shopping, and art options, Istiklal Avenue is an indispensable part of Istanbul. Walking from Taksim Square to Tünel, you can visit Akbanksanat for a quick look through its collection. Or simply head straight to the century-old Mısır Apartmanı. Take the elevator to the top floor and browse through the galleries as you make your way down: Galeri Nev, Galerist, CDA Project, Pi Artworks, and Galeri Zilberman. It’s hard to leave once you’re inside. A little further down Istiklal, you’ll come across another venue striving to make art a part of daily life: SALT, by Garanti. Just across from SALT, you can find ARTER, a project by the Vehbi Koç Foundation. Aiming to contribute to the country’s artistic production, the venue that recently hosted Patricia Piccinini is now hosting Kutluğ Ataman’s exhibition. Across the avenue, Borusan Müzik Evi can also be added to an art lover’s itinerary for its “Light and Matter” exhibitions. If you’re not exhausted by this point, you can visit Arte Istanbul at Kumbaracı Yokuşu and the many independent art events in the back alleys of Galata

TOPHANE PROVES ITS WORTH

Tophane, one of the most eccentric neighborhoods in Istanbul, with its back leaning against Istiklal Avenue and it’s worth its salt when it comes to the arts. The first spark was ignited on No. 5 Hayriye Avenue in 1998, when carpenter Armenak Usta’s workshop transformed into Apel, the most romantic gallery in Istanbul. Since 2008, many galleries, including the pioneers Outlet and NON, have opened in the neighborhood, one after the other. Galeri Outlet was vacated after an unpleasant incident during the opening of an exhibition one evening in September 2010. Now Outlet has resurrected as Pilot in the bohemian Cihangir neighborhood. Pg Art Gallery, Pi Artworks, Daire, Elipsis, NON, Rodeo, Depo, artSümer, and Galeri Manâ, all of which are situated along Boğazkesen Avenue in Tophane, are still welcoming art lovers.

AKARETLER IS BOOMING

In its heyday, Sıraevler in Akaretler hosted countless important names, including the court painter Fausto Zonaro. These days, the neighborhood is determined to become Istanbul’s new art and design hub. In addition to more design-oriented galleries such asartlimits, Autoban, and Derin Design, the area also hosts Galerist and Rampa, which are true temples of contemporary art. If you continue further up the hill and connect to the Maçka – Teşvikiye – Nişantaşı triangle, you should visit Mac Art, Çağla Cabaoğlu, Dirimart, and, Galeri x-ist, particularly if you’re interested in discovering young, up-and-coming talents. Last but not least, make sure to stop by Art On to see exhibitions by established international artists as well as young Turkish artists.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/istanbuls-naive-and-sentimental-galleries-441.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/istanbuls-naive-and-sentimental-galleries-441.html Wed, 28 Dec 2011 11:31:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Ending Soon! Art Exhibitions in Istanbul]]> 2011 is ending, and with it, a number of great art exhibits at galleries around town. Here are five exhibits you should see before they close at the end of December.

Emre Tandırlı: Sürpriztepe

The cityscape of Istanbul is famous both for the beauty of its panoramic views, and for the eyesore created by massive amounts of shabby prefabricated housing. Turkish painter Emre Tandırlı has managed to reconcile these two apparently contradictory aspects of Istanbul’s appearance in startling fashion, through a series of paintings whimsically entitled Sürpriztepe (Surprise Hill). The title of the exhibit, currently running at the Mabeyn Gallery in Beşiktaş, refers to the common practice of using the suffix –tepe in the names of Istanbul neighborhoods (many of which are located on hills).In Sürpriztepe, Tandırlı takes full advantage of the bright colors of Istanbul’s apartment buildings, which – in his meticulous compositions – seem to blend in perfectly with that of the sky at sunset, after dark, or on an overcast or wintery day.

Tandırlı has done for Istanbul’s housing blocks what the Impressionists, in their day, did for train stations and other seemingly unsightly features of modern life, conjuring up an unexpected beauty from them for all of us to appreciate. Sürpriztepe, true to its name, will fascinate and surprise you.

When: Until December 31

Where: Mabeyn Gallery

How much: Free

Suretin Sireti

Suretin Sireti, the Turkish title of the Pera Museum’s exhibition entitled Beyond the Apparent in English, refers to the surface appearance (suret) of existence, as well to the more intangible reality (siret) that lies beyond it. Curated by Zeynep Yasa Yaman, the exhibit brings to the public the modern/contemporary Turkish art collection of the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey, for the first time since the 1994 exhibition 1950-2000, which was exhibited at the Atatürk Cultural Center in Ankara. The current exhibition, taking up two floors of the Pera Museum’s gallery space, includes 60 works by 36 different artists born between 1905 and 1960, thus (like the previous exhibition in Ankara) comprising a retrospective of work by Turkish artists in the latter half of the 20th century. Among the artists represented in this show are Fikret Muallâ, Bedri Rahmi Eyüboğlu, Zeki Faik İzer, Tiraje Dikmen, Yüksel Arslan, Komet, Ömer Uluç, Adnan Çoker, Erol Akyavaş and Burhan Doğançay. The works on display, with their great diversity of subject matter and technique, recall those of such painters as Cézanne, Matisse, Kokoschka, and many more. Do not miss this exhibition, a veritable history of post-WWII Turkish art.

When: Until December 31

Where: Pera Müzesi

How much: 10 TL; 7 TL (groups of 10 or more); 5 TL (concession)

Michael Kenna: Magnum Silentium

Magnum Silentium, Latin for “a great silence,” is the name of the current exhibit at Elipsis Gallery by English photographer Michael Kenna. The stunning black-and-white photographs in the exhibit have been taken in such far-flung locales as Venice, Rio de Janeiro, the Sea of Okhotsk off Japan, the Pyramids of Giza, and China’s Anhui Province. With nary a human being in sight, darkness, clouds, mist, snow-clad hills, and silence combine to create the atmosphere of mystery and sublimity that is Kenna’s trademark. An exhibit not to be missed.

When: Until December 30

Where: Elipsis Gallery

How much: Free

Ceren Oykut: Mayom İçimde

Ceren Oykut’s new exhibit at Artsümer, Mayom İçimde, is a series of works in marker and ink brush depicting city scenes from Istanbul: stone, brick, concrete...Oykut creates Escher-like landscapes in which structures viewed from beneath – “from sea level” – are piled on top of each other in defiance of all physical laws. The title of Oykut’s exhibit, which translates approximately to “ready to go,” literally “with my bathing suit on beneath my clothes,” is a reference to the artist’s frustration at walking on the shores of the Bosphorus with a bathing suit and not being able to swim in this famous waterway. While the cityscape of early 21st century Istanbul may often be overwhelming, it is never boring – and, as always, it is a plentiful source of inspiration for artists like Oykut.

When: Until December 31

Where: artSümer

How much: Free

Sophie Calle: The Last Time, The First Time

The world-famous French artist Sophie Calle, born in 1953, is known for her series of provocative art projects, which have caused her to shadow complete strangers, to have herself shadowed, and to make telephone calls to names in an address book found on the street. Never one to fear embarking on a journey into others’ private worlds, Calle now enters the world of the (literally or metaphorically) blind with her new exhibit at the Sakıp Sabancı Museum entitled Son Kez, İlk Kez (The Last Time, The First Time.)

In the first part of the exhibit, called “The Last Time,” Calle asks 13 people who have lost their sight to describe the last thing they saw; Calle then presents photos both of her subjects and of the things they have described. Calle was apparently inspired to create this project by a well-known myth concerning the foundation of Istanbul, according to which the Greek colony of Chalcedon (now Kadıköy) was once named the “city of the blind” due to its colonists’ failure to settle on the more fertile site of Byzantium across the Bosphorus.

The second part of the exhibit is a video installation entitled “The First Time.” In this section Calle depicts the first encounter with the sea of Istanbulites who – as unimaginable as it may sound – have never seen it before in their lives. These touching video portraits of immigrants from Central and Eastern Anatolia who live cut off from the natural beauty of their new home perfectly complement Calle’s portraits of the visually disabled in part one.

For a full-length review of this exhibit, click here.

When: Until December 31

Where: Sakıp Sabancı Müzesi

How much: 10 TL; 7 TL (groups of 10 or more); 3 TL (students and teachers); free (children 14 and under, senior citizens, etc.)

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/ending-soon-art-exhibitions-in-istanbul-434.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/ending-soon-art-exhibitions-in-istanbul-434.html Thu, 22 Dec 2011 17:50:00 +0200
<![CDATA[20 Years of Design in Istanbul]]> In the last 20 years, design has not only been discovered in Istanbul but has also turned into such a big phenomenon that it has reached a threshold, and the term is now at risk of being worn out and overused. How and why this has happened is a long story. I will give a snapshot overview.

In the early 1990s, there were just a handful of design-oriented firms in Turkey, such as Koleksiyon, Nurus, Beymen, Vitra, Arçelik, and Beko. The professional organization of designers, ETMK (Industrial Designers’ Society of Turkey), was established in 1988 and emerged as one of the leading organizations in this sector after 1994. However, the key turning point for the rise of design in Turkey was the 1995 customs union between Turkey and the European Union, which forced Turkish companies to be more competitive in the market. Competition makes companies seek novelty: better and newer products. Turkish companies, no longer able to copy and reproduce foreign equipment, tools, and goods, began to recognize the power of original design and branding.

The consequences were twofold: the demand for Turkish design and designers increased, and renowned foreign designers were employed by companies wishing to gain a respected position in international markets. Fritz Frenkler, Anette Ponholzer for Nurus, and Ross Lovegrove for Vitra are just a few examples that come to mind. Designers’ Odyssey ‘98: The Adventures of Turkish Designers, a design exhibition accompanied by an international conference, was not only a nice welcome to the new millennium, but also served to stimulate design in Istanbul.

However, this rise of design was ruptured by two unfortunate catastrophes: the Gölcük earthquake in 1999, which claimed about 17,500 lives (according to official figures), and the 2001 economic crisis, which caused the collapse of several major Turkish banks.

Both of these events changed the design scene, in some ways for the better. As a result of the earthquake, the construction industry boomed, earthquake-safe housing schemes were developed, gated communities flourished, business and shopping centers proliferated, and high-rise buildings began to occupy the blue sky of the city, irreversibly denting the historical skyline of Istanbul. Obviously, these new residential and business spaces required new decorations, furniture, and accessories, which paved the way for an increasing number of design departments, journals, and a growing design industry.

In recent years, the world has noticed the achievements of internationally based Turkish designers such as Alev Ebuzziya, Ayşe Birsel, Defne Koz, Mirzat Koç, and Koray Özgen, and the overseas achievements of Turkish designers such as Oya Akman, Aziz Sarıyer, Can Yalman, and Inci Mutlu. Turkish design companies such as Autoban, Ilio, Derin, Design Base, Keystone, and Maybe Design have further consolidated the global presence of Turkish design. Nevertheless, the great leap occurred after 2005. In this year, Istanbul Design Week was established, the Istanbul Modern Museum was opened, design programs began airing on television, and the monthly Radikal Design Journal was published.

Designer shops always attract interest. The home decor sections of established brands such as IKEA, Mudo, Mozaik, and many others have made design widely accessible to a much broader audience in Turkey.

Fashion designers are using the term “design” more than any others, and are, in many ways, the design leaders in Turkey. Istanbul’s prominence as a center of fashion design has been further promoted by the annual ITKIB (Istanbul Textile and Confection Exporters Union) competitions and regular annual shows in Istanbul Fashion Week, the establishment of the Association of Fashion Designers in 2006 and IMA (Istanbul Moda Academy) in 2008, as well as the opening of several fashion design departments at various universities in recent years. The quasi-realistic dream of the textile sector is to convert Istanbul into one of the leading fashion centers of the world. The Turquality programme is a financial support project initiated by the government, which aims to create Turkish global brands. Needless to say, several young fashion designers and businesses get support from this fund for their international shows and marketing activities.

The “Design TURKEY Awards” were founded in 2008 by the government in cooperation with the ETMK. These awards are expected to occur every two years going forward, with designers submitting works that are exhibited and presented to an international jury. A prestigious award ceremony is held in Istanbul for the winning designs in various categories.

No doubt about it: design is a hot topic, and Istanbul is in the driver’s seat. Two forthcoming international events are simply the icing on the cake: the Istanbul Design Biennal, which will occur for the first time in 2012, and the design congresses of IDA (International Design Alliance) in 2013. Although the evolution of design in Istanbul is a miraculous story, this does not mean that she is a design city now. “Design” is being used in common parlance as a catchphrase, placed on shop fronts, employed by salesmen as a part of their sales pitch, appropriated for fancy advertisements and promotions, and inflated for branding and marketing. A new toy for an old capital? Well, let’s be fair, let’s wait and see.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/20-years-of-design-in-istanbul-421.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/20-years-of-design-in-istanbul-421.html Tue, 13 Dec 2011 15:28:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Studio 9 Istanbul Opening]]>

Nişantaşı’s considerable roster of art galleries has now received its newest addition, Studio 9, which officially opened on the 1st of this month. According to owners Sofia Vassalo and Hasan Taştan Yılmaz, Studio 9’s mission is to “allow for an environment of open dialogue and encourage creativity and a higher learning experience.” The gallery plans to feature contemporary artwork in many different media, including sculpture, photography, installation art, films, documentaries, and more. Studio 9 also aims to foster developing talent by focusing on the work of artists who are in the early stage of their careers.

The gallery opens with three concurrent exhibits: a photography exhibit by Canadian artist Jonah Samson, a series of sculptures by the Italian Francesco Albano (displayed both on the gallery’s ground floor and on its basement level) and video footage of a performance by French-Canadian artist Marie-Lou Desmeules which took place live on the gallery’s opening night.

Studio 9;Mim Kemal Öke Caddesi No.11/A; P: (0212) 291 39 92

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/studio-9-istanbul-opening-407.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/studio-9-istanbul-opening-407.html Mon, 05 Dec 2011 23:29:00 +0200
<![CDATA[What’s Going on at the Newest Gallery in Town]]> SALT’s second branch in Galata, which opened its doors last week, is hosting three temporary exhibitions at the moment. If you haven’t been to SALT Galata yet, located in the historic Ottoman Bank on Bankalar Caddesi inKaraköy, it is definitely worth a visit. Information about its three inaugural exhibitions can be found below. SALT Galata, Bankalar Caddesi No.11, Karaköy; P: (0212) 334 22 00


Foto Galatasaray

The exhibit entitledFoto Galatasarayconsists of selections from the photographs of the late Maryam Şahinyan, who ran a photography studio in the Galatasaray district of Beyoğlu from 1935 to 1985. Şahinyan’s studio was patronized by tens of thousands of people during this fifty-year period, a period which saw numerous important political and social developments in Turkey, from WWII to the events of 1955 to the Cyprus crisis. The black-and-white photographs in this exhibition – chosen and restored under the direction of Tayfun Serttaş from roughly 200,000 negatives belonging to the studio – are thus a visual record of five decades of Istanbul life, and especially of the city’s Armenian community of which Şahinyan was a part. Photography aficionados will not want to miss this exhibit, opening at SALT’s new Galata space.

When:November 22 – January 22

How much:Free

Geçmişe Hücum: Osmanlı İmparatorluğu’nda Arkeolojinin Öyküsü, 1753-1914

The nascent interest in archaeology in the late Ottoman Empire is one that will be familiar to those who have seen the Pera Museum’s recent exhibit entitledOsman Hamdi Bey and the Americans. Now, SALT’s newly opened space in Galata features an exhibit entitledScramble for the Past: A Story of Archaeology in the Ottoman Empire, 1753 – 1914, organized by Zainab Bahrani, Zeynep Çelik, and Edhem Eldem. On display in this exhibit will be documents, books, photographs, and maps by both Western and Ottoman explorers, as well as archaeological findings from numerous parts of the former Ottoman Empire: Greece, Turkey, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Egypt. The support structure for the exhibit is by architect Celine Condorelli (with graphic design by Aslı Altay), and it contains additional installations by artists Mark Dion and Michael Rakowitz.

When:November 22 – March 11

How much:Free

Peçesi Açılan Modernizm / Tarihleri Örgülemek

In her exhibit entitled Modernity Unveiled / Interweaving Histories, artist Gülsün Karamustafa focuses on the work of Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky, who immigrated to Istanbul during WWII from Nazi-occupied Austria (by way of Stalin’s USSR.) Schütte-Lihotzky was responsible for designing the plans of grade schools for Turkey’s Village Institutes, a program intended to further the economic development of Anatolian villagers during Depression-era Turkey. The exhibit consists of black-and-white photographs of projects undertaken in Anatolian villages during this period, displayed within wooden structures built by Karamustafa which themselves resemble buildings in progress. Modernity Unveiled / Interweaving Histories is a fascinating look at an important period in the early history of the Turkish Republic.

When: November 22 – January 22

How much: Free


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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/whats-going-on-at-the-newest-gallery-in-town-393.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/whats-going-on-at-the-newest-gallery-in-town-393.html Mon, 28 Nov 2011 18:37:00 +0200
<![CDATA[SALT Galata Opens]]> SALT (the name means “pure” or “absolute” in Turkish) has recently become known as one of Istanbul’s premier cultural centers and exhibition spaces. Up until now, the organization, which was founded by Garanti Bank, has been located in a six-story building on İstiklal Caddesi in the heart of Beyoğlu. Its self-professed aim being to “explore critical and timely issues in visual and material culture, and cultivate innovative programs for research and experimental thinking,” SALT hosts a wide variety of art exhibitions, talks, and film screenings which are free of charge to the public.

Now, SALT has a second branch, the newly-opened SALT Galata, located in the historic Ottoman Bank on Bankalar Caddesi in Karaköy. The building, which was designed by architect Alexandre Vallaury, opened in 1892 as the official state bank of the Ottoman Empire. Architecturally, the Ottoman Bank reflects the dual identity of the Westernizing Ottoman Empire, with a neo-Classical facade on Bankalar Caddesi and an Oriental one on the rear face of the building. Though it is no longer actively used as a bank, SALT’s Galata location currently houses the Ottoman Bank Museum, which is devoted to preserving the heritage of this historic financial institution. SALT Galata also features an exhibition space on its sub-ground-floor level; a research library (SALT Research); an auditorium seating over 200 people; an Open Archive; a cafe and a restaurant; workshop spaces; and a bookstore run by well-known Beyoğlu bookseller Robinson Crusoe.

The opening of SALT Galata has also been inaugurated with three new exhibitions: Foto Galatasaray, running until January 22nd; Scramble for the Past: A Story of Archaeology in the Ottoman Empire 1753 – 1914, running until March 11th; and Modernity Unveiled / Interweaving Histories, running until January 22nd. All three exhibitions contain abundant photographs dealing with topics in late Ottoman and early Republican history and society.

For a complete program of activities at both SALT Beyoğlu and SALT Galata, see SALT’s website, http://www.saltonline.org/en/anasayfa

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/salt-galata-opens-390.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/salt-galata-opens-390.html Thu, 24 Nov 2011 15:31:00 +0200
<![CDATA[7th Istanbul Animation Festival]]>

The Seventh Istanbul Animation Festival is an event eagerly awaited by animation buffs, consisting of the best short and feature-length animated films of the past two years. This year, the festival will run at the Pera Museum between the 22nd and 27th of November. Among the feature-length films in the festival that have garnered critical attention are the Korean animated filmGreen Days; the filmSky Songby Estonian Mati Kütt; and this year’s Polish filmGeorge the Hedgehog.

The festival’sprogramalso contains 28 short animated films which will be competing for the prize of “Best Animated Short Turkish Film.” The films are in the following categories: Seas and Sailors, Insatiable Humanity, Adaptations, Animal Kingdom, Everything Changes, Dark Tales, We don’t Like War, Stop Motion Beauties, Those Animator Turks, On the Roads, Like a Painting, For Kids, 3rd Dimension’s Trophies, Abstract, Documentaries, Man of Science, Was That Dream?, Black White, Alone’s Club, Through the Eyes of Children, Cheerful Drawings, Ordinary Lives, and About Food.

Parents should note that although all the films in the festival are animated, not all are intended for children; the category entitled “For Kids” consists of short films for preteen audiences.

Tickets can be purchased at the Pera Museum. There will also be a series of free workshops on animated filmmaking: check back on the Istanbul Animation Festival’swebsitefor more information.

Where:Pera Museum; Meşrutiyet Caddesi No. 141; P:(0212) 334 99 00

When:November 22 – 27, 11:00 AM

How much:10 TL (Feature-length films); 5 TL (Discount); 5 TL (Short films); Free (Workshops)

Language:Various languages with TR and ENG subtitles

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/7th-istanbul-animation-festival-381.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/7th-istanbul-animation-festival-381.html Fri, 18 Nov 2011 16:58:00 +0200
<![CDATA[2011 Sovereign European Art Prize]]>

This year’s Sovereign Art Foundation European Art Prize Exhibition will take place in Istanbul, hosted by the the Açık Kapı Sosyal Sorumluluk Derneği (Open Door Social Responsibility Association), with the main sponsorship of the Bay İnşaat 42 Maslak Project. The Sovereign European Art Prize is an annual event dating back to 2005, and features 30 finalists, from whom a single first-place winner is chosen.

This year, the exhibition (curated by Ali Akay) will take place between the 22nd and 29th of November at Istanbul’s Hasköy Yün İplik Fabrikası (Hasköy Yarn Factory). Attendees will be able to see the work of all 30 finalists on display; the night of the 29th, there will be a special Gala, at which name of the winning artist (who will receive a prize of 25,000 euros) will be announced. Following the exhibition, the works of the 29 runners-up will be auctioned off, with 50\% of the proceeds going to the artist, and the rest going to the Foundation for use in its projects benefiting disadvantaged children.

The exhibition is free and open to the public. For information about attending the Gala on the 29th, see the relevant page on the Açık Kapı website.

Hasköy Yün İplik Fabrikası;Kırmızı Minare Cami Sokağı No. 7, Hasköy; P: (0212) 369 88 10

When: November 22 – 29, 10:30 – 6:00 PM

How much: Free

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/2011-sovereign-european-art-prize-375.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/2011-sovereign-european-art-prize-375.html Tue, 15 Nov 2011 18:06:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Exhibits to See over Bayram]]> Staying in Istanbul during Bayram is not, contrary to popular belief, a fate worse than death. In fact, those in the know will tell you that – with smaller crowds, less traffic, and half-price public transportation – Bayram is the best time to be in the city. Don’t forget that many of Istanbul’s galleries and museums also remain open over the holidays – so there is no lack of things to do here.

The Biennial, which has been extensively covered on our website, ends this weekend, so if you haven’t been yet, hurry up and see it. Below are three more recommended exhibitions which are ending soon, courtesy of The Guide’s editorial staff.

Mehmet Kutlu / Yeni Hikayeler

The concepts of intertwined paths and rebirth will never fall out of favor in the creative world, whether it in paintings, essays or novels. The world of ceramics, however, is a very fragile and rigid medium that does not easily lend itself to such themes and symbols. Mehmet Kutlu reverses this trend in his exhibition titled Yeni Hikayeler, on display at the prestigious Rezan Has Museum.

The exhibition is an important mixture of outside influence and personal creativity. Kutlu’s work has been shaped by well-known Turkish figures like Yaşar Kemal, Genco Erkal, Gülriz Sururi, Türkan Şoray, Zülfü Livaneli, Sezen Aksu, Fazıl Say, Ayla Argan and Ferzan Özpetek. Gaining its primary inspiration from the birth of caterpillars from cocoons, the display aims to influence the developing, evolving and ultimately reborn nature of artists in the contemporary world. Yeni Hikayeler is an exhibit no one can afford to miss out on, whether they are familiar with Turkish pop culture or not.

Enjoy this interesting exhibition of ceramic/mosaic art at the beautiful Rezan Has Museum, and gain a new perspective on the lives of artists in the limelight!

When: Until November 20

Where: Rezan Has Müzesi (Rezan Has Museum)

How Much: 3 TL; 1 TL (concession)

Archè

The Belgian artist Johan Tahon will have his exhibit Archè on display at the Tiled Kiosk in the Istanbul Archaeology Museum. The exhibit -- organized by the museum as well as by Galeri Artist's Özil Collection -- will be displayed as part of the 12th Istanbul Biennial. The venue for the exhibit -- the Tiled Kiosk built by Mehmed II as part of Topkapı Palace -- is an appropriate one, as Tahon lives and works for part of the year in İznik, a historical center of tile production in Turkey.

Tahon's ceramic sculptures stand in strong contrast to the order and harmony of the İznik tilework among which they are placed. Human busts dripping with paint as though with blood, with looks of agony upon their faces, with gaping mouths and empty eye sockets, Tahon's creations seems to belong more to the world of Greek Tragedy than to that of Ottoman decorative arts. The title of Tahon's exhibit, Archè, means "beginning" in Greek; the works displayed therein suggest, on the contrary, the end times of the human race.

Anyone attending the 12th Istanbul Biennial should be sure to take a detour to Sultanahmet to view this outstanding exhibit in the Archaeology Museum.

When: Until November 13

Where: Çinili Köşk

How much: 10 TL (Museum admission)

Cityscale

Munich and Istanbul are two cities that differ greatly in geography, population, infrastructure, history, and culture. Nonethless, these two globalizing cities, linked through generations of cultural interaction, form the basis of a fascinating exhibit entitled Cityscale. The exhibit, accompanied by public installations, videos, presentations and panels, attempts to explore the differences between these two cities through works of art focusing on their exteriors.

The participating artists -- German and Turkish, working in a variety of different media and different disciplines -- include Gülçin Aksoy, Atıl Kunst, Annegret Bleisteiner, Klaus vom Bruch, Carlotta Brunetti, Deniz Gül, Julia Lohmann, Suat Ögüt, Hülya Özdemir, Susanne Pittroff, Michaela Rotsch, Ferhat Satıcı, Robert Stumpf and Yeni Anıt. Don't miss out on this fascinating and highly relevant exhibit.

When: Until November 13

Where: Siemens Sanat

How much: Free

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/exhibits-to-see-over-bayram-372.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/exhibits-to-see-over-bayram-372.html Tue, 08 Nov 2011 17:47:00 +0200
<![CDATA[SALT & Tate Modern]]> The Level 2 Gallery of London’s Tate Modern is currently hosting an exhibition entitled I Decided Not to Save the World, in collaboration with Istanbul’s SALT Gallery. The exhibition – which will run until January 8th at the Tate and will be at SALT Beyoğlu between the 20th of March and the 20th of May – consists of work by the artists Mircea Cantor, Yto Barrada, and Mounira Al Solh, as well as by the collective known as Slavs and Tatars.

Cantor, a Romanian artist who divides his time between his native Romania and France, is the recipient of numerous awards including this year’s Marcel Duchamp Prize. Known for his ironic, symbolic commentaries on contemporary society and everyday life (in a variety of different artistic media), Cantor is the creator of the video from which this exhibition takes its name.

The Paris-born artist Yto Barrada lives in Tangier, Morocco, where she is the artistic director and co-founder of the Cinémathèque de Tanger. Barrada’s photos and videos, often depicting Moroccan landscapes, people, and everyday objects, have been exhibited at (among others) MoMA, SFMOMA, and the 2007 Venice Biennial.

Mounira Al Solh comes from Beirut, Lebanon. Among her many works addressing the religious and political conflicts of her home country is the 2006 video Rawane’s Song (part of the present exhibition) which won the 2007 VideoBrasil Jury Prize. Al Solh has exhibited at the 2007 Venice Biennial, and is the Editor in Chief of the periodical NOA (Not Only Arabic.)

The witty, often tongue-in-cheek projects of the artistic collective Slavs and Tatars focus on questions of “Eurasian” cultural identity and cross-cultural interaction in a vast region “east of the former Berlin Wall and west of the Great Wall of China.” The group is the two-time winner of the Fernand Baudin Prize (in 2009 and 2010) and has exhibited at many venues including the Sharjah and Thessaloniki Biennials. Among its other projects, the group has taken an interest in republishing the early 20th-century Azeri humor magazine Molla Nasreddin.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/salt-tate-modern-369.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/salt-tate-modern-369.html Fri, 04 Nov 2011 13:35:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Win a Guided Tour of Istanbul Modern]]>

Want to tour the Istanbul Museum of Modern Art with a guide? Here is your chance!

Sign up to www.theguideistanbul.combetween 4 November 2011 and 4 January 2012, and enter the draw to win a guided tour of the Istanbul Museum of Modern Art*.

What will the tour cover?

The guided tour of Istanbul Museum of Modern Art, usually referred to as Istanbul Modern, will cover the temporary exhibition Hayal ve Hakikat (Dream and Reality), the photography exhibition Tekinsiz Karşılaşmalar (Uncanny Encounters) as well as the museum’s permanent exhibition Yeni Ufuklar, Yeni Yapıtlar (New Works, New Horizons), which presents the evolution of modern and contemporary Turkish art. The guided tour will be in English, start at 01:00pm, and last for one hour.

When will the tours be held?

One on 15th of January and one on 22nd of January.

How many people will win?

50 people will be randomly selected from all the new users that sign up between 4th of November and 4th of January, and all 50 will win a place in one of the free guided tours.

How will I know if I won?

The winners will be announced on www.theguideistanbul.com on the 6th of January. The winners will also receive an e-mail from info@theguideistanbul.com**.

What do I do if I win?

All you need to do isreply to info@theguideistanbul.com by the 11th of January (if you won the tour on the 15th of January) or by the 17th of January (if you won the tour on the 22nd of January) letting us know whether you’ll be able to make it to the tour. If we don’t get replies by these dates, we will give the tickets to the people on the waitlist.

What if I can’t make it to the tour?

Please let us know at info@theguideistanbul.com if you can’t make it to the tour so that we can give your space to one of the ten people on the waitlist***.

*Signing up to www.theguideistanbul.comis free. You can cancel your free membership at any time by notifying us through here or by sending an email to info@theguideistanbul.com.

**Winners will also receive a letter via mail informing them about the rules and regulations of the museum.

***The tickets issued can only be used by the winner.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/win-a-guided-tour-of-istanbul-modern-370.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/win-a-guided-tour-of-istanbul-modern-370.html Thu, 03 Nov 2011 14:50:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Osman Hamdi Bey ve Amerikalılar: Arkeoloji, Diplomasi, Sanat]]>

A new exhibition entitledOsman Hamdi Bey and the Americans: Archaeology, Diplomacy, and Art, curated by Professors Renata Holod and Robert Ousterhout of the University of Pennsylvania, is opening at the Pera Museum. The exhibition is about the painter, archaeologist, and museum curator Osman Hamdi Bey (the founder of Istanbul’s Archaeology Museums), the American photographer/archaeologist John Henry Haynes, and the German Assyriologist and archaeologist Hermann Vollrath Hilprecht.

All three were eminent figures in 19th century archaeology, Hilprecht as one of the excavators of Nippur in present-day Iraq (then under Ottoman control), Haynes as a photographer of the excavations of Assos, and Osman Hamdi Bey as an archaeologist at numerous sites all over the Ottoman Empire. Osman Hamdi Bey was, in addition, a painter of no small talent, who studied in Paris with Gérôme and Boulanger. As part of the exhibition, you will be able to see Osman Hamdi Bey’s own paintings, which fascinatingly mirror the style of the Western Orientalist painters of whose milieu he was a part.

The Pera Museum has long been known for its superb exhibitions on the subject of Western Orientalism. This is an excellent addition to those previous exhibitions, and anyone with an interest in archaeology and 19th century painting should not pass it up.

Where: Pera Museum;Meşrutiyet Caddesi No. 141 Tepebaşı; P:(0212) 334 99 00

When:Until January 8

How much:10 TL; 7 TL (groups of 10 or more); 5 TL (concession)


Related Content

Article

Osman Hamdi Bey and the Americans at the Pera Museum; by Will Washburn

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/osman-hamdi-bey-ve-amerikalilar-arkeoloji,-diplomasi,-sanat-362.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/osman-hamdi-bey-ve-amerikalilar-arkeoloji,-diplomasi,-sanat-362.html Thu, 03 Nov 2011 10:48:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Zeitgeist at Borusan]]>

The red, brick mansion, located at the foot of the Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge, is quite eye-catching with its unusual exterior and grandeur. Constructed at the beginning of the 20th century, this 10-floor building is widely known as Perili Köşk (Haunted Mansion), and has been serving as the headquarters of Borusan Holding since 2007.

On 17th of September, Borusan Holding launched an innovative art project called Borusan Contemporary, turning their headquarters into an office-museum, granting access to visitors to see their incredible art collection on weekends. Apart from some notepads, phones, family photographs, and personal libraries, employees clear away everything on their desks so that visitors can enter the Haunted Mansion and walk around the admirable office-turned-exhibition-space.

Borusan Contemporary is currently housing two collections on view until 11 December 2011: Segment #1,the selection of works brought together by Dr. Necmi Sönmez, an independentcurator, art critic, and writer based in Düsseldorf; and Yedi Yeni İş (Seven New Works), the contemporary art collection curated by Sylvia Kouvali and Mario Codognato.

The prioritization of New Media Art, including photography, video and light art, is the departure point of the Segment series, which will be renewed every three months. The title ofSeven New Worksis quite self-explanatory as the exhibition features seven new works by artists Aslı Çavuşoğlu, Burak Arıkan, Cevdet Erek, Ergin Çavuşoğlu, Esra Ersen, Gülsün Karamustafa, and Nasan Tur.

According to Dr. Necmi Sönmez, what unites the works presented in Segment #1 is the zeitgeist, “the spirit of the times,” and Seven New Works surely mirrors the same theme with a focus on contemporary art from Turkey.

Upon entering the exhibition space on the second floor, five works of theSeven New Works exhibition greet the viewer. The first work is Burak Arıkan’s interactive projection Collector Artist Network: Phase 1, which allows the visitors to explore the mansion through a self-referencing project. Arıkan’s mapping investigates the relationships between collectors in Turkey and artists here and abroad. The viewer can click on a name on the touch screen and follow the thread of network connections with more clicks and drags. Even though the piece is visually unresolved now, better coherency may be reached when this ongoing project develops.

Around Arıkan’s on-going mapping project are four video pieces. One of them is Ergin Çavuşoğlu’s Desire Lines (Duende), a three-channel video piece that deals with the dissonance between history and destiny with regards to what is considered rational. While two of the screens show scientific approaches in archeological excavations, the other screen is dedicated to two fortunetellers who interpret the findings by “reading” the objects found on the site. The work is quite overwhelming since the audience has to follow all three screens simultaneously. Regardless, Desire Lines (Duende) is sure to encourage the viewers to have a fresh look at one of the oldest discussions in the world: the relationship between history, truth, and rationality.

Nasan Tur’s video The Histories of Maraş/Varosha brings together the stories told by tour guides in the deserted district of Maraş/Varosha in between northern and southern Cyprus. The division of Cyprus is one of the unresolved political issues of modern European history, and it is still a touchy subject for many. Tur’s video work is based on the narratives of three tour guides who offer different views of Maraş/Varosha, which became a tourist attraction after military control of the area ceased.

The 3rd 2nd Bridgeby Cevdet Erek is a video work about the construction process of the Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge, the second bridge that connects the Asian and European sides of Istanbul. The work is pieced together by photos and videos that the artist took and also found in archives. Although an inspired piece, the lack of narrative and linear visual unfolding inevitably force the viewers to tackle with the play on spaces constructed in the video.

In Different Estimations Little Moscow, Aslı Çavuşoğlu attempts to build a collective memory by capturing remnants of the violence that took place in the northern town of Fatsa in Ordu during the 1980 military coup. Right before the coup, Fikri Sönmez, mayor of Fatsa, formed “People Committees” to install a participatory democracy in the district, only to be imprisoned during the coup and to have the democracy project destroyed. The video features visuals of abandoned spaces (one of which is where the “People Committees” took place), police cars, informer’s masks, and books, aiming to find a connection between present-day Fatsa and its past. Although, the visuals seem to focus on absence, they also reveal the traces of that violence and the scars that it left behind.

Upon exiting the space where these brand new works are featured, the viewer walks face first into a piece from Segment #1—the interactive mirror sculpture that Daniel Rozin installed in the second floor elevator hall. These mirrors “sense” the person standing before them and change their angle, thus changing the shape of the sculpture depending on the viewer’s motions.

From here on, the white-wall exhibition space ends and some of the best works of 20th century contemporary art in Segment #1 take over. One signature work of the office/museum is Peter Kogler’s wall paintingcalled Untitled (2008), specifically designed for the mansion. The digital print of Kogler’s abstract labyrinths carries one all the way up to the tenth floor, covering the elevator halls and staircase walls of the entire building. It is highly recommended that the visitors walk up, instead of taking the elevator because surprising artworks await them, one of which is Alan Rath’s Flying Eyeballs on the way up to the fifth floor.

Before one reaches the fifth floor, Esra Ersen’s video Casting for a Canary Opera and Gülsün Karamustafa’s Insomniambule—the two remaining video works of Seven New Works—can be seen on the fourth floor across from the office space.

Meticulously installed on the walls and hallways all around the 10-floor building are pieces by 20th century’s leading artists, such as Liam Gillick, Jerry Zeniuk, Sol LeWitt, Marina Zurkow Donald Judd, Keith Sonnier, Robert Mapplethorpe, Daniel Rozin, as well as works of Turkish contemporary artists, such as Ayşe Erkmen’s ceramic tilesColorful (2009), Kutluğ Ataman’s sculpture form Journey to the Moon (2008) and video Water (2009), Bengü Karaduman’s video Mirror Shadows (2007), and Bedri Baykam’s I’m Bleeding painting series.

Overall, the office allows the viewer to have a more personal experience with the artworks as family portraits and personal notes of executive directors mingle with paintings, sculptures, and photos, as well as the fantastic views of the Bosphorus. Especially the light sculpture Ballroom Chandelier Installation by Keith Sonnier in the meeting room at the top floor and the Istanbul Wall Painting on the two adjacent walls of the room commissioned to Jerry Zeniuk are must-sees for the ultimate office/museum experience.

If you would like to see one of the most inspiring collections in Turkey coupled with an innovative approach to exhibiting, head to the Haunted Mansion. The museum can be visited on weekends between 10:00 am and 08:00 pm. The entrance fee is 10 TL for adults and 5 TL for students and seniors.

When: 17 September - 11 December 2011

Where: Borusan Contemporary; Perili Köşk, Hisar Caddesi No.5, Baltalimanı; P: (0212) 393 52 00

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<![CDATA[Osman Hamdi Bey and the Americans at the Pera Museum]]>

The Pera Museum has long been known for its excellent permanent collection of art dealing with the interaction between the Ottomans and the West. In addition to a permanent exhibit entitled Intersecting Worlds, featuring portraits of Western ambassadors in the Ottoman Empire (and Ottoman ambassadors in Europe), the museum also boasts a superb collection of Orientalist painting, consisting of Western artists’ fanciful depictions of scenes from lands then belonging to the Ottomans.

One name stands out among all the others: Osman Hamdi, commonly known by the title Osman Hamdi Bey. A veritable Renaissance man, Osman Hamdi was one of the leading archaeologists of his time (and the founder of Istanbul’s Archaeology Museum), an author and politician, and a painter of considerable talent. In depicting scenes from his own homeland, the Europhile/Francophile Osman Hamdi favored the Orientalist style of painting employed by Boulanger, with whom he studied in Paris. Osman Hamdi’s emblematic painting The Tortoise Trainer has been part of the Pera Museum’s permanent collection since the museum opened in 2005.

The present show features two paintings by Osman Hamdi from the University of Pennsylvania’s archives, which have never been exhibited in Turkey before. (Many of the pieces in Osman Hamdi Bey and the Americans were displayed at last year’s exhibit Archaeologists and Travelers in Ottoman Lands at the University of Pennsylvania Museum.) The show also focuses on two of Hamdi’s archaeological colleagues, the American photographer John Henry Haynes (fallen into obscurity today but best known in his time for his photographs of the Assos excavations), and the German archaeologist Hermannn Vollrath Hilprecht, who held a position at UPenn in the late 19th century, and who played a leading role in the excavation of the ancient Mesopotamian city of Nippur.

Avoiding museum-exhibit overkill, this small but extremely well-chosen show (curated by Professors Renata Holod and Robert Ousterhout of the University of Pennsylvania) fills a single floor of the Pera Museum’s modestly-sized space with Osman Hamdi’s paintings, photographs of all three figures, photos taken at the sites of their archaeological digs, original copies of their correspondence, sample findings from the Nippur excavation (including an astounding series of miniature cuneiform tablets), and a wealth of information about the three men and their work.

As soon as you enter the first room of the exhibition, you are met with the sight of Osman Hamdi’s huge 1891 painting entitled At the Mosque Door, one of the two paintings from UPenn’s archives. The painting, discovered as recently as 2006, is ostensibly a picture of the entrance to the Muradiye Mosque in Bursa, although (as the exhibit panel explains) the low-relief kufic inscription high up on the mosque’s front wall is in fact taken from the Çoban Mustafa Paşa Camii in Gebze, where Osman Hamdi’s family lived. (The dome of that mosque can be seen in the background of the painting A View of Gebze, painted by Osman Hamdi ten years earlier and also on display in this exhibit.) The other previously unseen painting, hanging in the other room of the exhibit, is Osman Hamdi Bey’s 1903 work The Excavation at the Temple Court in Nippur. As Professors Holod and Ousterhout have explained, Osman Hamdi never actually visited Nippur, the painting being based on a photograph taken by Haynes. Hamdi Bey inserts Hilprecht – who is not in the photo – into the painting, standing out among all the native diggers and porters through his white uniform and pith helmet.

One leaves this exhibit with a sense of the great fluidity of identity that characterized these men – Hilprecht and Haynes in their seeming efforts to become “Orientals,” Osman Hamdi in his to become a Frenchman and a Westerner. A photograph of Haynes, with handlebar mustache, could be that of any 19th century American gentleman. Immediately to the right of this photo is another one in which the young American, wearing the costume of an Ottoman functionary, has become almost unrecognizable. A bronze bust of Osman Hamdi Bey – dressed only in a Western-style jacket, without his normal fez – makes him look for all the world like a chic turn-of-the-century Parisian. Hilprecht, the pith-helmet wearing symbol of German authority, also dresses like an Ottoman at times, and enjoys signing his name in cuneiform in his correspondence.

Running until the 8th of January, this exhibit is a must-see for anyone with an interest in Osman Hamdi’s art or Ottoman and Western archaeology.

Where: Pera Museum;Meşrutiyet Caddesi No. 141 Tepebaşı; P:(0212) 334 99 00

When: Until January 8

How much: 10 TL; 7 TL (groups of 10 or more); 5 TL (discount)

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/osman-hamdi-bey-and-the-americans-at-the-pera-museum-338.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/osman-hamdi-bey-and-the-americans-at-the-pera-museum-338.html Thu, 20 Oct 2011 16:37:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Mesopotamian Dramaturgies Takes Stage in Istanbul]]>

Kutluğ Ataman is an internationally acclaimed artist whose interest lies in creating “talking portraits” mostly of marginalized individuals, but essentially in capturing how people fictionalize themselves through language. In Mesopotamian Dramaturgies,exhibited at Arter until November 16th, Ataman has clearly moved away from solely presenting individuals as he did in his past works.

The body of works presented in this exhibition explores the limits of language, and demonstrates that even in the absence of language many stories are being told, resistances are being advanced, and cultural constructs are being reproduced.

The themes of Mesopotamia - the geography considered as “the cradle of civilizations” - and dramaturgy - the art of writing and producing plays - are merged to create a vast and ambitious collection of works that try to reclaim a complex history that presents a bottomless well of stories, histories, inventions and disasters. In addition, this chapter of Mesopotamian Dramaturgies featured at Arter has a particular focus on modernity and the ways in which ordinary people have appropriated modernization in Turkey. (The project is an on-going one and will extend to Syria, Northern Iraq, and Iran.)

Many of the videos in this exhibition were shot in eastern Turkey, close to the birthplace of the artist, and focus on how people express their imagined identities, and thus constantly make sense of and fictionalize their existence. For instance, in the Pursuit of Happiness, a peasant woman from eastern Turkey tells Ataman about her troubles of finding the right man, the problems in her previous marriages, how she lost her virginity, and the pressures of her family. Perhaps, her idea of marriage and relationship to men is a metaphor for Turkey’s dysfunctional relationship with the West and modernization, which have been forced into a static relationship since the foundation of the Republic. The West has often been thought of by Turkish politicians, journalists, intellectuals, and citizens as mutually exclusive with modernity. This piece clearly shows that this supposedly Western ideal of “pursuit of happiness” is appropriated by the protagonist and used to create a particular identity for herself, which she expresses in a garrulous but intriguing monologue. It is quite difficult to understand her at times because of the speed and manner that she talks in, but also due to the sound that gets mixed up in the exhibition space. In addition, the translation of her words sometimes fails to reflect the original version due to the impossibility of translating certain phrases and notions. This only strengthens Ataman’s suspicion of literal and cultural translation.

Right next to this work is English as a second language, presented as a two-channel video installation. Facing each other are two life-size teenage boys, one projected on the wall on the right and one on the left. They hold Edward Lear poems in their hands, trying to read them out loud. Even for a native speaker, the poems are almost undecipherable. English, the global language that supposedly connects us all, seems to fail to do the trick this time. The students do not only go through the trouble of learning English as a survival tool to be present and active in the global world, but they are also forced to understand the nonsensical limericks of Edward Lear. Positioned in the middle, the viewers find themselves in a ridiculous position of listening to undecipherable English and following these teenagers as they shuffle the sheets of papers in their hands, confused. It is crucial to note here for what purpose English is being taught, and how the language is instructed in class. Having an idea of how words are pronounced does not make a culture mobile or accessible, nor does it raise the level of education. It does not go anywhere beyond pretense and leaves the students in a lost and puzzled position, and the viewers doubly so.

A few steps further stands the Column inspired by Trajan’s Column, which was erected to describe the victories of the Roman Emperor. However, Ataman’s version is a column that is mute, only showing portraits of Kurdish individuals on separate TV screens diversified by a selection of old and more technological screens. In this piece, Ataman points at the time that has passed, and the only column erected is a mute one representing the silencing of the people in southeastern Turkey. This is a column that reminds us how language and communication can fail, once again, exemplified in this piece by mute Kurdish individuals who have pleaded for years to have a right to speak, learn, and teach their native language, Kurdish. This silence can be interpreted as a form of resistance as well as just a yearning for the basic human need for speaking one’s mother tongue. As much as silence can be seen as passive, it also allows for an active projection of ideas, thoughts, and stories.

Stories can ground one, as well as uproot and shake the notion of truth as in the fantastic mocumentary Journey to the Moon. This groundbreaking work appears to tell the story of a historical event that took place in an eastern village in Turkey during an election campaign in 1957. The villagers, having been moved by the speech of a politician, want to be a part of this mass modernization process and try to go to the moon by transforming a minaret into a spaceship. The black and white footage, as if found in archives, and the stop-motion photography technique used in the film gives the story an air of truthfulness even though the narrative was written by the artist. Interviews with leading academics, journalists, and scientists in color add to the validity of the events, leaving the audience in awe and confusion as to the realness of the incident. Thus, in this work, Ataman, once again emphasizes his belief in the fake construct of what we call history. The influence of the interviews also makes one question authority and how knowledge can be manipulated when used in certain manners. The film is presented as a two-channel video piece in this exhibition, which unfortunately takes away from the power of the narrative.

The artist’s latest work Mayhem, which was shot in Argentina at the Devil’s Throat, has multiple screens and projections of gushing water on the walls of the exhibition space. The cleansing and destructive power of water symbolizes the force of change. When applied to the Mesopotamian geography, this water, which originates in Argentina, loses its geographical significance. By decontextualizing it, Ataman emphasizes cultural constructions around nature and natural phenomena. He also points at the passing of time and the change that occurs in a particular geography. Sometimes, we are too absorbed by the present time and forget that once there was no nationalism, once we were a hunter-gatherer society, once pagans ruled the Mesopotamian territory…

In this series, which Ataman initiated in 2009, what strikes the viewer most is the balance, or the imbalance, between the “talking portraits” and mute ones. The artist almost suggests that lingual and cultural translation is impossible at times, depending on the context and the force behind it. The impossibility of translation, in Ataman’s view, is a reflection of the difficulties in transcending the dualities that are imposed onto people who are usually viewed as one single mass, belonging to one group or the other. By exposing personal stories, Ataman tries to explore the area between what is very personal and stereotypically societal. Hence, the artist brings out all that is controversial and thus human. Mesopotamia is a great example of that due to the very many ways its history and geography has been imagined and treated throughout the ages. In this regard, Mesopotamia offers a platform for the audience to revisit historical and cultural constructs that have shaped individuals’ and societies’ understandings of the world at large.

If interested, the viewers can watch the 222-minute documentary entitled Kutluğ Ataman, directed by Metin Çavuş, focusing on Ataman’s artistic practice with fragments from his works, and commentaries by curators, critics, and the artist himself. The film is screened twice a day at 11:00am and 02:00pm on the ground floor.

*************

ARTER - Space for Art;İstiklal Caddesi No. 211 Beyoğlu; P:(0212) 243 37 67

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/mesopotamian-dramaturgies-takes-stage-in-istanbul-335.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/mesopotamian-dramaturgies-takes-stage-in-istanbul-335.html Wed, 19 Oct 2011 19:26:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Turkish Passport]]>

Think of Holocaust films, and the first one that comes to mind is likely Spielberg’s award-winning Schindler’s List, a true story about the historical figure of Oskar Schindler, who saved over a thousand Jews from the death camps by claiming that he needed them to work in his munitions factory. Other stories of covert or overt resistance to the Nazis (by the Danish, for example), while less well-known than the deeds of Schindler, are still part of common discourse about the Holocaust.

But how many are aware that during the Second World War, Turkish diplomats in France and elsewhere saved the lives of tens of thousands of Jews by issuing them Turkish passports? This is the subject of a new documentary film entitled Turkish Passport, directed by Burak Arlıel and produced by Bahadır Arlıel and Güneş Çelikcan. The film, which received a warm reception at the Cannes Festival in May, will be released in cinemas in Turkey this week.

While the topic of the film might be similar in some respects to that of Schindler’s List, there are significant differences between the actions of Oskar Schindler and those of diplomats like Behiç Erkin (Turkey’s Ambassador to France), Necdet Kent (its Consul in Marseilles), Fikret Özdoğancı (its Vice Consul in Paris), and Selahattin Ülkümen (its Consul in Rhodes.) As the filmmakers have pointed out, given Turkey’s neutrality during WWII, there wasn’t always a need for subterfuge like Schindler’s in order to save Jews by diplomatic means. Nonetheless, there is no doubt that Kent and his colleagues put themselves in danger through their selfless actions. After Ülkümen successfully demanded the release of 42 Jews about to be deported from Rhodes, the Germans bombed the Turkish consulate there, killing Ülkümen’s wife.

Turkish Passport consists of interviews – with those saved by the Turks, with their relatives, and with the relatives of the diplomats who saved them – as well as reenacted scenes. The story it tells is a fascinating one. Under Behiç’s ambassadorship, the Turkish government claimed as its own any Jews who could show proof of Turkish ethnicity. Stereotypes about the heartlessness of modern bureaucracy go out the window as we watch these scenes explaining how French Jews of Turkish ancestry were able to obtain Turkish passports. It often sufficed to come to the Turkish consulate and recite a few phrases in Turkish (duly memorized beforehand) to qualify for this life-saving document. The Turkish government also evacuated Turkish passport-holders by train to Istanbul, a harrowing week-long journey through Axis-controlled (and Allied-bombed) territory that is well-captured by the film’s reenacted scenes.

In one incredible incident, Necdet Kent boards a train deporting Jews from Marseilles (bound for a concentration camp) and tells the Gestapo commander that he will accompany his fellow-citizens all the way to their final destination. The Germans stop the train at the next station and release Kent, his colleague, and all 81 Turkish Jews on board. Decades later, upon receiving the Üstün Hizmet Madalyası (Outstanding Service Medal) from the Turkish government in recognition of his wartime heroism, Kent is said to have remarked to his son, “It saddens me that I have received an award simply for doing my duty as a human being...look what humanity has come to.”

The inspiration for this project – which took years to make and involved extensive archival research in Turkey and abroad, as well as shooting in Turkey, Romania, and France – came when producer Güneş Çelikcan happened upon Behiç Erkin’s grave in Eskişehir. While the story told in Turkish Passport greatly redounds to the credit of Erkin and his diplomatic corps, the filmmakers have stressed that their story is a universal one, surpassing the confines of nationality or religion. Do not miss this fascinating new documentary, whose story deserves to be better known worldwide.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/turkish-passport-336.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/turkish-passport-336.html Wed, 19 Oct 2011 10:31:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Harlem Swing]]> The winner of numerous awards such as Tony Award for Best Musical, New York Drama Critics Award for Best Musical, Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Musical, and Obie Award for Best Off-Broadway Musical,Harlem Swing (Ain’t Misbehavin’)will be in Istanbul for just four performances this fall.

The musical – which originally premiered in 1978, and has had over 1600 performanaces since then – takes you back to Harlem in the 20s, the golden age of jazz and swing music, and the age of Fats Waller. Audiences atHarlem Swingwill be able to hear such Waller classics as “Ain’t Misbehavin’,” “Honeysuckle Rose,” and “Squeeze Me.”

Harlem Swingis overflowing with the spirit of Waller’s music as well as the performer’s lust for life. Fans of classic jazz and swing music will not want to miss it.

Where:Tim Show Center,Maslak Show Center Büyükdere Caddesi Derbent Mevkii;P:(0212) 286 66 86

When:October 14, 9:00 PM; October 15, 3:00 PM, 9:00 PM; October 16, 3:00 PM

How much:150 TL; 125 TL; 100 TL; 80 TL

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/harlem-swing-329.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/harlem-swing-329.html Sun, 16 Oct 2011 19:46:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Sophie Calle's "Last Time, First Time" at SSM]]> The French artist Sophie Calle, whose work often involves journeys into the private worlds of others – even of complete strangers – has now voyaged into an even more inaccessible realm: that of the literally and metaphorically blind. Calle’s two-part, multimedia exhibit entitled Son Kez, İlk Kez (Last Time, First Time) is on display at Istanbul’s Sakıp Sabancı Museum until the end of the year. The photographs comprising the first part of the exhibit, Son İmge (The Last Image), portray residents of Istanbul who lost their sight in childhood or adulthood, together with photos of the last thing they remember seeing. The second part of the exhibit, Denizi Görmek (To See the Sea) records on video the first glimpse of the sea by Istanbulites who – unbelievable as it may seem – have lived here for years or even decades without a trip to the shore.

As explained by a panel at the entrance to the exhibit, Calle’s project was inspired by the ancient myth according to which the settlement of Chalcedon (now Kadıköy on the Asian side of Istanbul) was dubbed the “city of the blind,” due to its colonists’ failure to choose the more preferable site of Byzantium just across the Bosphorus.

The Last Image

The exhibit’s first section – expanded from a smaller, earlier project of Calle’s – contains photos of 13 people, employing a slightly differentapproach for each. Calle sometimes photographs the actual objects that comprise her interviewees’ “last image,” such as one man’s living room couch, or the Haydarpaşa train station with its famous clock. In other cases, Calle’s photos recreate memories that would otherwise be impossible to record: a text describing the last hours ofone woman'sfailing vision is accompanied by a blurred photo of a red bus on a city street.

One photo features a young boy who has been blind from birth. (Calle has stated that she was initially reluctant to includehim in the exhibit.) Rather than describing his last memory, pre-blindness, the boy tells of a dream he has had of driving on a long, straight road, in a “black car,” wearing “black sunglasses.” We are completely at a loss how to interpret his words. Are these visions real, or are they meaningless clichés obtained at second or even third hand?

Some of Calle’s subjects even act out the scenes they are narrating. A young shepherd, blinded in a hunting accident, demonstrates for the camera how he covered his eyes with his hands after being shot. A former taxi driver, shot in the eyes during a fight, tells his story with such an abundance of hand gestures that it is obvious – even from this small sample of photos – that he has lost none of his physical vivacity.

We too suffer from a kind of visual handicap, being unable to see into the eyes– and thusthe psyches–of Calle’s blindsubjects.We learn that the elderly woman mentioned above (whose last image was of a blurred red bus)lost the sight in her one healthy eye through a doctor’s error during a routine medical procedure.Calle photographs this woman with her right eye closed, and her left eye, with its prominent white,wide open. Her expression (reproach? resignation? tranquillity?)is as impossible for us to read as ours would be for her.

To See the Sea

The neurologist Oliver Sacks, in an essay from An Anthropologist on Mars entitled “To See or not to See,” describes the experiences of the formerly blind who have recovered their sight post-surgery. One might assume that a blind person regaining a lost or never-acquired power of sight would be overjoyed at this change. According to Sacks, it is not so simple: many of his patients end up confused and disoriented, as lives lived around the senses of hearing, touch, and smell must accommodate a new and completely unfamiliar method of perception.

So it is, tragically, with many of Calle’s subjects in the second part ofher exhibit. The first videoin "To See the Sea"is of a thin, middle-aged man wearing a blazer, standing on the beach withhis back to us. After several minutes, he finally turns around, his eyes still full of anger and suspicion – as though even the sea itself were a trick being played on him. A young man on crutches seems too boweddown withgrief even to register the natural wonder lying before him for the first time. Another man, thick-set, wearing a denim jacket, has tears in his eyes after turning to face the camera; the elderly hacı with beard and skullcap in the next video can barely hold back his own tears.

The ten people in these videos, shot by cinematographer Caroline Champetier, are all immigrants from Central and Eastern Turkey.By definition(given the criterion for their inclusion in the exhibit) all are living on the social and economic margins of Istanbul. Nonetheless, there is nothingpitying or condescending in Calle’s portrayal of her subjects, whose dignity remains intact before the camera. A young girl in one video idly fiddles in the water with her foot, seemingly indifferent to the camera’s presence, with the inscrutable expression of children. A middle-aged woman wearing a headscarf breaks into a wide grin after she turns around. The exhibit closes on a note of possible optimism, as a girl wearing a red sweater turns around, just the tiniest hint of a smile breaking through her shy expression.

Son Kez, İlk Kez is a wonderful discovery, as is the Sabancı Museum itself, located above the second Bosphorus bridge in the neighborhood of Emirgan. Those living in Istanbul, or planning to travel here before the year is up, should find time to visit the museum and see this thought-provoking exhibit.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/sophie-calles-last-time,-first-time-at-ssm-325.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/sophie-calles-last-time,-first-time-at-ssm-325.html Wed, 12 Oct 2011 17:44:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Oktoberfest Istanbul]]> How does beer and sausage sound? If you’re nodding, then read on.

Oktoberfest is a beer festival identified with its origin city Munich. It’s been celebrated in Germany and in many other countries all around the world with great enthusiasm.

The hometown of the festival hosted the well-renowned event with the participation of 6 million people during seventeen days from 17th of September to the 3rd of October this year. But don’t worry if you could not go to Bavaria to celebrate it! Oktoberfest is coming to Istanbul for the first time. All beer-lovers and the ones who carry the festival spirit gather at Parkorman on 9th of October to celebrate the first Oktoberfest in Istanbul!

If you can’t make it to Parkorman, get together with your friends and celebrate Oktoberfest at home. Order some chicken from Wienerwald and stock up on beer and let the fun begin!

The festival has kept all the details and authenticity of the Bavarian Oktoberfest. During the festival, you will be able to find Bavarian foods and beverages and dance to Fiddler’s Green, Can Bonomo, Multitap, and German Folk Music Band.

Oktoberfest Istanbul, organized by KafePi Group and Pepeevents, aims to bring thousands of people from different countries and cultures together in a fun, socio-cultural environment. The festival will also mark the first time that you will be able to find all the beers sold in Turkey in one place.

A quick lesson in history:

Oktoberfest’s tradition is based upon the marriage ceremony of Crown Prince Ludwig who later became King Ludwig I. When Prince Ludwig married Princess Therese of Saxony-Hildburghausen on 12th October 1810, the citizens were invited to celebrate the royal wedding at the festivity fields in front of the city gates. At the end of the celebrations, horse races were arranged. Later, it was decided that horse races would be held on an annual basis and this yearly festivity created the backbone of the Oktoberfest tradition. For many years, the horse races were accompanied by lots of eating and beer-drinking, but later on the tradition of holding horse races died and the modern understanding of Oktoberfest was born.

When: October 9, 12.00 PM

Where: Parkorman

How much: 25 TL; 15 TL (student)

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/oktoberfest-istanbul-315.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/oktoberfest-istanbul-315.html Thu, 06 Oct 2011 20:56:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Get the Corn Popping: Filmekimi is here!]]> When: October 8-15

Where: Atlas Sineması, Beyoğlu Sineması, Citylife Sinema at City’s Shopping Mall, Cinebonus at Maçka G-Mall

How much: 14 TL; 8 TL (concession); 5 TL (weekday morning/afternoon screenings)

At its 10th anniversary, Filmekimi is returning to the screens bigger, stronger, and moresatisfying than ever. Due to the festival's growing popularity and the audience's increasing demands, this year the festival will also be held inİzmir, Bursa, Konya, Trabzon,and Diyarbakır in addition to Istanbul. The estimated number of movie-goers is expected to exceed last year’s record of 43,000.

If you plan on being one of the thousands of movie-goers this month, read The Guide Istanbul’s picks, get your tickets from www.biletix.comor ticket booths at the participating theaters, and hit the movie theaters.

The Oscars are Calling

The Artistis, without a doubt, the most original movie of the year.It is a black-and-white silent movie that gives the audiencea taste of the Hollywood movie industry in the1930s by showing the fall of George Valentin, a famous silent movie star, after the introduction of sound film.The movie is directed so brilliantly by Michel Hazanaviciusthat although it is silent, it is far away from being dull. Jean Dujardin’s flawless performance portraying the emotions of George Valentin, who loses all his fame and glory, brought him the Best Actor Award in Cannes Film Festival.There is no surprise that TheArtist is a strong Oscar contender in various categories, including Best Picture and Best Actor. TheArtist is a funny, romantic and, at the same, heartbreaking film that guarantees an enjoyable experience with its flawless acting, directing, and scenario.

Director:Michel Hazanavicius

Lead Actors: Jean Dujardin, Bérénice Bejo, John Goodman, James Cromwell

Awards:Cannes Film Festival - Winner of Best Actor (Jean Dujardin) and nominated for Palme d’Or (Michel Hazanavicius)

Language:Silent with English/French intertitles

Genre:Comedy, Romance, Drama

WeNeed to Talk About Kevinis about the suffering of a mother after her son goes on a high-school killing spree. The queen of festival films Tilda Swinton does an amazing job as Eva, the mother who is trying to deal with the grief and guilt of her son’s (Kevin) actions. Eva can’t understand why her son would commit such an evil crime and begins to write to her estranged husband Franklin (John C. Reilly) who always used to side with Kevin. In 2007, Swinton won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress with her performance in Michael Clayton. After her dazzling performance in WeNeed to Talk About Kevin, she is expected to be a strong nominee for the Oscars in Best Actress category. Ezra Miller, who plays the troubled son, might also be among the nominees for Best Supporting Actor.The director Lynne Ramsay also does a great job in reflecting the change in the maincharacters' personalitiesin chronological order and telling such a dramatic story without overwhelming the audience.

Director:Lynne Ramsay

Lead Actors:Tilda Swinton, John C. Reilly, Ezra Miller

Awards:Cannes Film Festival - Official Selection and nominated for Palme d’Or (Lynne Ramsay)

Language:English

Genre:Drama, Thriller

This Must Be the Placeshows another side of Sean Penn that the audience has not seen before. As one of the most versatile actors in Hollywood,Sean Penn’s past roles included a homosexual politician, a mentally retardedfather, a gangster lawyer, and a convicted murderer on death row. In This Must Be the Place, he plays Cheyenne—a withdrawnex-rock-star in his fifties. Although Cheyenne is retired from the music business, he still dresses and puts on make up like a rock star looking very similar to Robert Smith from The Cure and acting a lot like Ozzy Osbourne as he shuffles his feet while walkingand mumbles while talking. His life suddenly changes when he receives the news that his estranged father is about to die. He travels all the way from Ireland to New York on a ship but unfortunately he doesn’t make it on time. Feeling sorry that he could not reconcile with his father, Cheyenne decides to pursue his father's unfinished business and track down the former Nazi officer who tortured him in Auschwitz. He travels across America to find him but his quest transforms into a journey of reconciliation and self discovery.There is no need to say that Sean Penn, as always, creates wonders with this performance as a Nazi hunting ex-rock-star. He is definitely a strong contender in the Oscar race for Best Actor.

Director: Paolo Sorrentino

Lead Actors:Sean Penn, Frances McDormand, Judd Hirsch

Awards:Cannes Film Festival – Winner of Prize of the Ecumenical Jury and nominated for Palme d’Or (Paolo Sorrentino)

Language:English

Genre:Crime, Drama, Thriller

A Dangerous Methodisone of the most intriguing movies of the year as it revolves around the relationship between the founder of analytical psychology Carl Jung (Michael Fassbender), his mentor and the father of psychoanalysis Sigmund Freud (Viggo Mortensen),and Jung’s patient/lover Sabina Spielrein (Kiera Knightley). Sabina is a hysteric sadomasochistic Russian patient whose twisted relationship with Jung causes friction between Jung and Freud. As the movie progresses, we witness the birth of psychoanalysis through the intellectual dialogues between these three characters.Although both Mortensen and Fassbender are really dominant actors,thestrongest performance in the movie is by Keira Knightley. Although some critics claim that Knightley went over the top with this performance and exaggerated the scenes where shehas hysteric episodes, others believe that her performance will carry her to the Oscars.

Director:David Cronenberg

Lead Actors:Viggo Mortensen, Michael Fassbender, Keira Knightley, Vincent Cassel

Awards: Venice Film Festival – Nominated for Golden Lion (David Cronenberg)

Language:English

Genre:Drama, Thriller

Doomsday Scenarios

In Filmekimi2011, the audience will come across two kinds of threats against humanity.The first one is the approaching planet Melancholia that is about to crash into Earth and bring all kinds of life to an end. In Melancholia, Lars von Trier prepares the audience for the end of the world through the eyes of Justine (Kirsten Dunst), a manic depressive woman who has just been left at the altar, and her long-suffering sister Claire (Charlotte Gainsbourg), accompanied with breathtaking images and sounds. The movie sets itself aside from other end-of-the-world films because instead of showing chaos and panic all over the world, Lars Von Trier only focuses on these two main characters.

Director:Lars von Trier

Lead Actors:KirstenDunst, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Kiefer Sutherland, John Hurt, Alexander Skarsgard

Awards:Cannes Film Festival - Winner of Best Actress (Kirsten Dunst) and nominated for Palme d’Or (Lars von Trier)

Language:English

Genre:Drama, Sci-Fi

The second threat against humanity isa deadly virus, which spreads very quickly and easily,in Steven Soderbergh's Contagion. The cast of the movie is full of AcademyAward- winners and nominees, including Gwyneth Paltrow, Matt Damon, Kate Winslet, Laurence Fishburne, Jude Law, Marion Cotillard, andElliot Gould. The film deals with thechaotic environment of panic and loss of social order through the behaviors of the different characters who are doctors, representatives from Homeland Security, journalists, epidemiologists, and sick people.This is a very realistic film by Academy Award-winning American director Steven Soderberghabout public health and scientific response to a worldwide epidemic.

Director:Steven Soderbergh

Lead Actors:Gwyneth Paltrow, Matt Damon, Kate Winslet, Laurence Fishburne, Jude Law, Marion Cotillard, Elliot Gould

Language:English

Genre:Drama, Sci Fi, Thriller

Unlimited Sexual Fantasies

ShameandSleeping Beauty are two movies that are based on sexual fantasies. In Shame, director Steven McQueen and actorMichael Fassbender team up one more time, after Hunger, in order to portray a very lonely man named Brandon who has a secretworld of excessive sex, pornography, and masturbation. Although he thinks about sex all the time, he frequently feels shame and regret for leading such an artificial life. His life turns upside down when his sister Sissy (Carey Mulligan) comes to live with him temporarily. He feels like his darkest and deepest desires will be exposed and he will be perceived as a pervert by his sister.

Michael Fassbender, who is not afraid to show every inch of his body, does a great job in portraying Brandon. The director Steve McQueen uses lots of nudity and sexual scenes to reflect the inner world of Brandon and make the movie as realistic as possible. (The movie will have a special screening on 14th of October at midnight at Atlas Sineması.)

Director:Steve McQueen

Lead Actors:Michael Fassbender, Carey Mulligan,

Awards:Venice Film Festival – 'CinemAvvenire' Award for Best Film, FIPRESCI Prize for Best Film, Volpi Cup for Best Actor (Michael Fassbender), Golden Lion Nomination for Steve McQueen

Language:English

Genre:Drama

In Sleeping Beauty the audience witnesses a sexual nightmare wherethe young university student Lucy (Emily Browning) getsdrawn into a mysterious world of unspoken desires. According to some critics, the movie is reminiscent of Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut with rich people having deranged sex parties without any consequences.In the movie, Emily Browning shows a controlledand believable performance as Lucywith her childish and innocent looks. Also, director Julia Leigh creates a dreamlike atmosphere with soft lights and bold primary colors.

Director:Julia Leigh

Lead Actors:Emily Browning, Rachael Blake, and Ewen Leslie

Awards:Cannes Film Festival - Nominated for Palme d'Or (Julia Leigh)

Language:English

Genre:Drama

Young Talents

In the French production Kid with aBike, the audience witnesses the struggles of an eleven-year-old boy named Cyril (Thomas Doret), who is abandoned by his father and left at an orphanage. Cyril frequently escapes from the orphanage to search for his father and his bike that got lost. One day, Cyril meets a hairdresser named Samantha (Cécile De France) who helps him find and get his bike back. After a while, Cyril starts to stay with Samantha on the weekends. Although she is not a qualified childcare provider, she tries really hard to lead the confused and rebellious boy in the right direction and be the mother he never had. Growing up in a tough town with bad influences, will Cyril hold on to the hope that Samantha gives him or will he keep on walking on the dark path he's been walking since his father abandoned him?

Directors:Jean-PierreDardenne and Luc Dardenne

Lead Actors:Thomas Doret, Cécile De France and Jérémie Renier

Awards:Cannes Film Festival - Winner of Grand Prize of the Jury for Best Film and nominated for Palm d’Or (Jean-PierreDardenne ), Flaiano Film Festival - Winner of Best Director

Language:French

Genre:Drama


Another French production that is based on childhood dramas is Tomboy, which is about a ten-year-old girl who moves into a new neighborhood where she introduces herself as a boy. Zoé Héran, as thetomboy Laure, is very convincing both as a girl and a boy, and fun to watch. The scenes withLaure's sister Malonn Lévana cheers up the movie and entertains the audience. Fans of such coming-of-age tales as Stand by Me andVillage of Dreams will enjoy this film.

Director:Céline Sciamma

Lead Actors:Zoé Héran, Malonn Lévana, and Jeanne Disson

Awards:Berlin International Film Festival – Winner of Teddy Jury Award (Céline Sciamma), Philadelphia International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival – Winner of Jury Prize for Best Feature, San Francisco International Lesbian & Gay Film Festival – Winner of Audience Award for Best Feature, Torino International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival – Winner of Best Feature Film

Language: French

Genre:Drama

Middle Eastern Tunes

The Devil's Doubleis the story Latif Yahia, who is an Iraqi soldier forced to act as the body double of Saddam Hussein’s son Uday Hussein. The world of Hussein is filled with rape, torture, murder, drugs, sex, and money, and Yahia has to find a way to adapt into all this cruelty.In the movie, the roles of both Uday Hussein and Latif Yahia are played by Dominic Cooper. Although this is his first role as the leading actor, hisperformance isbreathtaking.

Director: Lee Tamahori

Lead Actors:Dominic Cooper, Ludivine Sagnier and Raad Rawi

Language:English

Genre:Action, Biography, Drama

This is Not a Filmis a controversial film by the most importantIranian director Jafar Panahi. The movie was smuggled out of Iranto Cannes Film Festival on a flash discinside of a cake since Jafar Panahi's rights of making a movie is banned for 20 years by the oppressiveIranian government. In the film, Panahi spends an ordinary day at home andtells his friend documentary producer Mirtahmasb his ideas for a new movie. Panahi is the co-director, screenwriter, film editor, and star in this “non movie” where he proves that he will always pursue his desire of making movies.

Directors:Mojtaba Mirtahmasb and Jafar Panahi

Lead Actors: Jafar Panahi

Language:Persian

Genre:Documentary

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/get-the-corn-popping-filmekimi-is-here-314.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/get-the-corn-popping-filmekimi-is-here-314.html Thu, 06 Oct 2011 15:23:00 +0300
<![CDATA[21st Akbank Jazz Festival]]> Arts festivals are an embarrassment of riches. Too often do we get our hands on a program for the latest film or theater or music festival, and spend hours winnowing down our choices…only to find that time, budget constraints, and prior engagements conspire to prevent us from attending them all.

This year’s 21st Akbank Jazz Festival offers an especially wide selection of music, stretching the generic confines of jazz to the limit. With acts as varied as Azam Ali, Hollie Cook, The Amsterdam Klezmer Band, Ray Gelato, and dozens of others, the festival has something for every taste, even for those who wouldn’t normally consider themselves jazz fans.

The only way to know for sure what you want to attend is to look at Akbank’s complete program, available here. For those who would like a little musical guidance, here are five picks courtesy of The Guide’s editorial staff.

Arild Andersen Trio

One of the most exceptional European jazz trios, the Arild Andersen Trio, will kick start the festival on the 13th. The trio’s founder, Arild Andersen, is a prominent Norwegian bass player who was named European Musician of the Year in 2008 by the French Académie du jazz. Andersen is accompanied by the legendary Scottish saxophone player Tommy Smith and the Italian drummer Paolo Vinaccia.

Andersen, who has been on the Scandinavian Jazz scene since the 1970s, is undeniably one ofthe most gifted talents in Scandinavia. He has released numerous albums, performed with the Jan Garbarek Quartet, and collaborated with American jazz masters like Chick Corea, Phil Woods,and Dexter Gordon. Music critics have been very effusive with their praise about this Norwegian bassist: “The music of the Arild Andersen Trio is not about showing off,” saysTyran Grillo in his review of the Rochester International Jazz Festival.“It is about mood, reflection and living in the moment. The bass may be Anderson's voice, but song craft is his forte.”

Where:Cemal Reşit Rey Konser Salonu

When: October 13, 8:30 PM

How much: 50 TL; 40 TL; 30 TL; 20 TL (students)

ZAZ

The young French songstress Isabelle Geffroy (better known as Zaz), hugely popular both in France and here in Turkey – where she is especially known for her hit song “Je Veux” (I want to) – will be performing in Istanbul for one night only.

Starting her musical studies at the age of five, Zaz attracted attention through her street concerts in Paris, and her fame has swiftly increased to the point where she is now known as France’s most popular singer. She has released one album to date, Zaz, as well as a number of hit singles, and we’re sure her audiences are breathlessly awaiting another album from this hugely talented singer, with her infectious energy, zest, and love of life.

When: October 22, 8:30 PM

Where: Lutfi Kirdar Kongre ve Sergi Sarayi

How much: 125 TL; 103.50 TL; 93 TL; 82.50 TL; 71.50 TL; 56.50 TL; 55.50 TL

The Ray Gelato Giants

During the festival you’ll have a chance to hear Ray Gelato and his band perform at Babylon. Gelato, widely recognized as one of the greatest living UK masters of swing, is in great demand and has performed for Paul McCartney, Richard Branson, and the British royal family. Gelato formed his current group, The Ray Gelato Giants, in 1994, and his career since then has been a flurry of tours, film appearances, and album releases. Renowned for his lively and energetic interpretations of such classic songs as “That’s Amore” and “Just a Gigolo,” Gelato is sure to provide audiences at Babylon with a night of terrific singing and saxophone playing.

The Ray Gelato Giants are in Istanbul to promote their new album, Ray Gelato Salutes The Great Entertainers. Gelato’s band is made up of the Gelato himself on vocals and tenor saxophone, Daniel Marsden on trumpet, Andrew Rogers on trombone, Oliver Wilby on alto/tenor saxophone, Oliver Hayhurst on double bass, Gunther Kurmayr on piano, and Sebastian De Krom on drums. Don’t delay! Get your tickets before they’re sold out.

When: October 13, 10:30 PM

Where: Babylon

How much: 30 TL; 20 TL (students)

Avishai Cohen

The jazz musician Avishai Cohen, whose 2006 album Continuo was described by the New York Times as combining “heavy Middle Eastern groove with a delicate, almost New Age lyricism,” has long been a fixture of New York City’s jazz scene, and has made a dozen albums in his career. Cohen originally studied the piano, then moved on to bass guitar and double bass, under the influence of the bass guitarist Jaco Pastorius. Cohen has performed with his mentor, jazz legend Chick Corea, as well as with other stars like Herbie Hancock and Bobby McFerrin.

Cohen will be singing and playing bass on numbers from his latest album, Seven Seas, alongside Omri Mor on piano, and Amir Bresler on drums. Don’t miss this great concert by a fantastic jazz maestro, Avishai Cohen.

When: October 23, 8:30 PM

Where: Lütfi Kırdar Kongre ve Sergi Sarayı

How much: 60 TL; 50 TL; 40 TL; 30 TL; 20 TL (students)

Kerem Görsev Trio & Sedef Erçetin “Chamber Jazz”

Jazz, in all its different incarnations (Nu-jazz, Balkan jazz, swing jazz, fusion jazz, and many more) is the focal point of the Akbank Jazz Festival. For those who prefer a more classic, even classical, variety of jazz, Kerem Görsev is a perfect choice. The 50-year-old Görsev was initially trained as a classical pianist (at the Istanbul State Conservatory), and the influence of classical music on his jazz projects (which include albums madewith the London and St. Petersburg Philharmonics) is evident. Görsev is currently applying a chamber music approach to jazz through his Chamber Jazz project.

Görsev’s trio normally consists of himself on piano, Kağan Yıldız on double bass, and Ferit Odman on drums. For the Chamber Jazz project, the trio will be joined by Sedef Erçetin on cello. Come to The Seed to hear their unique sound, bridging the gap between jazz and classical music.

When: October 20, 9:00 PM

Where: The Seed

How much: 50 TL

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/21st-akbank-jazz-festival-309.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/21st-akbank-jazz-festival-309.html Tue, 04 Oct 2011 10:03:00 +0300
<![CDATA[C24 Gallery]]> Art-lovers in New York City – a locale bursting at the seams with museums and galleries – have recently made room for a further addition to this great center for international art. The C24 Gallery, founded by Emre and Maide Kurttepeli, Erkut and Aslı Soyak, and Mel Doğan, has recently opened on West 24th Street in Chelsea, becoming the first Turkish art gallery in New York City. The gallery’s inaugural exhibition is entitled Double Crescent: Art from Istanbul and New Orleans.

The exhibition, which will be running through October 22nd, brings together works from artists based in Istanbul as well as in one of the most historical cities in the United States, New Orleans. Explaining the logic behind this combination, curator Dan Cameron (the Artistic Director for the 8th Istanbul Biennial in 2003) has stated, “Double Crescent examines the art of two great port cities that have channeled European culture into unexpected colors and shapes. Both Istanbul and New Orleans have existed as exotic relics of a colonial past, and both have undergone extraordinary transformations over the past 100 years, which have brought them back from a marginal position to centrality in world culture with completely new identities shaped by the global economy. This exhibition showcases two vibrant scenes of contemporary art that are as yet little known to New York audiences in order to at least partly redress this lack of information and firsthand experience.”

Among the works on display in Double Crescent is a piece entitled The Raft by Generic Art Solutions, a project by New Orleans-based pair Tony Campbell and Matt Vis. The composition of this 2010 work ironically references Géricault’s famous oil painting The Raft of the Medusa, while its details refer to the BP Gulf of Mexico oil spill (and perhaps, one can not help speculating, to Hurricane Katrina as well.) Joining Generic Art Solutions is another artist who has also exhibited at New Orleans’s Jonathan Ferrara Gallery, Skylar Fein. Fein’s defiant, provocative works include a piece from his Black Flag series, entitled Black Flag for Herbert Marcuse. Here, a plaster/wood panel has been painted in black and white to resemble a American flag, in which the stripes have been replaced by segments displaying prices in dollars and cents and a running quotation from the famous Frankfurt School philosopher.

The works by Turkish artists at C24, while they may not be as (immediately) accessible in theme as the pieces mentioned above, are no less accomplished. The filmmaker and video artist Gülsün Karamustafa has participated in a number of biennials as well as numerous international film festivals including the Uçan Süpürge Kadın Filmleri Festivali (Flying Broom Women’s Film Festival), the first women’s film festival in Turkey. Karamustafa’s video piece The City and the Secret Panther Fashion, showing a group of five women clad in leopard-skin-patterned clothing, on a bed with leopard-skin-patterned quilt and drapes, is a brilliant reductio ad absurdum of this signifier of liberated sexuality. The alabaster chair-and-footrest pairs of Ayşe Erkmen (whose works have been exhibited at venues like the Venice and Sharjah Biennials) deftly blur the line between aesthetics and functionality.

The show also includes work by US artists Bruce Davenport, Jr., Dave Greber, and Regina Scully, as well as Turkish artists Ali Kazma, Hale Tenger, and Nazım Ünal Yılmaz. The Executive Director of C24 is Kristen Lynn Johnston; its Programming Director is Olivier Fuller; its current Creative Consultant for Turkish Art is Sefa Sağlam; and its Gallery Manager is Caroline Rowley.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/c24-gallery-306.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/c24-gallery-306.html Fri, 30 Sep 2011 16:34:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Istanbul Design Week]]> Istanbul Design Week – organized by dDf, with the partnership of the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality and İSTAV (The Istanbul Art Publicity and Research Foundation) – will be open to design-lovers for five days in September and October, showcasing the latest trends in the theoretical, artistic, scientific, and technological aspects of design and architecture.

IDW, now in its sixth year, will take place on the Old Galata Bridge, and will include a variety of conferences, exhibitions, and seminars. The attendees will include such eminent names in design as Lidewij Edekoort, Amanda Levete, Tomoko Azumi, Melkan Tabanlıoğlu, Zuzanna Skalaska, Paul Van Ravestein and Monique Mulder (Mattmo), Nathan Shedroff, Ralph Wiegman, Timo Wong and Priscilla Lui, Ronen Kadushin and Eberhard Schrempf.

During Istanbul Design Week, you will have the chance to see an exhibition entitled Design Spirit, whose concept involves 40 projects by 40 designers under the age of 40. The Barbarian Group will also have an exhibition showcasing its innovate ideas in book design. Additional exhibitions will include Pink Design, involving various pink-colored products; an exhibition by the well-known Turkish designers Aziz Sariyer, Akin Nalca, Şule Koç, Tamer Nakisci, Fatih Alkan and Ayla Turan,entitled Istanbul Bells; Izmir Design Line, featuring the works of Izmir-based designers; Juju Studio; the winners of the Dutch Design Awards; the Dutch design firm Brainport; the Good 50x70 poster exhibition; and work by the English graphic designer Anthony Burrill. There will also be an exhibition from Austria at the nearby Eski Şapka Fabrikası (Old Hat Factory) in Hasköy. Finally, during Istanbul Design Week you will be able to see the winning design projects from the W Hotel’s Young Designers Competition.

Design aficionados will not want to miss this important annual event, which is sure to be brimming with new ideas and concepts.

When: September 28 – October 2

Where: Old Galata Bridge

How much: 10 TL; 5 TL (students)

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/istanbul-design-week-304.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/istanbul-design-week-304.html Tue, 27 Sep 2011 18:02:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Untitled (12th Istanbul Biennial)]]>

The 12th Istanbul Biennial came in much secrecy but it was totally worth the anxious wait. In the press opening, curators Jens Hoffmann and Adriano Pedrosa stated that the reason for the secrecy was to prevent pre-consumption of the artists and their works. This year, it was not only the secrecy that was new but also the decision in limiting the exhibition spaces. The show used to be scattered around the city, taking advantage of its intricate urban structure; however, this time around the curators chose to house the exhibitions in two large warehouses in Tophane, famously known as Antrepo 3 and Antrepo 5.

When: September 17–November 13

The Venue

Having cut down on the exhibition spaces, the curators commissioned the Office of Ryue Nishizawa to design the interior. The unique architecture clearly reflects some aspects of Istanbul. Rooms of different sizes leading one into passageways, shortcuts, and multiple rooms create distinct interior-exterior relationships. The architecture, thus, manages to create the city structure that it borrows from Istanbul, while adding a touch of Gonzales-Torres’s minimal and elegant approach to art.

The Concept

The Cuban American artist Felix Gonzalez-Torres (1957–1996) is the point of departure of the 12th Istanbul Biennial. Gonzalez-Torres was one of those artists who constantly demonstrated that the personal is political. As in previous years, the twelfth edition of the Biennial delves into the relationship between art and politics. There are both politically outspoken works, and formally innovative and curious art pieces. One of the refreshing aspects of the Biennial is its balanced use of diverse artistic mediums.

The Sections

The venue houses 5 group exhibitions and 50 solo shows. Each of the group exhibitions are marked by gray walls, occupying a room for each subdivision: Untitled (Death by Gun), Untitled (Ross), Untitled (History), Untitled (Passport), and Untitled (Abstraction). Marked by white walls, the solo shows are situated around the group exhibitions. All continents are represented in the show but there is a special focus on Latin America and the Middle East.

The Works

There are many historically crucial artworks at the Biennial. For instance, in the section Untitled (Death by Gun), there is Street Execution of a Viet Cong Prisoner taken in three frames by the American photojournalist Eddie Adams in 1968. As shocking and gruesome as they were, these photographs brought a much-needed discussion around the Vietnam War.

In the same section, Mat Collishaw’s Bullet Hole depicts a bullet hole in what appears to be the back of a head. In this extreme close-up, the photograph is divided over 15 panels that appear like stained glass pieces taken from a public building or perhaps a church.

In the section Untitled (History) Voluspa Jarpa’s work Library of No History draws attention with its simple presentation of books that contain declassified CIA documents about the Pinochet dictatorship in Chile. The viewers are welcome to take a book on the condition that they write down on a form why they’re taking one. The title of the piece makes one think about what makes history, and the question goes beyond a simple “official versus alternative” take on historical accounts. The unquestionable objectivity and power of documents are also being explored through this piece. The dominance of the color gray suggests that these documents, which are supposedly holding the truth about a certain era, are far from conveying the complex socio-political effects of the dictatorship.

In the solo shows Marwa Arsanios’s installation All About Acapulco dives into her own family history in order to tell the story of Acapulco, a coastal site in south of Lebanon. Formerly a nice beach town, Acapulco changed its face after 1976 with the arrival of refugees who appropriated the beach clubs as their homes. Arsanios tries to trace the story of this urban transformation through her own family’s relationship to the beach town.

The third leg of the Biennial is Untitled (Abstraction), in which Theo Craveiro’s ant farm entitled Visible Idea presents a playful yet thought-provoking piece on systems of communicating an idea. The artist asks what kind of structures we need in order to communicate, or if we need any systems at all. Based on the grid structure of a well-known painting by Waldemar Cordeiro of the same title, the piece not only shows multiple systems working within each other but also brings up the question of whether we can exist beyond systems.

Linked to the same section, a solo exhibition by Adrian Esparza, Far and Wide, attract much attention with its visual simplicity and complex web of questions regarding, color, form, origin, and universality. In this piece, Esparza unravels a serape, a Mexican blanket, thus deconstructing it to its founding geometric shapes and colors. This way, the artist takes the blanket out of its traditional context, and turns into a universal human experience.

Untitled (Passport) explores the theme of borders as well as state control and oppression. It also draws attention to ideological constructions of natural phenomena. One such example is Kutluğ Ataman’s two-channel video piece Water. In this piece, a short section of the free flowing water of the Bosphorus is recorded at different times of the day and then edited into 5 different sections in both channels, creating horizontal grids on the screens. The piece makes reference to water politics, putting water within the limits of a screen to reflect upon state ideology.

Claire Fontaine, on the other hand, approaches the issue of borders from another perspective. The neon lights in Albanian, Turkish, Armenian, German, and Kurdish declare that there are “Foreigners Everywhere.” This references the issue of the xenophobia that has been heightened especially after the 9/11 attack, while also drawing attention to the fact that we are all foreigners at one point or another.

The last section of the Biennial is Untitled (Ross), which directly refers to Gonzales-Torres’s work about his partner Ross Laycock who died of AIDS in 1991, five years before the artist himself died of the same disease. This section mainly explores queer love and the notion of family, as well as problems regarding AIDS. In Jonathas de Andrades 2 in 1, two handsome Brazilian men wearing identical clothes are photographed in a series as they assemble two single beds into a double bed. The piece acts as a humorous manual encouraging and smoothing the union of two persons of the same sex. Many of the works in the group exhibition have erotic undertones and the materials used are from daily life, allowing the audience to access the works easily.

On the contrary, works on AIDS are dense and heavy, such as the one by the Ardmore Ceramic Art Studio, which uses ceramics as a tool to express the frustration and fear about AIDS both for patients and the people around them.

The Verdict

The biennial reaches far and wide in terms of time and geographies, and questions our most fundamental experiences as well as socio-political issues like state control, racism, and violence. This groundbreaking audiovisual world will draw you in with its ability to provoke, educate, and humor. You only need to pay attention as the works speak in various languages directly to your senses.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/untitled-12th-istanbul-biennial-296.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/untitled-12th-istanbul-biennial-296.html Fri, 16 Sep 2011 21:00:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Biennial and the Others]]> “So many exhibitions, so little time.” This fall will see the 12th Istanbul Biennial take place at Antrepo 3 and 5 in Tophane. Needless to say, the Biennial is an eagerly-awaited exhibition, and one that will be shrouded in secrecy up until the very opening of the show. However, the Biennial is in fact just one of a series of must-see exhibitions in Istanbul this month. Below is a list of The Guide Istanbul’s picks of some of the fall’s most creative and interesting art events.

The Turkish-Bulgarian artist Ergin Çavuşoğlu’s exhibit Başkalık (Alterity), at the Rampa Gallery, deals with life’s little coincidences, and their greater significance, accompanied by an instructional video explaining the artist’s methodology.

When: September 12 - October 20

Click here for more details.

The Kurye 11 Video Screenings, running concurrently with the Kurye 2011 Game Art Festival, are a series of documentary and non-documentary films and videos of various lengths, either inspired by video games or taking video games as their subject matter.

When: September 12 – 18

Click here for more details.

The Kurye 2011 Game Art Festival entitled Space Invaders, at Yapı-Endüstri Merkezi,deals with the intersecting fields of video, art, and video games, with panels by various prominent gamers, game developers, and artists.

When: September 14 – 23

Click here for more details.

The exhibit entitled İstanbullaşmak (becoming Istanbul) at SALT Gallery in Beyoğlu sheds light on some mysteries in Istanbul’s history, explaining the origins of the names of different neighborhoods, public transportation in the city, the changing face of Istanbul, and many other fascinating questions.

When: September 13 - December 31

Click here for more details.

Tekinsiz Oyunlar (Uncanny Games), at Pg Gallery, asks us to consider what a “game” is, with an exhibit by 22 different artists focusing on the not quite so innocent games of one-upmanship played by adults.

When: September 13 - October 28

Click here for more details.

Mogens Jacobsen’s OECDlab at PiST is an interactive look at the world of laboratory equipment and statistical measuring devices, provocatively inviting its audience to question the notion of scientific objectivity.

When: September 14 – November 5

Click here for more details.

The newly-opening Pilot Gallery in Cihangir will host an exhibition entitled If I Can’t Dance It’s Not My Revolution by Halil Altındere. The exhibition’s various themes include the anarchist Emma Goldman (the inspiration for the exhibition’s title) and the Dengbej people of Southeast Anatolia.

When: September 15 – November 12

Click here for more details.

Pop Art Extended, at Gallery Linart and ALANistanbul, offers a look movement known as Pop Art, not only by displaying three Warhol pieces never shown before in Turkey, but also through the work of artists following in Warhol’s footsteps: Arda Yalkın, Ayline Olukman, Ayşegül Sağbaş, Deniz Beşer, Gökçe Çelikel, Halil Vurucuoğlu, Monika Bulanda, Murat Pulat, Yiğit Yazıcı and Zeynep Beler.

When: September 15 – October 15

Click here for more details.

The artist and filmmaker Kutluğ Ataman’s Mesopotamya Dramaturjileri (Mesopotamian Dramaturgies), at Arter, is an ongoing photo/video project dealing with the clash between tradition and modernity in Southeast Anatolia (later installments will take us to other countries in the region such as Syria and Iraq.)

When: September 15 - November 16

Click here for more details.

Hayal ve Hakikat: Türkiye’den Modern ve Çağdaş Kadın Sanatçılar(Dreams and Reality: Modern and Contemporary Female Artists from Turkey), at the Istanbul Museum of Modern Art, is a wide-ranging exhibition of Turkish women’s art from the early 1900s to the present, offering a feminist perspective on art, society, and women’s issues. Various panels and symposia will accompany the exhibition.

When: September 16 - January 8

Click here for more details.

Reflex at Galeri Nev, by the artist Canan Tolon, is an exhibit of abstract oil paintings whose patterns are subtly repeated and transformed from panel to panel. In this way, Tolon’s static images take on dynamic force.

When: September 17 - October 22

Click here for more details.

İnci Eviner’s Kırık Manifestolar (Broken Manifestoes), showing at Galeri Nev, is an unsettling exhibition of video screens offering a vision of humankind gone astray. The exhibition has a soundtrack by João Pedro Veloso Rodrigues.

When: September 17 – October 30

Click here for more details.

To inaugurate the Perili Köşk’s use as a gallery space on the weekends, there will be an exhibition entitled Yedi Yeni İş (Seven New Works) by Esra Ersen, Burak Arıkan, Gülsün Karamustafa, Cevdet Erek, Nasan Tur, Ergin Çavuşoğlu and Aslı Çavuşoğlu, and curated by Mario Codognato and Sylvia Kouvali.

When: September 17 – December 11

Click here for more details.

The duo known as :mentalKLINIK, consisting of Yasemin Baydar and Birol Demir, have an exhibition entitled That’s F___ing Awesome (through Galerist) at the Hasköy Yarn Factory. This exhibition will force the viewer to see everyday objects in an eery and unfamiliar light.

When: September 17 – October 22

Click here for more details.

Ali Taptık’s Deployment at X-ist is a four-part series of photographs whose subjects include catalogues of various plant specimens, the photographer’s snapshot photos, photos taken with different focal lengths, and photos dealing with the Turkish publication of Henry Miller’s Tropic of Capricorn.

When: September 22 – October 15

Click here for more details.

Rasha Kahil’s exhibit In Your Home, at The Empire Project, is a provocative series of photographs of the artist, in the nude, in houses belonging to friends and acquaintances of hers. The exhibit asks the viewer to question who is the real voyeur: us, or the artist?

When: September 23 – October 29

Click here for more details.

Rasha Kahil will also give a talk at The Empire Project dealing with the issues with which she is preoccupied as an artist – the body, the gaze, and the relationship between the public and the private.

When: September 24

Click here for more details.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/biennial-and-the-others-293.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/biennial-and-the-others-293.html Wed, 14 Sep 2011 21:58:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Istanbul Fashion Week Recap + Picks]]> Who are Lian and Ezgi?

Lian and Ezgi are personal shoppers and fashion consultants. They also do freelance styling and give seminars on image and styling. After studying fashion design at Parsons School of Design, Lian worked at Vakko as the Couture Headbuyer. After finishing her studies in Management at Bilkent University, Ezgi studied fashion in Florence at the Polimoda Fashion School. She also worked for Vakko as the Product Manager of the Women’s Department, then as the Marketing Manager of Ipek Kıramer. Lian and Ezgi have a website called Luxury Shoppers where you can follow their style, buy their products, and contact them for their services.

The fifth Istanbul Fashion Week, which was held last week between September 7th and 10th, hosted alarge number of young Turkish designers as well as a small number of Turkish brands. Press members from Italy, Germany, Spain, and many other countries attended the shows to report back on what took place at IFW this year.

The week took off with a mixed show of İpek Arnas, Aslı Güler, and Jale Hürdoğan, and continued with the socially-responsible brand Argande’s show. The first day of IFW ended with the shows of Atıl Kutoğlu and well-known brand Tween, where Matt Dillon was among the audience. In addition to the tent set up in Tepebaşı in front of the TRT Building, some designers chose other locations for their shows. Gül Ağış’s show “Hammam Decadence” took place at the historical Galatasaray Hamam, while Mehtap Elaidi introduced “Istanbul Tılsımları,” her Spring/Summer 2012 collection that will be shown during Paris Fashion Week, at Spoil. Atıl Kutoğlu, Özgür Mansur, Cengiz Abazoğlu for adl, and Hakan Yıldırım for Koton were among the sought-after shows of the week.

Of the 22 fashion shows that took place over 4 days, Lian Kebudi and Ezgi Kıramer chose to attend the mixed show of the first day, Niyazi Erdoğan, Atıl Kutoğlu, Hakan Yıldırım for Koton, and Simay Bülbül.

Here is what they had to say about the fashion shows:

Mixed Show (İpek Arnas, Aslı Güler, and Jale Hürdoğan)

E+L: “The pieces in Jale Hürdoğan’s collection ‘Stigmatization’ were quite vamp and fierce. We thought that İpek Arnas’s innovative knitwear was fun. Aslı Güler’s collection was inspired by the girlie look of the 50s-60s and featured a lot of short, high-waisted skirts, colorful scarves, and raincoats.”

Niyazi Erdoğan

E+L: “We liked the unity between all the details within the collection and how they supported the concept. What first grabbed our attention were the color palette and the art deco prints on tshirts and shirts. We really liked the crocodile belts, sunglasses, jeans, and the details of the pants. With this collection, we can clearly see that Niyazi Erdoğan has grown and developed as a designer.”

Atıl Kutoğlu

E+L: “We found the men’s collection to be very fresh and new. We liked the color combinations, suit cuts, the combination of shorts and jackets, and portfolio bags. We were less impressed by the women’s collection as it was filled with striped caftans and patterns that we’re used to seeing from Atıl Kutoğlu. Yet, we really liked the grey and yellow striped fabrics as well as the day-time looks.”

Hakan Yıldırım for Koton

E+L: “This was one of our favorite shows. As always, Hakan Yıldırım created a chic collection of evening gowns. The color palette consisted of black, fuchsia, midnight blue, purple, and ecru. We really liked the high-heeled, pointy shoes as well as the details in the hair and make-up.”

Simay Bülbül

E+L: “Simay Bülbül is an expert when it comes to leather. We loved the zipper on the side in the short black dress—it’s punk but also chic. We loved both of the white dresses—they feature great leather work, and the contrast between the leather and chiffon is beautiful.”

Browse the photos above to see Ezgi and Lian’s picks, snapshots from the runway, and the style of the IFW audience.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/istanbul-fashion-week-recap-picks-289.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/istanbul-fashion-week-recap-picks-289.html Mon, 12 Sep 2011 20:29:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Pilot Gallery: The Rebirth of Outlet Gallery]]> Tophane’s Outlet Gallery has moved to Cihangir and has reinvented itself during the process.

Outlet Gallery opened in 2008, aiming to bring contemporary art to the masses, especially the works of Turkish artists whose works have been widely exhibited outside of Turkey but never found a Turkish audience. The need for a larger space and disputes with the landlord led owner Azra Tüzünoğlu to look for a new space. And what she found is surely worth the 16-month construction process.

What is now called Pilot Gallery used to be one of the hippest nightclubs of the 70s. The venue had been out of use for over 30 years when Azra found it. As expected, the venue was a bit of a mess and she was asked multiple times whether they were sure they wanted to buy it. But Azra says, “Even at its worst, this place looked like a beautiful woman with smudged mascara on the morning after.”

Azra says that the reason why they decided to change the name of the gallery from Outlet to Pilot is that Outlet had fulfilled its purpose and that a new name was needed to move forward. The word pilot is written the same way in multiple languages and means the same thing; the word also stands for someone who takes you from one place to the next. Also, a pilot study is the experimental ground of new systems and ideas—just like the innovative Pilot Gallery.

This pioneering venue will not only be a space that showcases artists’ works but it will also be an interactive, social area, a meeting point for exchanging ideas. In fact, Pilot will be launching a digital library through which visitors will be able to access numerous art publications. There are also plans for organizing a variety of workshops, film screenings, and talks.

Even though the main goal of Pilot is displaying artworks and taking an active role in the development of art in Turkey, they also want to answer this question: will there be more interesting works when formerly separate disciplines like literature, cinema, and architecture are brought together with contemporary art?

Now, the venue is almost ready for the gallery’s opening on September 15th with Halil Altındere’s exhibition called “If I can’t dance, it’s not my revolution.” We would have given you the scoop on what this post-disco gallery looks like but it would spoil all the fun, so we’ll let you check it out yourself.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/pilot-gallery-the-rebirth-of-outlet-gallery-285.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/pilot-gallery-the-rebirth-of-outlet-gallery-285.html Thu, 08 Sep 2011 15:56:00 +0300
<![CDATA[The 12th Istanbul Biennial: “Untitled”]]>

When: September 17 to November 13

Where: Atrepo 3 and Antrepo 5

Istanbul residents and visitors alike are waiting with excitement and anticipation for the 12th Istanbul Biennial, which will take place this year from September 17 to November 13. Organized by the IKSV, with sponsorship from Koç Holding, this event is cloaked in an air of mystery; very few details are being released to the general public. Naturally, this has helped add to the buzz of this always-anticipated event. Indeed, the Biennial has helped put Istanbul on the map as a global arts destination, and today it is widely considered to be among the most important art events in Europe.

The title for this year’s Biennial is “Untitled”. This title, along with the visual identity and themes of the Biennial, reference the work of Cuban-American artist Felix Gonzalez-Torres. Gonzalez-Torres was one of the most influential artists of his time, combining elements of conceptual art, minimalism, and political activism in his work, which was both formally innovative and explicitly political. Gonzalez-Torres’s work challenged notions of public and private space as well as the authoritative structures in which we all function. His artwork often used everyday objects, such as light bulbs, pieces of string, paper, and cellophane-wrapped hard candies, while his experience with AIDS was another recurring theme in his work.

While Gonzalez-Torres’s work will not be displayed at the Biennial, his presence and artistic themes will be evoked in a number of ways. IKSV has stated that, in keeping with Gonzalez-Torres’s idea of “Untitled” and his desire to circumvent established artistic and political conventions, the names of the artists will remain undisclosed until the Biennial’s opening. However, with the release of some preliminary images, we have learnt the names of some of the artists whose work will be on display at the Biennial, including Claudia Andujar, Dora Maurer, Geta Bratescu, Letizia Battaglia, Martha Rosler, Teresa Burga, Tina Modotti, and Zarina Hashmi.

Taking inspiration from Gonzalez-Torres’s work, the Biennial will be composed of five group exhibitions. Around these group exhibitions will be more than 50 solo presentations, which will be linked to the subjects of the groups, but will go one step further in pushing the themes and exploring the topics presented in the group exhibits.

The five group exhibitions will be as follows:

Untitled (Abstraction)Inspired by Gonzalez-Torres’s “Untitled” (BloodworkSteady Decline, 1994), this exhibit brings together artists whose works subvert pure abstraction and high-modernism by integrating political and physiological themes into their artwork.

“Untitled” (Ross)takes its point of departure from “Untitled”(Ross, 1991),a work which consisted of an endless supply of candies individually wrapped in various colors of cellophane, which was an homage to Gonzalez-Torres’s lover Ross. This exhibit consists of works that blend the personal into the political, exploring themes of gay love, relations, family, identity, desire, sexuality, and loss.

“Untitled” (Passport)takes its inspiration from “Untitled” (Passport #II, 1993), a work consisting of endless copies of bound booklets. The themes in this exhibit include national identity, trespassing across borders, mapping, statehood, economic migration, and political and cultural alienation.

“Untitled:” (History)focuses on the writing of history and alternative readings of history.

“Untitled” (Death by Gun)is inspired by the “stack piece” of the same title by Gonzalez-Torres (1990). This is a group exhibition that considers the rampant global spread of gun violence through a diverse array of historic and contemporary artworks that focus on the role of the gun, the murderer, and the victim.

The venue for the 12th Istanbul Biennial will be Antrepo 3 and 5. The inside of these former warehouse spaces have been transformed into exhibition spaces with steel and drywall construction by the Architectural Design Office of Ryue Nishizawa. The IKSV has stated that with this exhibit space and format, this Biennial is drawing attention to the importance of the exhibition, the primary format of artistic and curatorial expression. This is in response to the trend seen today, particularly in the biennial context, in which multiple side shows and supporting events are favored over the main event. Instead, this Biennial will be installed in Antrepo, within a single, carefully constructed space that privileges the display of artworks.

The Biennial is being co-curated by Adriano Pedrosa, the founding director of Programa Independente da Escola São Paulo (PIESP), and Jens Hoffmann, director of the CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts in San Francisco. Pedrosa and Hoffmann have previously stated that their curatorial approach attempts to negotiate two seemingly opposing perspectives in contemporary art: art that is concerned purely with aesthetic and formal matters, and art that overtly addresses political and social subjects. Clearly, the political and the personal, and the connection between the two, will be a strong theme throughout this Biennial.

While some consider all artwork political, it can certainly be said that the Turkish contemporary art scene has been a relatively free medium for political criticism in comparison to other media in Turkey, such as mass media or demonstrations. In fact, through his work, Gonzalez-Torres demonstrated that the most successful political moves are ones that do not appear on first glance to be political. Surely the fact that Gonzalez-Torresfrequently addresses explicitly political subjects in his work was a key motivation behind picking his work as the starting point and inspiration for this Istanbul Biennial. How this year’s artists will take these themes as an inspiration for their work remains to be seen. But one thing is for sure— we are all waiting with baited breath.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/the-12th-istanbul-biennial-untitled-273.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/the-12th-istanbul-biennial-untitled-273.html Thu, 25 Aug 2011 19:15:00 +0300
<![CDATA[A Guided Tour of Atlı Köşk]]>

Located on the same grounds as the Sakıp Sabancı Museum, Atlı Köşk is where the prestigious Sabancı family once lived. Now, the Sakıp Sabancı Museum is offering a rare opportunity for art enthusiasts and history buffs to tour the Atlı Köşk.

The tour, which is held every Saturday morning at 11:00am until September 24th, covers the furniture and painting collections in the mansion as well as the sculptures around it.

The story of the mansion goes back to 1927, when Prince Mehmed Ali Hasan from the Mısır Hidiv familycommissioned the Italian architect Edouard De Nari to build a summerhouse for his family. In1950, Hacı Ömer Sabancı bought it off from Princess Iffet.

After the purchase, the first statue to be installed was Louis Doumas’s horse sculpture (1864) in front of the mansion, and since then, the mansion has been referred to as Atlı Köşk. In 1957, another horse sculpture would follow Doumas’s, and find its place by the entrance of the estate. This statue is an exact copy of one of the four bronze horses that were exhibited at the Sultanahmet Square (which was called the At Meydanı—or Horse Square—during the Ottoman Era) until 1204, and were pillaged during the fourth Crusade. These statues were then brought to Venice and installed in the world-famous Piazza San Marco. In addition to these widely-known horse sculptures, the estate houses many sculptures standing in various spots of the garden.

Hacı Ömer Sabancı had a special interest in paintings and furniture and he is said to have acquired most of the furniture in the mansion from the Asmali Mescit neighborhood, which, before the 1980s, used to be the center of furniture artisans. There is also a considerable amount of furniture purchased from overseas as well. Later, it was going to be Sakıp Sabancı to follow his father’s footsteps and make the Sabancı collection as wide and varied, from calligraphy to furniture, from archeological artifacts to paintings.

The tour of Atlı Köşk begins with a room in which personal items of Sakıp Sabancı are displayed. Agendas, caricatures gifted to him, a bust, and multiple awards decorate the walls and cabins in this room. The first short corridor exhibits a still life painting by Nikolai Kalmikof (1896-1951) who changed his name to Naci Kalmukoğlu upon becoming a Turkish citizen in 1936. After the Russian Revolution, the Kalmikof family migrated, first to Crimea and then to Istanbul. Freshly graduated from the Kharkov Fine Arts Academy, the 24 year-old Nikolai Kalmikof began his career by painting murals in movie theaters and chic apartment buildings, which stand to this day mainly in Nişantaşı (i.e. Sümer Apartment buildings.), Beyoğlu (i.e. Elhamra Cinema), and Kadıköy (i.e. Süreyya Cinema). Having had a classical arts education in Russia, he has assumed a more naturalist style in his works and he is best known for his striking nude paintings of gypsy girls.

The entrance hall welcomes guests with an impressive collection of paintings by Fausto Zonaro, who is said to have the biggest influence in developing Western style painting in the latest years of the Ottoman Era. One of the works hung in the entrance hall is the mysterious Young Girl with a Pumpkin, which is believed to be the only painting that Zonaro brought with him to Istanbul in 1891. The identity of the girl is unknown, although it is speculated that she was a former lover. In 1896, Zonaro became a court painter and gained fame with his realistic paintings. Best examples of this style are the Sun (allegedly, depicting the Caddebostan shore) and the Moon, which are displayed in the mansion on opposite walls facing each other.

The most striking feature of the first tearoom, which is designed to host guests who won’t be staying for dinner, is its rococo style and the dominance of warm colors accompanied by a heavy use of wood from floor to ceiling. There is a magnificent painting in this room depicting women in the harem trying to stay warm, holding their hands out on to astove. The identity of the painter is unknown; however, there are some speculations about the reflections of the man in the mirror in the painting. Some presume him to be the painter himself and some believe that he is the Harem Ağası (Chief harem eunuch or Master of the Girls). Since for a man to depict the harem so realistically is highly unlikely, the possibility of a woman painter to have created this piece still carries some weight. Next to it is another Zonaro painting, which bears little resemblance to his style because it is a commission work given with clear directions. The painting is a replica of the woman figure carding wool in Velasquez’spainting The Fable of Arachne. There are also two vases standing next to each other, which were commissioned by Napoleon himself to be sent to influential people as propaganda during his reign.

Across this room is another tearoom, directly connected to the dining hall, designed to host guests who are to stay for dinner. Here, you’ll see two portraits of young women painted by Sultan Abdülmecid. The styles of these paintings are different from one another, leading art historians to conclude that Abdülmecid didn’t have a style of his own but was constantly transitioning between various artists’ techniques. In fact, Abdülmecid was never able to form a unique style of his own because he remained confined in his art practice to the subjects and training he received in the palace.

On the adjacent wall is the only Republic Era painting in the mansion by Nazmi Ziya Güran. The artist, along with the likes of İbrahim Çallı, Avni Lifij, and Namık İsmail, belongs to a generation of Republic Era painters, who revolutionized Turkish contemporary art during the first half of the 20th century. Nazmi Ziya’s style is the closest to impressionism, and in this landscape painting he produced in 1936, he depicts a river running through a town, trees, and some houses in the back. The smoke coming out of chimneys makes the only reference to humans.

Another painter who takes nature as the major source of inspiration is Ivan Aivazovsky, admired for his ability to play with light on waves and sea foam. Three seascape paintings of the artist crown this room on three separate walls. First depicts the sea under moonlight, the second under the sun, and the third is rather unusual with its imaginative quality in bringing together, rocks, trees, the sea, and the sun.

The dining room features a striking portrait by Pierre Desire Guillemet entitled Halayık (1873) depicting a female servant in the harem. Guillemet came to Istanbul upon the request of Sultan Abdülaziz, who admired Guillemet’s portrait of him and allowed him to stay as a court painter. It is probably due to his wife’s occupation as a teacher in the harem that Guillemet was able to portray an African woman residing in the harem so realistically.

Another intriguing painting in the dining hall is the rare example of a still life painting by Hüseyin Zekai Paşa, who is one of the first to employ Western style in his art practice. In this unusual still life, he depicts rotten and half eaten fruits among fresh ones. Although, still life paintings are usually hung in the dining rooms to show prosperity, this style also tries to convey the mortality that no living being can escape.

The small corridor exhibits portraits of sultans facing each other on opposite sides of the walls. These portraits are extremely important because they point to the transition from miniature style painting to Western portraiture, which is clearly demonstrated by the use of perspective and the bodily postures of sultans. Written below each sultan’s portrait are their accomplishments and drawings of keys that hint to the prosperity of that particular sultan’s time. The portraits end with the tuğra (calligraphic signature) of Sultan Abdülaziz on the connecting wall.

This completes the tour of the first floor and the tour guide encourages the viewers to see the world-famous calligraphy collection on the second floor where you’ll see examples of works produced in a span of 500 years. The collection includes rare manuscripts of the Qur’an, albums, panels, and decrees, and also tools used in the creation of this artistic style. There are even a few calligraphy works carved on wood, which used to belong to the Bektashi and other Sufi orders. This calligraphy collection was exhibited at many international institutions, such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Louvre Museum in Paris, and Arthur M. Sackler Museum in Cambridge (part of the Harvard Art Museums).

The tour is held at 01:00pm on Saturdays only, until the end of September (except on September 3rd). Students from the Sabancı University give this tour in Turkish free of charge (you only need to pay the museum entrance fee, which is 10 TL for adults and 7TL for students). Upon finishing the tour, a walk around the garden filled with many more sculptures and artifacts, followed by a scenic lunch at Müzedechanga would make a fulfilling and pleasant Saturday afternoon for curious, art-loving urbanites.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/a-guided-tour-of-atli-kosk-258.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/a-guided-tour-of-atli-kosk-258.html Tue, 16 Aug 2011 20:35:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Istanbul Fashion Week 2011]]>

Istanbul Fashion Week is here with the freshest trends of Spring/Summer 2012 collections. Between 7th and 10th of September, Istanbul Fashion Week will revitalize Beyoğlu with Turkish designers and brands that will take the catwalk with their daring and flamboyant clothing lines.

This invitation-only event will include the voguish collections of these creative designers:Aslı Güler, Atıl Kutoğlu, Bahar Korçan, Çiğdem Akın, Deniz Kaprol, Gamze Saraçoğlu, Gül Ağış, Hatice Gökçe, İpek Arnas, Jale Hürdoğan, Mehtap Elaidi, Nejla Güvenç, Niyazi Erdoğan, Özgür Masur, Özlem Kaya, Jean De Art by Özlem Süer, Rana ve Berna Canok, Seda Zoroğlu, Simay Bülbül, Şafak Tokur, Studio Kaprol (Gülcan Ardıç, Beliz Mısırlı, Tolga Turan, Ali Bayramoğlu), and Tuvana Büyükçınar. The tent that will be set up in the TRT Tepebaşı Car Park will be the destination of the glamorous fashionistas who will all flux to the fashion shows of the following 6 brands:Adil Işık, G. Gentile, Koton, Tween, Twist, and Argande.

You can never prepare enough for the scandalous outfits, outrageous make-up, chic fashion shows, skinny models, and the dazzling designs, all of which together will spell out the four days of fashion in Istanbul.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/istanbul-fashion-week-2011-252.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/istanbul-fashion-week-2011-252.html Thu, 11 Aug 2011 21:23:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Bored No Longer: Kids Workshops in Museums]]> We bet your kids have already started the tormented countdown back to school. They’re sitting at home, dreading the coming school year. Why not give them something to keep themselves busy, and actually enjoy their last few weeks before the new school semester begins? We have the perfect blend of art activities for a solution—a collection of workshops held at the Pera Museum and Istanbul Modern, where your little ones will get to learn how to create art and understand it: be it sculpture, filming, or painting.

If your youngster spends too much time with play dough, why not encourage them to participate in a sculpture workshop? Pera Museum offers separate sculpture workshops for kids aged 6-7 and 8-12.

If they know each and every single Hollywood star by heart, they’ll probably love to learn filming.

If they like to spell A-R-T all the time, they’ll enjoy learning about how a museum works.

If they constantly drag you to the stationary store and force you to buy colorful pens, take the little ones to a painting workshop.For kids between 8-12 years old, there is a separate painting workshop.

If they keep talking about the world tour they’re going to have when they grow up, let them learn what the earth is made of.

Not only will kids engage themselves deep in art, but they will also get to see that that the concept of a museum is not so boring after all! Definitely a chance they shouldn’t miss.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/bored-no-longer-kids-workshops-in-museums-250.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/bored-no-longer-kids-workshops-in-museums-250.html Wed, 10 Aug 2011 22:54:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Summer Mixed Exhibition]]> Many of Istanbul’s art galleries have closed their doors for the summer. But there are still great exhibitions around the city for serious art aficionados. The Summer Mixed Exhibition at Evin Art Gallery is one such exhibition that we suggest you don’t miss out on.

Social realism is forever an interesting art form for younger art-lovers, and even an older crowd looking to keep up with the “Art Noveau.” As a pioneer in this field for Turkish art, Nuri İyem’s creations have combined the best of both Anatolian and modern realism.

The new and older works of Nuri İyem, Nasip İyem, Naile Akıncı, Neş’e Erdok, and Nedret Sekban will be displayed until the end of summer as a collective group.Nuri İyem, the outstanding name of the exhibit, was one of the forerunners of the art wave “Yeniler,” which focused on the social realistic painting within Turkish art. He focused on the faces of the melancholic and endeavoring Anatolian women, and the traces of their migratory struggle can be found in İyem’s work of the past 50 years.

Evin Art Gallery sits in a historic building that has been renovated while keeping all the historic features of the building intact, and stands as a center for both personal and group exhibits of Turkish visual arts. Take some time out of your daily routine to explore this truly amazing collection of new-meets-classic art, we promise you won’t regret it!

When: Until September 30

How Much: Free

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/summer-mixed-exhibition-241.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/summer-mixed-exhibition-241.html Thu, 04 Aug 2011 11:06:00 +0300
<![CDATA[History Comes Alive: The Hagia Sophia and Hürrem Sultan Hamam]]>

The Hagia Sophia was originally built as an Orthodox patriarchal basilica in the 6th century AD and was a house of Christian worship for 916 years. It was taken over by the Ottomans upon their conquest of Istanbul (then called Constantinople) in 1453, converted into a mosque, and served as a Muslim house of worship for 481 years. Finally, it was converted into a museum by the Republic of Turkey in 1935.

Every tourist knows that the Hagia Sophia Museum is a must-see for any first-time visitor to Istanbul. Butnow, returning tourists have a few more reasons to see the Hagia Sophia again. During restoration efforts to the Sultan’s tomb within Hagia Sophia, the cleanup crew stumbled upon an amazing collection of Ottoman-era clothing underneath the rubble. The outfits are estimated to be over 560 years old and are thought to belong to the people buried in the tomb. A pre-Islamic custom was to place the clothing and turbans of the deceased on top of their coffin. And what have been found are examples of such clothing. While it seems that any sort of artifact with this timeline would need severe maintenance to be on any kind of display, museum officials are of the opinion that the pieces will be on display sooner than initially thought. The plans are to showcase the pieces at the Topkapı Palace after conservation and repairs. The news has been met with open arms from the international community as well. In fact, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) has already decided to sponsor the furthering of these restorative efforts!

The Hagia Sophia has yet another secret hidden within its walls. The relics of the Hagia Sophia’s religious past are still as dazzling as ever, and with the removal of some of the restoration materials and construction tools, the icons of the angel seraph are now clearly visible over the east entrance of the museum.

After 17 years of restoration, museum officials are now giving the Hagia Sophia a break while offering visitors and history buffs something to take home with them. During the restoration efforts, the images of the museum walls and décor have all been digitalized, and will be released in the Hagia Sofia Museum Yearbook. Boasting a complicated history of Christian, Islamic, and lastly nondenominational influences, the Hagia Sophia’s walls contain more conflict than many historic buildings would care to admit. Now, visitors can take a bit of the museum home along with them and view it whenever they wish.

A similar advancement has been made in the area for those desiring a bit of Ottoman experience for themselves. The sly Hürrem Sultan was famed as the wife of Süleyman the Magnifient, and became sort of a legend for being among the few women who had a voice in affairs of the Empire. Now, the Hürrem Sultan Hamam is finally open after three years of restoration efforts—but not for sightseeing purposes. For those wishing to bathe like the coy sultan once did, the hamam will be open as a fully-functioning traditional Ottoman hot bath, with all the experiences and details that its inhabitants would have enjoyed in its prime. You can even host special events like bridal hamams and parties. With cobblestones covered in gold and authentic carpeting and marble floors, Hürrem Sultan would have been proud to see her territory glorified years after her departure from the Topkapı Palace. Open until midnight every day of the week, there’s not a bad time to take a soak and feel the satisfying effects of the Turkish bath.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/history-comes-alive-the-hagia-sophia-and-hurrem-sultan-hamam-231.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/history-comes-alive-the-hagia-sophia-and-hurrem-sultan-hamam-231.html Thu, 28 Jul 2011 12:20:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Art Beats Out Heat: Summertime Exhibitions in the City]]>

There’s something particularly enticing about an indefinable medium, an infinite study. Contemporary art delves into such a territory, and the end is nowhere near—nonbelievers might think that the boundaries of artistic creativity are near reach, but five exhibitions are here to show Istanbulites that there is no such thing. Intertwining important aspects of Turkish history and culture within exhibitions that are raw, ingenious, and unique, the five summer exhibitions serve as fantastic stops for art lovers. Whether you wish to see a traditional example of painting or an unconventional installation, there is an exhibition in the city catering to your interests. Grab your walking shoes and maybe even a sketchpad for an on-the-spot wave of inspiration.

5 Person Bufetat Arter

On display until August 21st, 5 Person Bufet, curated by Emre Baykal, is the first solo exhibition of Deniz Gül whose practice explores the tension and transitivity between the inside and the outside—public and private spheres, home and society, individual and collective psyches. In a way, the artist is turning the insides out and showing us how much of the codes and norms that belong to the public sphere permeate through the make-up of what is deemed as individuality.

The installation is part of a multi-phase project, which started out with a text written by the artist who envisioned ending it with a musical performance composed specifically for this project. The installation itself includes 5 pieces of furniture: a Vitrine, Closet, Safe, Coffin, and Door, which are turned into a room in a rather unusual format. The pieces of furniture are lined up in a row, resembling columns or monuments, and they are able to hold one person. Each object acts like a threshold that challenges what each individual regards as inside and outside. It is possible that the artist suggests that there is no outside, but only spaces to hide in, escape, or go further inside.

This feeling of the interior is reinforced by a smart intervention with the glass windows of the exhibition space. The artist has chosen to apply cut glass motifs of crystal ashtrays, sugar bowls, and glass-sets, which have been quite popularly displayed in the vitrines of Turkish homes since the 80s. The light that is refracted by these objects surrounds the room. In a way, the artist contains the viewer in a fragile shell made up of what we display as our valuables. Deniz Gül unpacks the workings of soft power that seep through the holes between what we call inside and outside. It is a solitary journey to see how the multiple systems that work within and outside of us get so deep and complex.

Humanat The Empire Project

The second exhibition of the brand new The Empire Project is the photography exhibition, Human, featuring the works of 6 photographers: Rasha Kahil, Halil Koyutürk, Sean Lee, Manolo Menéndez, Gözde Türkkan, and Gökşin Varan.

According to the exhibition’s statement, “In the end we are alone. Cold. Abandoned in a giant social collective. Solitary, naked little individuals, sharing one common denominator: we are Human.” In line with this statement, the selection of photos attempts to unfold various human conditions: vulnerable, lonely, exposed.

Each photo in the exhibition is provoking and eye-catching, some more than others. Rasha Kahil’s works, for instance, are intimate, plain, and piercing. Sean Lee’s pieces are moody and intense. All the artists have their distinct yet complementary styles. Some might consider the photos bordering on the pornographic side. In any case, the Human exhibition, which is on until August 27th, is an opportunity to see examples of various styles in photography that mix fiction with reality.

20 Modern Turkish Artists of the 20th Century at santralistanbul

It is a rare opportunity to walk through the history of modern Turkish art, its pillars and influences across decades and geographies.

The exhibition, curated by the internationally-acclaimed writer, publisher, and artist Ferit Edgu, is divided into three parts in the Main Gallery according to artistic styles and influences. The section on the first floor is called Geometry, Light, Music and Walls in which works by İlhan Koman, Ferruh Başağa, Adnan Çoker, Burhan Doğançay, and Koray Ariş are on display. In this section, the viewer may feel another level of admiration for the profoundness and artisanship in connecting mathematics, philosophy, and art; especially the sculptures are inspirational and moving. The second floor features the Paris School-Turkish Abstract Painters, which encompass the works of Fahrelnissa Zeid, Hakkı Anlı, Selim Turan, Nejad Devrim, Mübin Orhon, and Albert Bitran. Last but not least, Two Generation of Figurative Paintings featuring Yüksel Arslan, Mehmet Güleryüz, Komet, Ergin İnan, Ömer Uluç, Abidin Dino, Avni Arbaş, Alaettin Aksoy, and Fikret Muallâ is displayed on the third floor.

The entrancefloorof the exhibition features Ara Güler’s portrait photographs of these 20 artists who are some of the great masters of Turkish art. As loud as each piece is, they silently sit side-by-side forming a comprehensive picture of the history of 20th century Turkish art. To walk through the different sections of the exhibition, featuring 400 paintings and sculptures, almost feels like walking through time in a multi-faceted platform. Needless to say, this is a rare opportunity to see a rich archive of the most prominent artists that came out of this land.

The exhibition was scheduled to end by the end of June; however, due to public demand, the exhibition is extended until July 31st.

On the Territory: Contemporary Art in Colombiaat santralistanbul

While you are at santralistanbul, you must also pay a visit to the smaller exhibition dedicated to young Colombian artists curated by Jaime Céronat Gallery 1. On view until August 11th, the exhibition entitledOn the Territory: Contemporary Art in Colombiafeatures the works of artists from a country that has seen much turmoil in its recent past. The show is complementary to the exhibition in the Main Gallery in its comprehensive picture of the type of art and artistic practice that has risen in Colombia. The viewer cannot ignore the comparative and contrasting aspect that this show offers. To see the resemblances and differences between the context of Turkey and Colombia, in terms of the artists’ interests and styles, their take on the political and social atmosphere in their country and the world, is interesting.

Borders Orbits 10 at Siemens Sanat

The Borders Orbits Competition, organized by Siemens Sanat for the tenth time, features the works of seven young artists, whose practices focuson the fluidity of identities rather than a homogenous and fixated identity problem. All the winning artists propose that this fluidity is the zeitgeist, “the spirit of the times” of contemporary visual culture.

On display are video works by Güler Aşık and Sibel Ay, monumental canvases by Hüseyin Arıcı, photos by Rabia Öner, figure-images by N. Güneş Güven, the metaphorical plastic sign “Communication Network” by Zeynep Gürler, and paintings by Faruk Yigen. The Borders Orbits 10 exhibition can be visited at Siemens Sanat until July 31st.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/art-beats-out-heat-summertime-exhibitions-in-the-city-226.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/art-beats-out-heat-summertime-exhibitions-in-the-city-226.html Sun, 24 Jul 2011 21:24:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Caring for Frankenstein: Hold Me Close to Your Heart]]>

As you’re walking down Istiklal Street, you may be taken aback by the sight of two scooters (transmogrified into deers) behind a glass window, one with a pair of antlers made of rear-view mirrors, affectionately holding and tending the other. These peculiar “lovers” created by Patricia Piccinini do not only raise curiosity but also lure one in for an adventurous walk around the alternative universe that the artist has built. Entitled Hold Me Close to Your Heart, this astonishing body of work, which includes works of sculpture, painting, video and sound installations, and digital prints, is on display at Arter until August 21.

The first piece The Lovers greets the viewer at the entrance floor where works made out of motor parts and panels with auto paint and fine finishing are displayed. The second work,The Observer, reflects Piccinini’s observant look at the world of commodities. In this piece, a young boy is tipped over a stack of Ikea chairs and is looking down at us, at the world. The viewer gets the impression that it might be unsafe for him to be up there; however, in a way, he looks finely settled as well. Throughout the entrance floor, Piccinini warms up the viewer to her strange and highly-imaginative world that dives deep into the complexities of the high-tech world we inhabit.

The diversity of materials and mediums continue up on the second and third floors of Arter. In this site-specific exhibition, Piccinini arranged for each floor to carry a unique atmosphere. The viewer observes a stark change as they go up to the dimly-lit room of the second floor, where strange creatures seem to be in close emotional and physical contact with human beings. This closeness intensifies as the viewer steps foot onto the third floor, carefully staged to appear as someone’s home. It’s as if the viewer tiptoes around the tranquility of a house in which creatures of all sorts live together. Just when we have had enough of the endless “nature versus culture” debate, with its doomsday scenarios and portrayals of scientists playing God, the body of works on each floor urges us to tackle with issues surrounding nature, wilderness, artificiality, bioethics, beauty, and techno/cultural productions.

Piccinini is patient in taking us into her alternative universe, in which she seeks no answers but is curious about the mutability of beings of any kind—real or imaginary—and the blurry terrain where all things natural and artificial reside. She does not give any credit to apocalyptic cries nor does she fall for a science that is or will be the answer to the problems of human kind. She rather sees the possibilities and unpredictability of scientific creation, along with the problems that (may) arise from those creations. She is more concerned about our stance towards undesirable outcomes. Science is far from being perfect and it is time that we question how we, humans, will deal with both the successful and disappointing outcomes of our experiments. In a way, she wants the viewer to reconsider their attitudes towards Frankenstein or the Elephant Man, both of whom, as the stories go, have experienced great misery as a result of human negligence and obsession with beauty.

Pointing to the ethical issues that surround our “creations”—and we should take this as general as possible—Piccinini takes her practice one step further and challenges her viewers to empathize with hideous creatures that mostly only exist through her artistic production. Piccinini’s weird creatures and humans live together, holding each other, and nursing one another. This suggests that Piccinini is hopeful about a future in which humans, who are inclined to see themselves as the supreme species, will be co-existing with creatures of different origins—ones that have mutated or others that have come as a result of biotechnological endeavors.

In her work Doubting Thomas (2006), for instance, the viewer finds a boy around the age of eight, curiously but hesitantly touching the mouth of a creature that Piccinini has created. The artist portrays a child that tries to discover and make a connection with a species that has no resemblance to him whatsoever. In many of her works, the viewer will find that she uses figures of children, and this might be due to the high level of intuitive awareness that children have. Perhaps, Piccinini also aims to show that, despite the vulnerability of children, there is no harm in furry creatures playing with kids. It might be the case that these creatures are as vulnerable as we are, if not more.

Rarely, the artist creates sculptures of real creatures, as in the blobfish depicted in her work Eulogy (2011). The blobfish, unknown to most, lives deep in the southern seas of Australia and yet faces the danger of extinction due to reckless crab fishing. In Eulogy, an ordinary man holds a blobfish in his hand with a bitter look on his face, sharing its last moments. He is not histrionic; he only wants to give it the attention it deserves. Through this work, the artist asks questions as simple as this: Do we only care for what is useful to us or at least pleasing to our eyes? How can we justify this ignorance and indifference towards the blobfish and the likes? Eulogy is about personal redemption as well as about being more aware of problems that we, humans, create for the sake of finding and generating resources for ourselves.

The uncanny quality of each piece is undeniable; however, for some odd reason the viewer is never actually scared, and possibly not even repulsed. Piccinini’s creations are not meant to be threatening at all. The artist somehow manages to minimize the repulsion one might feel, and this way, she adds another layer of challenge for the viewer, urging them to question the cause of their reaction towards her creations. This finely balanced element in Piccinini’s work—the amicable quality of creatures, which might have looked threatening in someone else’s hands—is what builds the spine of her artistic practice. What might be considered ugly and, therefore, threatening and unnecessary, becomes an ordinary part of life, no longer ugly but benevolent and accepted as is. In creating an unusual universe, Piccinini takes our imagination beyond the boundaries of our limited understanding and urges us to question how we instinctually, socially, and politically position ourselves as individuals and as species in the world.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/caring-for-frankenstein-hold-me-close-to-your-heart-211.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/caring-for-frankenstein-hold-me-close-to-your-heart-211.html Fri, 08 Jul 2011 16:29:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Modern Essays Kicks Off with Ahmet Öğüt’s Jet-black Murat 131 at SALT]]> SALT has initiated a new series called Modern Essays, which began last week with Ahmet Öğüt’s outstanding installation Across the Slope. The series aims to investigate different aspects and effects of modernization in light of the Westernization process that Turkey has been undergoing for decades.

As the first one in the series, Öğüt’s piece is promising, showing strong wit and character, while offering an unsettling insight into the relationship between modernization and the middle class in Turkey. In his art practice, the internationally-acclaimed artist explores how people struggle against restricted freedoms on a daily basis. Öğüt constantly analyzes and deconstructs the meaning of certain objects and materials in the public psyche, such as coal, shovel, diamond, cars, and asphalt, which do more than just make life easier and/or worthy for people. They hold great significance and trigger many associations in the collective mind of individuals, whose lives intersect with the political sphere every day via subtle encounters. Öğüt carefully unpacks the meanings latent in each, and turns them into humorous yet profound art pieces. The work featured at SALT is another playful response of Öğüt’s in which the artistturns an ordinary car made in the 1970s into a strong metaphor for Turkey’s recent history.

The work presents a “middle-class dream,” once symbolized by Murat 131, the Turkish version of the Italian automobile Fiat 131 (also called Mirafiori), which was being manufactured in Tofaş’s factory in Turkey in the 1970s. The car on display is actually two Murat 131 cars merged to extend their length and seem like a limo version. The car’s bottom sits on a slope constructed precisely for the purpose of suspending its wheels in mid-air, creating a feeling of unease as well as marvel for the viewer. Öğüt’s version of a jet-black Murat 131 demonstrates an unstable and incomplete dream that begs for a re-evaluation of a top-down civilization/Westernization project, most explicit in clothing styles, technological products, and architectural constructions seen all around Turkey. This way, the artist first aims to question a certain understanding of progress. On an elemental level, the precariousness of the situation lies in the impossibility of becoming “modern” simply by driving certain “dream” cars. There is also the problem of defining what is culturally and socially modern.

In this work, Öğüt suggests that any imposed change offers hope; however, if the grounding is not solid, it leaves one in the lurch just like the car that made it to the peak of the slope and then got stuck. Although the complexities of the issue are extensive, this modified vehicle on the slope seems to embody most aspects of it and render them tangible.

Across the Slopewas first showcased at the Centre d’Art Santa Mònica in Barcelona in 2008. The artwork manages to speak to a wide international audience as these cars were manufactured and used around the world in Italy, Spain, Poland, France, North Africa, Southeast Asia, and some parts of South America. Each manufacturer produced the Mirafiori with certain local specifications, and also adopted local names to appeal to its market. However, the modification of the Mirafiori does not stop at the national level but continue through to individual customization endeavors. Therefore, the car on display not only refers to the particular point in history that it was made in and the nationalization attempts, but also ponders upon the idea of customization. Hence, Öğüt delves right into the area where the personal meets higher socio-political and economic endeavors.

In Turkey, the process of car modification is both revered and insulted, depending on the social class one speaks from. For quite a long time, it was popular to modify certain cars to make them look like another. Especially the middle-class car models known as the “bird” series—Doğan (falcon), Şahin (hawk), and Serçe (canary)—would be the subject of such customization. A Şahin model car with a Doğan appearance, for instance, was far more in style than the original Doğan. This practice hints at a middle-class that builds various layers in its structure and appearance, constantly reinventing itself within certain limits. The customization is also a great play with top down changes at large. By creating his own version of Murat 131, Öğüt turns the modernization process inside out, making solid references to characterizations of social classes in Turkey in light of certain ambigious modernization projects orchestrated by the state.

Although, not part of the original installation, posters taken from architect Tanju Kaner’s personal archive are hung on the wall right at the entrance of SALT on Istiklal Street. These posters aim to attract pedestrians, who are likely to be familiar with the already cult car model Murat 131. The posters and the automobile itself create a certain feeling of nostalgia, since Murat 131 created a big buzz at the time, as it was the first car that middle class citizens in Turkey were able to afford. On the posters, the viewer finds both advertisements of the70s and individual comments made about this brand new car introduced to the lower strata of society. Much of the advertisements focus on why Murat 131 is the ideal car for certain types of families, focusing on various qualities from gas consumption to the number of persons it can carry.

From the conceptualization to the realization of the work, Across the Slope offers a gateway into thinking more intensely about a modernization process that has been dragging on for a long time in various parts of the world. Also, by adopting a certain distance from its subject, due to its temporal setting, Öğüt makes a humorous approach possible.

Regardless of how Modern Essays will continue, the kickoff with Across the Slope is yet to inspire and be subject to lively discussions.

The show will be on display until October 1, and will be accompanied by a video program in SALT Beyoğlu’sWalk-in Cinema on the entrance floor, presenting various readings of the installation. Check out www.saltonline.org in the upcoming days to see the schedule of the video program.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/modern-essays-kicks-off-with-ahmet-oguts-jet-black-murat-131-at-salt-196.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/modern-essays-kicks-off-with-ahmet-oguts-jet-black-murat-131-at-salt-196.html Wed, 22 Jun 2011 20:23:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Sound Unbound: Istanbul Jazz Festival]]>

The International Istanbul Jazz Festival is not only a world-class series of concerts by some of the biggest names in jazz, it’s also spread out all over town, giving jazz lovers a chance to see the city from a myriad of angles.

The 2011 Istanbul Jazz Fest, which runs from July 1st to the 19th, has been officially dubbed “Jazz-Hearted Istanbul” by the Istanbul Culture and Art Foundation (IKSV). It is advertised with a logo of a heart sprouting instruments, implying that Istanbul’s heart beats to the sound of jazz, or that if you placed an enormous stethoscope on the city’s heart, you would hear the sounds of jazz. Well, in a sense that’s true — once a year. If you’re lucky enough to be here at the right time and can handle the heat, you’ll see that it really does. However, the metaphor of the heart doesn’t cover the half of it.

Forty concerts will be held, branching out from the more traditional Cemil Topuzlu Open Air Theatre (ground zero for many years) to newer hotspots like the Istanbul Modern, the Marmara Esma Sultan, santralistanbul, and historical wonders in the old city like Hagia Eirene Museum and the venerable, often overlooked Archaeological Museum. In total, 25 different venues have been chosen for gigs, so the heart of the city will be pumping a life-affirming jazz vibe through the arteries and veins of the urban landscape, creating a jazz aficionado’s equivalent of an enlivening pub crawl. After growing intoxicated off the music at one spot, you can move on to another with a completely different vibe and environment the next day, getting a fascinating tour of the city in the process. There will even be the so-called festival within the festival, which started last year. The organizers call this the “Tünel Feast”, and it will literally spill out into the streets and other spaces on July 2nd. Expect workshops, special exhibitions, and unexpected performances to enliven Beyoğlu, Şişhane, Galata, and Asmalımescit (Istanbul’s Greenwich Village or Shoreditch), and less impromptu concerts on purpose-built stages in the Tünel and Galata squares.

Of course, this festival, focused on jazz, has long included other musicians that would never appear in your iTunes’s jazz genre list. From Patti Smith to Sting to Lou Reed to Jane Birkin, it’s been eclectic fare for years, so there’s always been something for everyone, whether you’re happy with the mainstream or prefer hipster fare. This is not an event restricted to jazz fans and connoisseurs only, which is not to say that jazz aficionados have nothing to be excited about. It would require many pages to give a definitive description of the more than 300 visiting and local artists participating in the festival, but some of the more notable acts to catch deserve some mention.

Herbie Hancock, Marcus Miller, and Wayne Shorter’s world premier performance of “Tribute to Miles” is a must-see. The complete group includes Hancock (piano), Shorter (sax), Miller (bass and bass clarinet), Sean Jones (trumpet), and Sean Rickman (drums). Hancock, one of the first jazzmen to introduce synthesizers and funk, not to mention hip-hop scratching on the seminal single “Rockit”, needs no introduction. Nor does multi-instrumentalist Miller, primarily known as a bassist who worked with Miles Davis, or jazz’s arguably greatest composer, Shorter, a formidable saxophonist who also worked with Miles, Art Blakey, and Weather Report. Snatch a ticket for this one before they’re all gone.

“Sing the Truth”, a unique project featuring the inimitable voices of Angelique Kidjo, Dianne Reeves, and Lizz Wright, will also be a showstopper. A homage to female vocalists as diverse as the late Miriam Makeba, Aretha Franklin, Tracy Chapman, and Lauryn Hill, this performance is sure to bring down the house. With Africa’s foremost diva, Kidjo, alongside Reeves, the four-time winner for “Best Jazz Vocal Performer”, and Wright, who seamlessly blends jazz, pop, and folk, this is bound to be an unforgettable night.

If you like your jazz seasoned with the pop and R&B and backed up by world-renowned piano, then be sure to check out the show of nine-Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Natalie Cole. She’ll be sharing the stage with Randy Crawford, much admired in Europe for her versatile vocal style,and jazz-meets-soul outfit “The Crusaders” bandleader Joe Sample on piano.

Moving on from these mostly American jazz luminaries, who will appear at Cemil Topuzlu Open Air Theatre, and in keeping with the multi-cultural, genre-bending ethos, you can also catch Paul Simon’s first show in Istanbul, or dig the “World Stars from Mali”, an event that promises Syrian violins, sitars, Indian tabla, and rock guitars. Or take in what is being billed as one of the most interesting events this year: “A Strange Place for Jazz”. The name riffs off the name of the trio e.s.t.’s album “A Strange Place for Snow” and is dedicated to the band’s late founder, Esbjörn Svensson. For those of you who have become increasingly bored with the American jazz scene and thrilled by the new Nordic Jazz that has emerged over the past decade, this will be a welcome addition to the festival.

A real draw this year for the more adventurous, passionate music lover is the array of exciting venues where the performances will take place. The aforementioned IKSV web site provides Google maps with a few simple clicks (pics included), and with printed-out map or smart phone in hand, no one should have any trouble reaching the gigs. For those who prefer not to travel farther afield, most of the biggest names will remain at the easy-to-locate open air theater in Harbiye, but for a night of master percussionists (Zakir Hussain among them), why not visit the old city and the 4th-century Hagia Eirene Museum just inside Topkapi Palace grounds? The only Byzantine church to retain its atrium, it is usually reserved for classical music events. The acoustics are awe-inspiring, and make this worth the trip.

Make a day of it and include the often overlooked, stately Archaeology Museum, a stone’s throw from Hagia Eirene. Visit the museum’s tranquil tea garden for a breather after you’ve taken in enough Hellenic, Egyptian, and Roman artefacts. Scope it out, then retrace your steps for The Duwala Malambo Project, which features Richard Bona, Raul Midon, and Grammy-winning producer Arif Mardin making a stew of world music, folk, jazz, soul, and blues –phew! Feel like a trip to picturesque seaside Ortaköy? Enjoy the fish restaurants there, have a look at the iconic view of the mosque in the shadow of the Bosphorus Bridge, and then catch the aforementioned “World Stars from Mali” show in the evening. It will be held at the Esma Sultan venue, a onetime Ottoman mansion transformed into an atmospheric site for concerts. If you feel like traveling up the Bosphorus and inland, you’ll even find a show at an upmarket department store complex in Istiniye.

If that’s not your scene, stick to the seaside and head back down the Bosphorus to the Istanbul Modern, Istanbul’s impressive answer to New York’s MOMA, and part of the gentrification or renaissance of the entire Beyoğlu district. Sitting in the café with its incomparable view is almost as enjoyable as the art on exhibit, and the museum will play host to one of the festival’s most innovative upcoming artists, Patrick Wolf. Expect a mix of electronica, plunderphonics, his trademark classical viola, piano, and – what else? – ukulele. If museums turn you off, head inland to Şişhane and check out the IKSV’s own pristine, brand new club, Salon. It’s a short wander down the hill from Tünel Square, where the nostalgic tram terminates, and the stately Beyoğlu municipal headquarters, easily accessible by metro. This is your chance to see a collaboration between Turkish composer and bassist Alp Ersönmez and Bugge Wesseltofft, the prolific Norwegian jazzman, as part of the festival’s “European Club” series.

A dérive is "a mode of experimental behavior linked to the conditions of urban society: a technique of rapid passage through varied ambiances" concocted by the French Situationists, as any art student or museum curator will tell you. Rather than a music festival alone, the 18th IKSV Jazz Festival promises both sound unbound and a musical dérive. Call it an odyssey if you prefer. After all, this was once Homer’s part of the world. If the above venues are not enough for you, there are two on the Golden Horn, on the side of the Horn that faces the old city. One is santralistanbul, a post-industrial island of calm in the middle of hectic Istanbul and home to two museums, trendy cafés, performance spaces, and one of the Bilgi University campuses. The concerts will be held outside in an amphitheater, and promise to be magical: the water and scenic background will serve as a backdrop to the stage. Musicians will also take the stage in a recently renovated historical shipyard. Can you guess which concert will be held in the shipyard? Yep, that’s right: “A Strange Place for Jazz”.

As free-jazz exponent Ornette Coleman put it in the liner notes of his album, Change of the Century, “Many people don’t trust their reactions to music or art unless there is a verbal explanation for it…the only thing that really matters is whether you feel it or not.” It’s not my place to “intellectualize…or reduce analytically” the music for you. Get out there and feel it for yourself – and enjoy both the musical and the urbanjourneys.

Tickets are available at BILETIX sales points or www.biletix.com.tr. You can also go directly to the İKSV building(Nejat Eczacıbaşı Binası, Sadi Konuralp Cad. No: 5 Şişhane)

Ticket prices for the 18th Istanbul Jazz Festival range between 15TL and 350TL. Credit cards will be accepted in all purchases.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/sound-unbound-istanbul-jazz-festival-195.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/sound-unbound-istanbul-jazz-festival-195.html Wed, 22 Jun 2011 16:05:00 +0300
<![CDATA[In Focus At Pera Museum: Human Nature]]> As the city’s art spaces reveal their final shows of the season, Pera Museum opens two simultaneous shows: an extensive retrospective on the neglected modernist painter İhsan Cemal Karaburçak and a group show titled ‘Fundamentally Human’ featuring seven contemporary artists who marry art with science in their works. Representing completely diverse schools of thought and techniques prevalent in different eras, these two shows speak to each other in a dimension not so readily available to the viewer: art is a product of human nature.

Naive Colorscapes

A rare figure in the history of Turkish modern art, İhsan Cemal Karaburçak is a naive artist who managed to stand against the conventions of the era in which he lived and to create an oeuvre that is unmistakably characteristic and unique.

Born in 1898 in Istanbul, İhsan Cemal grew up in the bleak years of the two world wars. He studied to become a civil servant at the Directorate of Telegraph Services in Ankara, with a mission to build telegraph poles all over Anatolia. As he climbed up the career ladder at his office, he was transferred to a post in Paris, where he decided to take up painting. It was there in 1930 that he signed up for a drawing class at the prestigious École Universelle. However, he soon quit as he became disillusioned with the conventional methods the school tried to impose on him. He wanted to intentionally ignore the rules of classical perspective, just like Cézanne had done at the turn of the 20th century, and set out to explore the modernist school of thought on his own. He kept on painting and in the 1950s opened an art gallery in Ankara and published his musings on art as pamphlets. He also exhibited regularly in Turkey and abroad, becoming a well-known artist who was celebrated for his distinctive style.

As you enter the show at the Pera Museum’s fifth floor, you will immediately notice his style and use of color, with the abundance of color in the small canvases hung all around the gallery. İhsan Cemal’s portraits, still lifes, landscapes, cityscapes, and later abstractions all focus on certain colors, such as the combination of orange and green, and the ever dominant dark purple, inspired by Ankara’s clear nightfalls and admittedly reflecting the painter’s moody temperament: “I am a painter of color. Since the sun kills all the colors, I may be inclined to like nature more when it grows dark -when clouds accumulate, or the earth, the trees, and the buildings are bathed in rain, allowing colors to emerge. I must be selecting dark shades for I am charmed by the lights drifting through or the illumination that appears underneath. Perhaps it is a question of a pessimistic or melancholic disposition or nature, who knows? Yet, whatever the reasons may be, since I attain satisfactory results and create art for art’s sake, I am happy with my art, and by extension, with my life.”

It is interesting to witness İhsan Cemal’s progress, from his early flower still lifes to semi-abstracted cityscapes and finally to complete abstractions, filled with the traces of imagery from previous figurative periods. In this transformed pictorial language of his later years, he abandons perspective and aims to paint “a two-dimensional picture on a two-dimensional canvas.” Reminiscent of Klee’s color blocks, İhsan Cemal creates his signature untitled paintings that feature basic shapes to replace his earlier favorite figures: rectangular blocks as houses, circles as trees, Ts as telegraph poles, Cs as curving streets and several colored suns and moons. Considering his profession, the experts speak of instances of Morse code embedded within his canvases but what the artist meant by the little dots of color on the pictorial surface remains a mystery.

Unexpected Aesthetics of Neuroscience

The third floor of the Pera Museum hosts an interesting show put together by the Director of New York’s Schools of Visual Art Suzanne Anker. A digital artist herself, Anker brought together six leading artists who incorporate scientific methods with different media in the visual arts. Leonel Moura, Michael Rees, Michael Joaquin Grey, Andrew Carnie, Rona Pondick, and Frank Gillette have all worked with new technologies ranging from robotics, 3-D scanning, Photoshop, rapid prototyping, microscopy, and computational video.

Walking around the airy white gallery space of the museum’s third floor made me feel as if I was in a science fiction movie, possibly in the art gallery of an alien spaceship. A circular robot with wheels and a blackboard marker buzzed around inside an open display cabinet, writing words on a stack of white drawing paper. Eerie hydra-like parachutes hung from the ceiling and small, clear sculptures that look like molecular bodies sat comfortably on white pedestals. A giant, silvery skull smiled at me from inside a large photograph on the wall.

At the press conference, Anker based the starting point of the exhibiton on the theory of metaphors by linguist Beorge Lakoff. A professor at the University of California-Berkeley since the 1970s, Lakoff has argued that metaphors are not linguistic but conceptual constructions, and are central to the development of thought. By approaching art, thinking about and interacting with art, we construct certain metaphors in our minds and this actually affects our nervous system in a very physical way. I was very much surprised to find out that recent research shows the evolution of the human brain began with the discovery of figurative sculpture. This means that as we continue to read, write, think, and create, we increase our potential to be smarter and more creative.

This theory is illustrated in the show by Andrew Carnie’s wonderful slide-show installation titled ‘Magic Forest’ (1992). Set in a dark backroom at a not-so-convenient corner of the gallery, the slide-show begins with an image of a skull. A growing brain inside the skull produces an increasing number of neurons and tree-like structures of different colors and shapes. The colors come from the flourescent dyes used in the analysis of the brain tissue under a laser confocal microscope. The neurons, projected over several layers of tulle, create a feeling of depth and an unexpected state of tranquility in the viewer. Who would have thought looking at images of brain activity would be so mesmerizing?

Here, it is impossible to miss the “Tree of Life” imagery in the nervous system. Perhaps this is why New York artist Rona Pondick put her own head as the single fruit of a steel tree that resembles a neuron. Described as “an alchemical forest” by curator Joe Houston, Pondick’s half-human, half-plant trees are a metaphor for growth, both physical and personal.

Michael Rees, a conceptual artist focusing on rapid prototyping technology, is exhibiting his latest Ajna sculptures. This is a remarkable series in which he combines skulls with uteri and vertebrae among other internal organs. Almost recreating the mythological ‘uroboros’, the image of a serpent eating its own tail, Rees makes an allusion to the notion of death and rebirth with this series. In a book called ‘Information arts: intersections of art, science, and technology’ by Stephen Wilson, Rees uses this unique technology to create these organic-looking resin sculptures. He compares this technology to “what the medieval alchemists call the Albedo state, the silvery mercurial state where one thing can reflect or become another as easily as not.” The prototyped resin gives the sculptures a tactile quality, which suggests the possibility of growing or reconstructing real body organs with the latest advances in technology.

Moving away from biology on to artificial intelligence, the most playful work on the show is definitely Leonel Moura’s ‘artbot’ ISU Poetics. Named after the Romanian poet Isidore Isou, the founder of the Dadaist Arts movement Lettrism (a movement where the letter is basis of a new art form), ISU is a fascinating four-wheeled robot, which can draw letters and make words to create pictorial compositions. As the robot moves around writing his poetry comprised of simple words, Mr. Moura explains to me that there is no single algorhythm to tell ISU what to do. ISU reacts to color. The color of drawing on a sheet of paper is picked up by its sensors and it makes its own decisions to draw or to stop – unless led on by a stimulus. Moura managed to have ISU draw a human figure by placing it on a clear plexiglass panel with the same drawing. While the artbot struggled with the contours of the figure at the beginning, in time it became quite proficient. The three drawings on the wall prove that the resulting image is in fact more than satisfactory. Later that week, Moura took on a bolder position in his Istanbul Manifesto performance at Galata Perform by saying, “Marcel Duchamp’s idea was to make art with the already made. Our idea is to make art that makes art. […] The great artist of tomorrow will not be human.” Perhaps this may be true. Just as we know that we can see brain activity or move a cursor on a computer with our eyes, what seems like science fiction now may become reality. But still the fact remains that pondering about human nature has allowed scientists and artists alike to get to where we are now.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/in-focus-at-pera-museum-human-nature-189.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/in-focus-at-pera-museum-human-nature-189.html Sun, 12 Jun 2011 16:01:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Ceramic and Miniature Updated]]>

Summer season in the arts scene began with many new exhibitions, some continuing until fall, and others introducing rising artists and featuring works in support of a certain cause for a short time. Two great examples of the latter case are “Cabinet of Curiosities” by Burçak Bingöl and “Tradition Now” by Günseli Kato. Both exhibitions are significant endeavors in re-thinking traditional arts—ceramic and miniature—and adding them to the visual universe of contemporary art.

“Cabinet of Curiosities” (Nadireler Kabinesi) is taking place at CDA Projects on the second floor of Mısır Apartmanı until 15 June. The title of the exhibition references a tradition in Renaissance Europe, when a cabinet referred to a room (rather than a piece of furniture) in which uncategorizable objects were collected. More rudimentary forms of this cabinet existed before the sixteenth century; however, it became popular during the sixteenth century as many monarchs took up the hobby of forming large collections of “things.” In “Cabinet of Curiosities,” inspired by this phenomenon, Bingöl creates her own cabinet of curiosities in which she features her own valuables: her ideas and feelings expressed through ceramic.

The first piece that grabs one’s attention at Bingöl’s exhibition is a ceramic table and chair at the end of the exhibition hall that appears to be standing on tenterhooks. As implied by the title “Daydreamer,” the work evokes the feeling that this space is quite fragile, just like the artist’s perception of her working environment—a table and chair where she cooks up her ideas. To the left of this work, there is a room half covered with floral wallpaper. Four shelves stand next to each other on the wall, each carrying an ordinary object, such as a plastic cup and a small gas bottle used in almost every house. Everything featured on this wall is covered with the same floral wallpaper, hidden in the artificial garden constructed by the artist.

In fact, throughout the exhibition, floral patterns dominate Bingöl’s objects. In every room, we find a camera made out of ceramic mounted on the wall and covered with floral designs. The artist clearly wants to remind us that we are constantly monitored by various agents/objects that have become ordinary and, thus, obscure, blending in with our immediate environment. Yet, this work suggests more than that: it reflects on our own systems of thinking in which we constantly monitor ourselves, and watch our words and moves.

One other interest of the artist is systems of production. In the next room of the exhibition we find two twisted pipe systems that seem to be deadlocked. On the other wall we find “Broken,” a cluster of broken ceramic pieces representing disappointment, fragility, and dysfunction. Two video pieces titled “The Craftsman” and “The Ruinous” are shown on the adjacent wall, the first featuring the artist hard at work, constructing her pieces, and the latter showing her breaking and destroying her works. Certainly, for the artist, destruction is an integral part of the strenuous production process, which requires both mental and physical strength. Therefore, the idea of showing the “kitchen” where everything is constructed is more than necessary, especially in today’s world where traditional ways of producing art is no longer popular. In fact, Bingöl’s choice of material—ceramic—indicates a type of resistance to mainstream understanding of contemporary art and a brittle but solid way to adhere to the contemporary.

The second exhibition is Günseli Kato’s “Tradition Now” (Gelenek Şimdi) featured at Galeri G-art in Maçka until 30 June. Günseli Kato is a prominent artist whose extensive knowledge in miniature manifests itself with the wonderful collection of pieces featured in this show. The artist brought these works together for the benefit of AÇEV, a Turkishnon-governmental organization which does research, program development, program implementation, and advocacy for early childhood and adult education.

Although the small gallery space is not necessarily the ideal place to present Kato’s large-sized roaring lions, observing angels, golden trees, and colorful horses hanging from the ceiling, each piece invites the viewer to pay attention to an art that has been forgotten due to new trends in image production. The title of the exhibition carries urgency in its language—by reminding the viewer of a miniature treasure of the past, the artist calls for a re-examination of our perception of it as well.

Kato believes that the art of miniature cannot be maintained by making reproductions of old motifs and models. The figures Kato chooses to include in this exhibition all belong to past centuries’ miniature works. However, her contemporary take on them is what makes them unique and admirable. Kato has created a magical universe loaded with symbols, and she invites us in with the condition that we make up our own fantasies as our eyes ponder upon each piece. This is Kato’s way of updating traditional arts.

Now…cancel your next TV-show marathon, head to these exhibitions, and rethinkthe way you understand contemporary art.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/ceramic-and-miniature-updated-186.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/ceramic-and-miniature-updated-186.html Thu, 09 Jun 2011 23:26:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Get Classical with Istanbul Music Festival]]>

The year 1973 was a monumental year for Istanbul, as the world’s attention turned towards the Bosphorus Strait with the completion of the Bosphorus Bridge—the first bridge to connect Europe and Asia. During the same year, a cultural bridge between these two continents as well as the rest of the world began taking its roots with the establishment of the IKSV Festival.

What began as a comprehensive festival, which included jazz, classical music, contemporary dance, and film, later divided into separate IKSV festivals, allowing for a more thorough focus on these individual areas. Having adopted its current title in 1994, the Istanbul International Music Festival has brought the likes of Adam Fischer, Cecilia Bartoli, Fazıl Say, and José Collado to eager audiences in Istanbul over the past 38 years. This year, the festival is celebrating its 39th year with more than 600 national and international musicians, and a bevy of premieres. In line with this year’s theme “Journeys to the Far,” the festival is offering eclectic options from the US and Mexico to Russia and Argentina.

The opening concert on June 4th was a huge success with the Borusan Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra’s performance of “Izmir Rhapsody” composed by Muammer Sun (who received the festival’s Honorary Award on the same night) under the baton of Sascha Goetzel. The concert also included Edvard Grieg’s “Piano Concerto in A minor” and Sergei Prokofiev’s “Scythian Suite” with the dynamic interpretation of the young piano virtuoso Lara Melda.

Tonight, to pay homage to the Hungarian composer Franz Liszt’s 200th birth anniversary, Turkey’s master piano virtuoso İdil Biret will give life to his compositions at the Hagia Irene Museum. Consistent with the festival’s theme, Biret will play “Années de Pèlerinage”—pieces that Liszt composed, inspired by his journeys throughout Italy.

The same venue will host a historic event on June 10, when the Latvian violin virtuoso Gidon Kremer will take the stage to conduct Kremerata Baltica for the first time, a chamber orchestra made of young musicians from Baltic countries. The event is titled “Hommage a Glenn Gould,” as the repertoire of the night consists of seven pieces dedicated to the legendary Canadian pianist, especially commissioned to seven contemporary composers by Kremer, who will be granted a “Lifetime Achievement Award” before the concert.

On June 16, the audience of the “On the Road &Off the Road” event at Hagia Irene Museum will witness the world premiere of a specially commissioned piece for the festival. In celebration of Turkey’s legendary composer İlhan Usmanbaş’s 90th birthday, the Akbank Chamber Orchestra will perform Usmanbaş’s Concerto (a piece that the Istanbul Music Festival commissioned for this concert) under the baton of conductor Cem Mansur.

June 17 will mark another world premiere of a piece commissioned by the festival. This event, called “Grammar of Dreams,” will take place at santralistanbul’s Energy Museum - a venue that is hosting the festival’s events for the first time this year. During this event, young Turkish composer Turgut Pöğün’s “Music I”, and pieces by the Hezarfen Ensemble and Michael Ellison will be performed.

The festival’s exclusive concert is by none other than the ultimate diva Renée Fleming, accompanied by the Borusan Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Sascha Goetzel. With her charismatic appearance and perfect interpretations, the American soprano who will be performing in Turkey for the first time, will illuminate the stage at the Hagia Irene Museum on June 22.

Another unique event titled “Dreaming the Faraway” will take place on June 25 at the Hagia Irene Museum. For the night’s performance, David Greilsammer, The Music Director of the Geneva Chamber Orchestra and Artistic Director of the Suedama Ensemble in New York, will take the stage with the Geneva Chamber Orchestra, performing pieces by Mozart, Ravel, and Rameau.

Last but not least, the closing concert (an event that is expected to host the largest number of attendees) will be at Lütfi Kırdar Convention and Exhibition Center on June 29. Originally founded by the late American conductor, composer, and pianist Leonard Bernstein; Schleswig-Holstein Orchestra will be conducted by the much-celebrated German pianist and conductor Christoph Eschenbach. The American cellist Alissa Weilerstein (who is considered by many as the heir to the multi-award winner, American cellist, virtuoso, and orchestral composer Yo-Yo Ma) will be the soloist for the night.

With its select events, outstanding musicians, and inspirational locations, the Istanbul Music Festival continues to live up to its reputation as one of the best festivals in Turkey, once again enriching Istanbul’s cultural landscape.

The festival will be running from June 4 to June 29. Tickets can be purchased through Biletix kiosks, call center (0216 556 98 00), or website (www.biletix.com) as well as the headquarters of Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts and the Hagia Irene Museum kiosk.

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In addition to classic festival locations (the Hagia Irene Museum, Archeological Museum, Çinili Köşk, Süreyya Opera House, and Lütfi Kırdar Convention and Exhibition Center), this year, Galata Mevlevihanesi, Istanbul University Rector’s Building, Istanbul Modern, and santralistanbul are also added to the mix. If you are looking for good alternatives on where to eat and drink pre/post concerts, here is a list exclusively selected by The Guide Istanbul.

Around Hagia Irene Museum, Archeological Museum, Çinili Köşk, Istanbul University Rector’s Building

Balıkçı Sabahattin– Housed in a restored Ottoman mansion, Balıkçı Sabahattin is one of the top seafood restaurants in Istanbul.

Seasons Restaurant– Located in a huge glass pavilion within the 5-star Four Seasons hotel, Seasons offers excellent international, Ottoman, and contemporary Turkish dishes.

Meşhur Filibe Köftecisi– Humble yet delicious, meatballs never tasted so good. Do not forget to order piyaz on the side!

Hamdi Eminönü – A few steps away from the Egyptian Bazaar, Hamdi is famous not only for its large variety of delicious kebabs and mezes but also for its exceptional views of the Golden Horn.

Giritli – Located in a cozy garden lit with colorful bulbs, Giritli offers the freshest seafood, a huge selection of mezes from the Greek island of Crete, and is especially attractive on warm summer nights.

Dubb Indian – With a wonderful view of the Old City, Dubb Indian is one of the few Indian restaurants in Istanbul, offering authentic dishes (especially Northern specialties).

Around Süreyya Opera House

Çiya– This modest restaurant offers delicacies from Syria, Georgia, southern Iran, and all parts of Turkey, with a menu that changes almost daily.

Yanyalı Fehmi Lokantası– A century-old esnaf lokantası (tradesmen restaurant), Yanyalı Fehmi is a modest, family-run eatery where you can find a variety of kebabs, grills, fish, meat, and vegetable stews. Their desserts win rave reviews!

Divan Marina Brasserie– Divan is a great choice for fine dining with a refreshing view of the marina.

Viktor Levi– One of the most established wine houses in Istanbul, you can drink selective wines accompanied by tasteful meze-style dishes.

Angel Restaurant Salacak– With a spectacular view of the Maiden’s Tower, Angel Restaurant is a typical fish restaurant that is sure to satisfy your taste buds!

Around Lütfi Kırdar Convention and Exhibition Center

Delicatessen– A hip joint at the heart of Nişantaşı, Delicatessen offers dozens of choices from steak burger to fresh fish, and most dishes come with scrumptious sides.

Borsa– An established restaurant dedicated to traditional Turkish cuisine, Borsa is a classic choice for concerts-goers.

Dragon Chinese– Arguably one of the best options for Chinese food in Istanbul, Dragon Chinese specializes in Cantonese and Szechuan dishes prepared by chefs from Hong Kong.

Park Şamdan– An established fine-dining restaurant, Park Şamdan serves Turkish and international dishes. You can rely on your experienced waiter to lead you through the impressive menu.

Brasserie Nişantaşı– Located on the trendiest crossroad in Nişantaşı, Brasserie Nişantaşı is the meeting point for Istanbul’s glitterati and one of the best places for people-watching. The menu is very French, with salmon, beef carpaccio, and great summer desserts, as well as a variety of European dishes.

Around Galata Mevlevihanesi and Istanbul Modern

Meze by Lemon Tree– For meyhane aficionados as well as novices, there isn’t a better place to drink rakı and please your palate with sophisticated takes on traditional mezes.

X Restaurant–X Restaurant is located on the top floor of the Istanbul Foundation for Arts and Culture’s building, offering magnificent views over The Golden Horn and the historical peninsula. The Turkish and Mediterranean fusion menu includes such delicacies as pumpkin soup and Homemade Smoked Salmon Slices with Beetroot Puree and Quail Eggs Pane.

Lokanta Maya– A relatively new addition to the Karaköy district, this small and cute restaurant makes excellent appetizers; make sure you try the mücver!

Karaköy Lokantası– Located on a small street behind the Karaköy shipping docks, Karaköy Lokantası is known for offering consistently delicious Turkish cuisine at reasonable prices. A family-run restaurant, this is one of the most popular lunch spots in the neighborhood with local businessmen, while in the evening the atmosphere is more like a meyhane (Turkish tavern).

Akın Balık– A humble fish restaurant located right on the docks of Karaköy, Akın Balık is a great spot from which to enjoy the sunset.

Istanbul Modern Cafe– Known for its great panoramic views of the Old City and the Bosphorus, the café’s inventive menu features hot and cold appetizers, seafood, pasta, and meat dishes.

Around santralistanbul

Ottosantral– Located at santralistanbul, this hip restaurant offers Italian and Fusion cuisine alongside traditional Turkish specialties. The salads are particularly fresh and inventive, while their oven-baked pizzas and amazing cocktails are often raved about.

AsitaneAsitane is solely dedicated to serving historic recipes of the Ottoman Empire.Their menu consists of specialties prepared from the Topkapı and Dolmabahçe Palace kitchen archives, and some of the dishes date back to the early 16th century.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/get-classical-with-istanbul-music-festival-184.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/get-classical-with-istanbul-music-festival-184.html Tue, 07 Jun 2011 00:05:00 +0300
<![CDATA[DOCUMENTARIST This Week!]]>

This week Istanbul will be hosting another international film festival that brings together 80 documentaries produced in over 40 countries. An independent initiative organized by young filmmakers, the 4th Documentarist: Istanbul Documentary Days festival will take place between 31 May - 5 June with screenings at the French Cultural Center, Akbank Sanat, Pera Museum, Cezayir, IFEA (Fransiz Anadolu Araştırmaları Enstitüsü), and Sismanoglio Megaro.

Each year, the carefully selected films cover an extensive array of issues concerning politics, social life, arts, environment, and personal stories. This year, more specifically, the focus is on the post-Communist period, the Arab world, ethnographic documentaries, and music. The festival also includes a selection of Turkish documentaries (SIYAD selections and much more).

The list of films included in the festival is striking as it includes a wide range of cinematic and thematic approaches. InMy Sweet Canary, Roy Sher tells the story of Roza Eskenazi through the eyes of three young musicians from Greece, Turkey, and Israel. Three friends embark on a musical journey from Istanbul to Thessaloniki and then to Athens to follow the trail of this phenomenal musician who has never been the subject of a film prior to My Sweet Canary. Quite different from this one is Greek Crisis Explained, a 3-minute film interpretation of the recent financial crisis that Greece has gone through.

A Bitter Taste of Freedomby Marina Goldovskaya is an astonishing portrait of the journalist Anna Politkovskaya who was murdered when she was 48 years old. The timing of this documentary is especially important considering the heated discussions and controversies that have recently come up about the media and freedom of speech. 12 Angry Lebanese is a film by Zeina Daccache, who set up the first drama project in a Lebanese prison. The film is based on this 15-month long project, taking place in the notorious Roumieh Prison.

Some award-winning films are especially crucial in rethinking the genre of documentary filmmaking. Andrei Ujica’sThe Autobiography of Nicolae Ceausescu, for instance, is made up of 1000 hours of archival footage, extending the limits of documentary filmmaking from the get-go. The documentary is evidence that it is possible to compose and finalize a film on recent history based entirely on existing footage and images.

Through a selection of works from the 1950s to today, the section “Anthropology and Documentary” surveys the role of film in anthropological studies and vice versa. Jean Rouch’s pioneering work The Mad Masters(1955) and Secrets of the Tribe (2010) by Jose Padilha will allow the audience to think about representation and what has changed in the past half century in ethnological documentary making. The latter will also give insight into the ethically questionable ways that many anthropologists have explored and portrayed “other” communities.

Over the week, not only films but also many filmmakers will be crossing the city. This year’s guest of honor is the internationally acclaimed Czech documentarist Helena Trestikova, who received the European Film Academy’s Prix Arte award in Copenhagen with her documentary film Rene. This documentary was filmed over a 20-year period following the story of René Plasil, a habitual criminal who was sent to prison for the first time at the age of 16. Rene is the second leg of a trilogy that aims to observe women in long periods of time. Shot over 14 years, Trestikova’s latest documentary Katka aims to understand a woman who is a drug addict trying to get off heroin. Her films Rene; Katka; Hitler, Stalin and I; Carmen Story; Marriage Stories: Zuzana and Stanislav; and Marriage Stories 20 Years Later: Zuzana and Stanislav will be screened as part of the festival. Trestikova will also be holding a master class on Saturday June 4 at Akbank Sanat*.

Another exciting guest is the Istanbul-born visual anthropologist Asen Balıkçı. Apioneer in the field of ethnographic filmmaking, Balıkçı got his degree in anthropology at Columbia University where he studied with the late cultural anthropologist Margaret Mead. Between the years 1957-1965, he conducted fieldwork with the Netsilik Eskimo. One of his strongest works on the Netsilik Eskimo, At the Winter Sea Ice Camp, which he co-directed with Quentin Brown, will be screened as a two-part documentary. For the first time, the Turkish audience will be able to meet Asen Balıkçı and discuss his work on Friday 3 June between 04:00pm – 07:00pm at Akbank Sanat.

During the festival the audience will also be able to see a selection of the prominent Syrian activist and filmmaker Omar Amiralay’s documentary films:A Plate of Sardines or The First Time I Heard of Israel,Everyday Life in a Syrian Village, andEssay on the Euphrates Dam.

An event that shouldn’t be missed is “A Wall is a Screen” (aka cinematic walk) on Friday June 3, starting at 08:30pm at Tünel Square. Performed by a German group from Hamburg who describe it as “a combination of a guided city tour and a film night,” this activity will feature short film screenings on building walls in the Beyoğlu area.

For a full list of films, screening times, and detailed information on the festival’s entire list of side events, please visit http://www.documentarist.org. Tickets cost 4TL and can be purchased at http://www.mybilet.com/belgeselFilmFest.php.

*The master class will be held between 11:00am –02:00pm. The admission is free, but you need to reserve a seat by emailing program@documentarist.org.)

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/documentarist-this-week-179.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/documentarist-this-week-179.html Wed, 01 Jun 2011 09:31:00 +0300
<![CDATA[A Retrospective: "I am not a studio artist" by Hüseyin Bahri Alptekin]]>

The exhibition "I am not a studio artist"by Hüseyin Bahri Alptekin at Istanbul’s newest gallery SALT is Alptekin’s most comprehensive exhibition to be showcased in Turkey or abroad so far. The retrospective organized by Vasıf Kortun and Duygu Demir from the programs and research team at SALT allows the audience to view photo-installations, collages, videos, and objects as well as newly-commissioned works of renowned artists whose paths have crossed Alptekin’s through various channels during his years of artistic practice.

Nomadic artist, writer, lecturer, and curator, Hüseyin Bahri Alptekin (1957-2007) studied aesthetics, philosophy of art, and sociology in Istanbul and Paris. After working as a photographer for SIPA Press and writing for various publications as an art and design critic, Alptekin lectured at Bilkent University and Istanbul Bilgi University, while also continuing his art practice.

He participated in various international exhibitions including São Paolo Biennial (1998); Cetinje Biennial (2002), where he won the UNESCO Prize; How Latitudes Become Forms, Walker Art Center (2003); Manifesta 5 (2004); and the International Istanbul Biennial (1995, 2005). With his installation Don’t Complain, Alptekin also represented Turkey in the 52nd Venice Biennale, which also marks the first time a Turkish Pavilion was held in Venice.

Alptekin’s multivalent art practice presents itself on the surface level by the multitude of mediums and materials he uses. While he uses a variety of popular materials in his works, Alptekin explores pressing issues in depth, such as globalization, immigration, exile, and cross-cultural image circulation.

For the exhibition I am not a studio artist SALT has tracked and collected many of Alptekin’s works that have been sitting in various storage rooms of collectors and international art centers and also reproduced some works that have not survived. The walk-in cinema on the entrance floor also showcases a series of interviews with the colleagues and friends of Alptekin, which shed a personal light on the artist. Impromptu talks and screenings are also hosted as part of the programming.

The breadth and density of Alptekin’s works reflect an artist who was profoundly interested in localities and the issues of his day as well as someone who was acutely conscious of human existential conditions and psychological inclinations. Heterotopia is a 3D collage work on which he collaborated with Michael Morris. Alptekin and Morris enjoyed going to the weekly markets in Ankara, with vendors selling random bits and pieces, and cheap vodka and caviar circulating from the former Soviet countries. As they viewed and shopped from the tezgah (stalls) at this market, Alptekin and Morris came to see the vendors’ stalls as a way of exhibition making. Drawing inspiration from the prominent French philosopher and social theorist Foucault, they set up their own tezgah, juxtaposing objects that, when displayed together, hint at other “heterotopic” places.

The piece Global Digestion was influenced by Slovenian philosopher and critical theorist Slavoj Žižek’s book The Plague of Fantasies in which Žižek writes about the cultural differences between how people go to the bathroom. Global Digestion brings together tens of photos of various bathrooms, which Alptekin encountered during his travels. In fact, many of Alptekin’s works involve an aspect of traveling, be it the social issues he recognizes at the places he visits and/or larger questions regarding globalization and trans-nationalism. One of his most prominent works H-Fact: Hospitality/Hostilityis a great example of how Alptekin points at issues surrounding travel, immigration, and prejudices in various places.

The work Winter Depression (and other works, such as Artist in Depression and Artist in Summer Depression thatare not on view) features a diagnosis table. The table on view is a re-construction, but it is modeled after the original one, which belonged to Alptekin’s father who was a doctor. The image that covers the wall on the back is taken from French theorist Guy Debord’s Society of Spectacle. This same section showcases photographs of Alptekin’s experiments with ancient healing practices and his visit to a sanatorium, depicting white curtains billowing into a corridor within the sanatorium.

The exhibitionis not only a retrospective but also hosts newly commissioned works by artists Camila Rocha, Gülsün Karamustafa, Nedko Solakov, Gabriel Lester, and Can Altay. Each artist has contributed pieces of works that deal with and respond to Alptekin’s life and practice. For instance, Can Altay’s kinetic installation work called Merzbahri: Global Hangover(2011)is made of wood, plastic balls, and plexi as a reference to Alptekin’s choice in materials. The work as a whole also hints at motifs from Alptekin’s life and travels.

Alptekin’s photo series of the sanatorium is tactfully complimented by Gabriel Lester’s work Melancholiain Arkadia (to my dear friend)(2011), which features real curtains hung by the windowpanes on the second floor of SALT. With a special chemical material the curtains were made to look as though the wind blew in and Alptekin’s soul just left the room through the billowing curtains. The work is delicate, especially relevant, and moving considering Alptekin’s sudden death in 2007. It is as if Lester is paying respects to his friend and bidding him a personal farewell behind the curtains.

This beautiful tribute to Hüseyin Bahri Alptekin offers the viewers an unprecedented opportunity to dive into the work of an outstanding persona. Accompanying the exhibition, which will last until August 7, a comprehensive book on Hüseyin Bahri Alptekin edited by Duygu Demir is available for sale in Turkish and English at Robinson Crusoe 389 bookshop at SALT.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/a-retrospective-i-am-not-a-studio-artist-by-huseyin-bahri-alptekin-161.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/a-retrospective-i-am-not-a-studio-artist-by-huseyin-bahri-alptekin-161.html Mon, 16 May 2011 17:50:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Get a piece of Turkey at MoMA]]>

The work of several Turkish artists will be on sale at the New York Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) gift shop from May 12 to June 30 as part of their ‘Destination: Design’ series, which introduces designers and design themes from around the world. ‘Destination: Istanbul’ will carry 100 products from 25 young Turkish designers, made exclusively for the MoMA design shop.

Pieces will include decorative objects, jewelry, and many other household and gift items. The inspiration behind the pieces is Istanbul itself and the city’s unique position as a meeting point between East and West, old and new. Istanbul’s rich history and Ottoman and Byzantine heritage have served as an inspiration to the artists who have created a range of contemporary pieces. (www.momastore.org)

The designers who will showcase their work at MoMA store are as follows:

"İstanbul Dresses, Ali Bakova, Alev Ebuzziya Siesbye, Arda Tunçman, Ömer Ünal, Aida Pekin, Aysun Altındağ ve Meltem Maralcan, Bahadır Baruter, Mehtap Obuz, Berra Alkan, Burcu Akbulut Onur, 2mikrop, Demir Obuz, Elif Özsezen, Ela Cindoruk, Emir Uras, Erdem Akan, Fabio Ricci, İz, Kamer Foundation, Koray Özgen, Leyla Taranto, Tan Mavitan ve Urart, Kunter Şekercioğlu, Maybe Design, Münire Kırmacı, Nil Deniz, Alper Böler, Ottoman Jewelry, Oya Akman, Özlem Ölçer, Özlem Tuna, Sabrina Fresko, Sadi Tekin, Selin Okçu Büyüksoy, Sema Obuz, Sezgin Sander, Soner Özenç, Sultan Ragbet."

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/get-a-piece-of-turkey-at-moma-155.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/get-a-piece-of-turkey-at-moma-155.html Tue, 10 May 2011 21:12:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Stephen Jones and the Accent of Fashion @ Vakko]]>

The radical hat designer Stephen Jones is at Vakko Moda Merkezi to celebrate the 30th year of his career with his retrospective exhibit “Stephen Jones & the Accent of Fashion”. The exhibit includes hats that Stephen Jones designed for his own collection in addition to the designs he made for JeanPaul Gaultier, Thierry Mugler, Comme des Garçons, Claude Montana, John Galliano, Christian Dior, Azzedine Alaïa,Walter Van Beirendonck, and Marc Jacobs.

The exhibit consists of 180 hats under four categories, as well as the “Turkish Entrée”—a collection of Turkish creations that Stephen Jones specifically designed for the exhibit. Stephen Jones has previously exhibited his work at The Victoria & Albert Museum in London, Louvre Museum in Paris, and Brooklyn Museum in New York.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/stephen-jones-and-the-accent-of-fashion-vakko-134.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/stephen-jones-and-the-accent-of-fashion-vakko-134.html Fri, 22 Apr 2011 18:13:00 +0300
<![CDATA[SALT: The Newest Addition to Istanbul’s Arts Scene]]>

SALT is an innovative new institution that has recently made its debut on Istanbul’s arts scene. A non-profit organization funded by Garanti Bank, SALT has ambitions of becoming Turkey’s largest cultural institution. According to SALT Research and Programs Director Vasıf Kortun, SALT does not want to be boxed into any specific category, but instead transcend such categorization. It is not a museum, art or architectural institution, research facility or gallery, but a venue that stands for innovation. Working in conjunction with the greater changes that are currently taking place in Istanbul’s arts scene, SALT will host exhibitions and conferences, engage in interdisciplinary research projects, and will also open its library and archives for public use.

Garanti Bank initially established SALT in 2006 when it decided to amalgamate three existing institutions, Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Center, Garanti Gallery, and the Ottoman Bank Archives and Research Center, all of which are now joined under SALT. The word salt means simple or pure in Turkish, and Garanti chose this name in part for its meaning in Turkish. Instead of creating a logo, the team behind SALT decided to instead create a unique, custom-designed font, using this for all SALT-related press and activities.

SALT’s activities will be split between two Garanti-owned buildings, one on Istiklal Street in Beyoğlu and SALT Galata, which is housed in a 19th century building that was once the Imperial Ottoman Bank headquarters, and will be opened to the public in September 2011. The six-story SALT building on Istiklal Street dates back to the 19th century and was originally known as the Siniossoglou Apartment building. Following extensive renovations, the building now features 1,130 m2 of exhibition space, archival space, offices, a café, a shop, a walk-in cinema, and a rooftop terrace-garden designed by architect Fritz Haeg. Amazingly, SALT Galata will be twice the size of the Beyoğlu venue, and will house the archives and a library.

SALT’s opening exhibits are “I am not a studio artist” by the late artist, writer, and curator Hüseyin Bahri Alptekin, as well as new commissions related to his life and works (which will be on display until August 7), and “Laboratory”, which features works by the 2010 winners of the Cultural Committee of German Business’ annual Ars Viva Prize for young artists based in Germany, which will be on display until July 1.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/salt-the-newest-addition-to-istanbuls-arts-scene-136.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/salt-the-newest-addition-to-istanbuls-arts-scene-136.html Fri, 15 Apr 2011 17:31:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Getting Intimate with the Royalty]]> There’s something mysterious about the grand halls and winding passages of Ottoman palaces. Wandering through these glorious buildings and well-kept gardens, one can’t help but wonder how an Ottoman emperor spent his days, what his work environment was like, or how his manners were like at the dinner table. And, seriously, how did the doctors treat his cavities?

No need to wonder any longer as the Saray Koleksiyonları Müzesi (the Palace Collection Museum) is now open. The museum, which is located on the grounds of the Dolmabahçe Palace, elucidates the daily lives of the last six Ottoman sultans and Atatürk.

The collection, which is representative of the last 70 years of Ottoman rule, covers over 5000 items in 20 different categories, such as “Being a Kid in the Palace”, “Religious Life”, and “Health and Personal Care”. The exhibited objects were used in the Ottoman palaces during the last period of Ottoman rule, including not only the Dolmabahçe Palace but also Aynalıkavak, Küçüksu, Ihlamur, and Beylerbeyi palaces.

The exhibited objects, which were once used by the palace residents and guests, include clothing, toys, medical tools, Hereke carpets, paintings, decorative objects, kitchenware, clocks, and much more. Some of these items were brought over from Europe during the 19th century, while some were built in the palace workshops. A section of the museum is dedicated to the painting collection and art supplies of Caliph Abdülmecid, who was also a painter. A few objects that were bought and used by Atatürk during his stay at the Dolmabahçe Palace can also be found in the museum. An 1895 kinetoscope, The Graphophone Company brand phonograph from the 1880s, and the first ever electric heater made in Turkey are a few examples of unique items that are exhibited in the collection.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/getting-intimate-with-the-royalty-135.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/getting-intimate-with-the-royalty-135.html Wed, 13 Apr 2011 18:46:00 +0300
<![CDATA[30th Istanbul Film Festival is here!]]>

The long-awaited 30th Istanbul Film Festival is here, making April a joyous month for film aficionados. Held between April 2 and April 17, the festival covers a variety of categories that will appeal to film lovers of all interests, from Human Rights and Turkish Cinema to Young Masters and Documentary Time with NTV. A total of 231 films are being screened, creating a huge dilemma for those of us who are going through the IKSV catalogue trying to squeeze in as many films as possible in our busy schedules. Here is our shortlist of the ‘must-see’ films of the festival to save you from losing yourself in the festival guide book or IKSV’s website trying to decide what to see.

Gişe Memuru (Toll Booth)

The first feature-length film written and directed by Tolga Karaçelik, who is better known for his award-winning short films such as Rapunzel, Toll Booth tells a story of miscommunication, isolation, and desperate alienation through the conflict between a father and his son. Confined to his world of dreams, the introvert Kenan is a toll booth attendant, who lives with his ailing father. Kenan’s dull and monotonous life, stuck between the routines of his toll booth and his home, will change when he is assigned to work at numerous other toll booths.

Karaçelik’s feature-length debut won Best First Feature Film, Best Director of Photography, and Best Actor (for Serkan Ercan’s performance) awards at the 47. Uluslararası Antalya Altın Portakal Film Festivali (47. International Antalya Golden Orange Film Festival).

The Two Escobars

Directed by Jeff and Michael Zimbalist, The Two Escobars is a documentary on two significant figures of Colombia: Andrés Escobar and Pablo Escobar. These two have no personal or family ties but fate brings them together. “Andrés was the team captain. Pablo ruled the criminal underworld. One divided a country. The other united it.” Led by the biggest soccer star Andrés, the Colombian national soccer team was close to winning the 1994 World Cup until Andrés made the irrevocable mistake of scoring a goal in his team’s post during the final match between Colombia and the US.

Waste Land

Directed by Lucy Walker, this documentary (which took three years to film) follows the Brooklyn artist Vik Muniz from New York to Rio de Janeiro on his artistic quest.

“From the world’s largest trash dump comes an astonishingly true story of a renowned New York artist and a group of scavengers.” Muniz embarks on a photography project in Jardim Gramacho (world’s greatest garbage dump), taking photos of a group of catadors—garbage collectors who collect recyclable material and turn them into pieces of art. This inspiring documentarywon 2010 Berlin Amnesty Award, Panorama–Audience Award, 2010 Seattle Best Documentary, and 2010 Sundance Audience Award.

Little White Lies (Les Petits Mouchoirs)

Every summer Max invites his friends to stay at his beach house. This summer, their vacation results in something much more than just a nice summer tan. Directed by the handsome Guillaume Canet (whom we know as Julien in Jeux d’enfants), Les Petits Mouchoirs brings together Rançois Cluzet, Marion Cotillard, and Benoît Magimel in a story about a group of bourgeois Parisians whose lives are surrounded by secrets and fears. Vincent, who is happily married, falls in love with Max; Marie is Ludo’s ex-girlfriend; Eric is cheating on Lea; Antoine is obsessed with his ex-girlfriend. As days go by their relationships, friendships, and loyalties will be tested.

Another Year

Another Yearis a glimpse of a married couple’s life and their relationship with their friends and relatives. Surrounded by their unhappy friends, colleagues, and family, Gerri and Tom struggle to stay happy. In his latest film, Mike Leigh underlines the opposing concepts of happiness and sadness, hope and hopelessness, partnership and loneliness, birth and death.

Manville won the 2010 USA National Board of Review Best Actress Award for her performance.

The Turin Horse (A Torinoi Lo)

Béla Tarr’s latest film The Turin Horse, which was co-directed by Ágnes Hranitzky,takes place in 1889, and begins with Nietzsche’s struggle to save a horse that has been whipped. This struggle leads Nietzsche towards an incurable mental illness that will leave him bedridden and mute. Yet, it’s not the great German philosopher but the old horse that is the hero of this story.

The Turin Horsewon the 2011 Berlin Jury Grand Prix Award.

The Trip

Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon play themselves in this funny feature-length film, which has been adapted from the Golden Tulip-winner British comedy series A Cock and Bull Story. Coogan, a guest food writer for a newspaper, travels to the English countryside with his neurotic friend Brydon. The Trip is a great example of witty British humor in which most dialogues between Coogan and Brydon are improvised.

Norwegian Wood (Noruwei no mori)

Norwegian Woodis the first film adaptation of one of Haruki Murakami’s greatest works. The inspiration for the film as well as the book came from a Beatles song that gave the film and the book its name. Tran Anh Hung, who had directed The Scent of Green Papaya and Cyclo, adapted the book (which was published in 1987) to the big screen. The film, which centers on love, death, loss of innocence, heartbreak, and the awakening of sexuality, takes place in the 1960s in Tokyo and follows Toru Watanabe who is desperately devoted to his first love Naoko. Watanebe feels the presence of death in all aspects of his life until he meets the lively Midori.

Poetry (Shi)

The winner of 2010 Cannes Best Scenario Award, Lee Chang-dong’s latest film Poetry tells the bitter-sweet story of Mija, an elderly lady who lives in the suburbs with her grandson. Mija attends poetry classes at a cultural center and, for the first time in her life, she is challenged to write a poem. This task sparks a light in her life at a time when her memory, strength, and looks have begun to fail her. However, through this journey, she will be forced to face an undesirable truth.

Incendies

Adapted from Wajdi Mouawad’s groundbreaking play to the big screen by Denis Villeneuve (the director of Polytechnique), Incendines tells the tragic story of twins Simon and Jeanne who embark on a journey to Lebanon after the death of their mother Nawal. This adventure will shed a disturbing light on Nawal’s death while showing the darkest moments of civil war.

Incendieswon the 2010 Toronto Best Canadian Feature, 2010 Vancouver Best Canadian Film, 2010 Warsaw Grand Prix, and 2010 Valladolid Best Screenwriting, Youth Jury Award and Audience Award. L. Azabal won the 2010 Abu Dhabi Best Actress Award. The film was also nominated for the Best Film in a Foreign Language Oscars.

Amador

Marcela is an immigrant woman who is going through marital, financial, and social difficulties while trying to adapt to a new country. Amador is an old, bedridden man waiting for his last breath. Their lives are intertwined when Marcela starts taking care of Amador as a summer job. Yet, Marcela is not only taking care of Amador but also sharing his secrets during the final days of his life. Magaly Solier, renowned Peruvian actress, plays Marcela in the film directed by Fernando León De Aranoa.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/30th-istanbul-film-festival-is-here-124.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/30th-istanbul-film-festival-is-here-124.html Fri, 08 Apr 2011 19:43:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Une Soiree Parisienne: The IWI Charity Ball]]> The International Women of Istanbul (IWI) Charity Gala event will take place at the Jardin de France in Tarabya with a French-themed evening for the benefit of the Bomonti Home for the Elderly (Fransız Fakirhanesi). The evening will feature French food and delicacies, outstanding live entertainment, dancing, a chance to win great prizes, a silent auction, and much more.

The Bomonti Home for the Elderly, which provides a home for approximately 100 elderly, relies solely on donations and faces many challenges as a major alteration project is required to update the facility to meet local regulations and EU standards of care. IWI has a long history of supporting the Bomonti Home for the Elderly with donations as well as volunteer work.

IWI invites you to this charity event, asking for your generous help and worthy contribution in an effort to secure the continuity of this home for those who depend on it.

Visit www.iwi-tr.org to purchase your tickets. (All proceeds from tickets will be donated to the Bomonti Home for the Elderly.)

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/une-soiree-parisienne-the-iwi-charity-ball-123.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/une-soiree-parisienne-the-iwi-charity-ball-123.html Fri, 08 Apr 2011 17:06:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Hanedan ve Kamera: Osmanlı Sarayından Portreler (Dynasty and the Camera: Portraits from the Ottoman Court)]]>

In the 19thcentury, the Ottoman sultans, the imperial family, and the statesmen paid special attention to portrait photography, which reached its peak during the reign of Sultan Abdülaziz. The development of portrait photography in the Ottoman era was largely due to the mastery of the court photographer Vasilaki Kargopulo and the Armenian-Ottoman Abdullah Brothers, who ran a photography studio in Istanbul and were made the official royal photographers to the Ottoman Sultan in 1863. Later on, the members of the Ottoman family started taking their own pictures in the privacy of their living areas.

This temporary exhibit at the Sadberk Hanım Museum features a selection of Ömer M. Koç’s photography collection, which includes portrait photographs of the imperial family that were taken with remarkably high skills and artistry. You will find the photographs of Caliph Abdülmecid Efendi, Heir Apparent Yusuf İzzeddin Efendi, and the royal princes Ömer Faruk, Mehmed Selaheddin, and Osman Fuad.


When:Until 24 April

How much:7 TL (Student)

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/hanedan-ve-kamera-osmanli-sarayindan-portreler-dynasty-and-the-camera-portraits-from-the-ottoman-court-122.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/hanedan-ve-kamera-osmanli-sarayindan-portreler-dynasty-and-the-camera-portraits-from-the-ottoman-court-122.html Fri, 08 Apr 2011 08:54:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Kayıp Cennet (Paradise Lost)]]>

Curated by Paolo Colombo and Levent Çalıkoğlu, the exhibit “Kayıp Cennet” (meaning paradise lost) deals with the relationship between art, nature, and technology. The name of the exhibit comes from 17th-century English poet John Milton’s epic poem “Paradise Lost,” which deals with the fall of man through Adam and Eve’s expulsion from the Garden of Eden. The exhibit forces visitors to contemplate their future in light of current natural disasters as it deals with the conflicts between nature and civilization and the clash of nature with today’s world of technology.

The exhibit presents the works of contemporary video and digital media artists from various generations and countries. The exhibited artists are: Doug Aitken, Francis Alÿs, Katerina Athanasopoulou, Jim Campell, Ergin Çavuşoğlu, DesertMed, Shaun Gladwell, Emre Hüner, Nina Katchadourian, Ali Kazma, Laleh Khorramian, Guy Maddin, Rivane Neuenschwander, Ulrike Ottinger, Tony Oursler, Qiu Anxiong, Pipilotti Rist, Charles Sandison, Kiki Smith, Bill Viola, and Pae White.

When:25 March 2011 – 24 July 2011

Where:Istanbul Modern Museum

How much:Museum entry fee


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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/kayip-cennet-paradise-lost-120.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/kayip-cennet-paradise-lost-120.html Fri, 01 Apr 2011 21:35:00 +0300
<![CDATA[Refreshingly Contemporary: Young Galleries in Town]]> Istanbul is fast becoming a hot spot for contemporary art and design. Let’s face it: when it came to arts, Istanbul used to be more associated with calligraphy, harem paintings or orientalist landscapes rather than video installations or large-scale public art projects. All that changed in the last 10 years.

As we are nearing the end of the first decade into the 21st century, Istanbul seems to be at the top of the list of “must see” cities of the global literati and arterati. Even though the city made a passionate plea in contemporary art with the launch of the Biennial in 1987, much of this new buzz around the city owes to contemporary art museums, galleries and non-profit venues that sprung up within this decade. As wealthy families decided to share their art collections with the public, the city gained a number of brand new museums and exhibition spaces. Young artists and curators began to participate by forming collectives and opening venues and the contemporary art scene began to flourish. The crowning of Istanbul as one of the European capitals of culture this year only added to this buzz. Now with the beginning of the new fall season, not a week goes by before you stumble upon a show opening, an after-party or an artist’s talk.

Most of these new and independent art spaces have found a home for themselves in neighborhoods around the cultural center Beyoğlu, Galata and Tophane, neighborhoods once seen as sketchy and even dangerous are now being quickly gentrified. We picked six promising venues to keep you up-to-date with what is going on in the young contemporary art scene of the city.

Milk

Design Gallery and Store

Milk is one of the first galleries to move into Galata before the condo projects in the area gained momentum and Serdar-ı Ekrem Caddesi began looking like a street straight out of Florence. Located in a dead-end alley off Galip Dede Caddesi, it is a bold initiative started by Elif Çevik, a project manager at an advertising agency, and Can Başyiğit, a freelance web designer. These two enthusiasts rushed to see design galleries whenever they went abroad and were frustrated with the lack of a venue for the design-obsessed. It took them two years to realize their dream of starting a gallery of their own in Istanbul where there can showcase both local and international talents in contemporary design.

Milk takes a democratic approach when it comes to picking up artists: they will look at any portfolio. That’s why you might see here a show of paper toys or illustrations by a Romanian artist or a local graffiti artist. In their store section, a variety of design items such as shoes, magnets, t-shirts, posters and toys by Derin Çiler, Ohm, Eyesores, Ndeur, and Çiğdem Paçal can be purchased.

ALANistanbul

Open since August 2009, ALANistanbul sits comfortably on the top floor of an old commercial building on Galip Dede Caddesi on the way to the Galata Tower. It was formed by two architects deeply interested in contemporary art, Arzu Ikiz and Efe Korkut Kurt, and a painter and ceramic artist, Aslı Biçer. The name ‘alan’ means space in Turkish and suggests a freedom of space and action - whether it is a music piece they want to play or a site-specific installation of handmade toys: their wide-ranging artists are free to transform this space in any way they want. The ALANistanbul team explains why they work with multi-disciplinary artists who are at different stages in their careers: “We dwell more on what the artist is doing to ALAN (space) and the performance of the exhibition itself than solely on the artist.”

With its smallish space covered with exposed brick and a rooftop boasting magnificent views of the Old City, ALANistanbul has hosted quite a number of shows and parties since its inception.

Outlet

Outlet is an attempt to bring art, regarded as a luxury commodity, to the masses in a time and space where social and cultural inequity is deeply entrenched,” says Outlet Gallery’s owner Azra Tüzünoğlu. Located in a small shop with a basement used as a Project Room, Outlet functions both as a non-profit exhibition space and a commercial gallery. Since its opening in 2008, it aims to bring a fresh approach to the gallery scene with striking shows with an emphasis on the artists coming from all parts of Turkey, not only confined to Istanbul.

Coming from a sociology background, Tüzünoğlu has written on contemporary art in Turkey and worked as the editor of Art-Ist magazine. At Outlet, she experiments between organizing solo shows for artists and curating large-scale, political group shows. Tufan Baltalar, Şener Özmen, Cengiz Tekin, Hamra Abbas (who recently won the Abraaj Capital Prize, one of the largerst prizes granted to a team of artists working together in the Middle East region), Servet Koçyiğit, and Fikret Atay are among the names represented by this ambitious young gallery.

Galeri Non

Non is one of the pioneering venues that set up shop in the Tophane area, just south of Galatasaray. Stacked between home appliance shops, Non fills its spacious ground floor with a large solid glass window and smallish basement with works by emerging artists; on the mezzanine level connected by a short flight of iron stairs is the tiny office where experienced curator Derya Demir and her coordinator Barış Berker Karakoç sits. Demir has been an active force in the city’s cultural life with a series of commendable projects over the years: in 2008, she curated a group exhibit called “You Can’t Kiss Away a Murder” at Galerist; founded a performance art organization called Art On Stage; and with artist friend Leyla Gediz, started Galeri Splendid, which was nevertheless short-lived. She opened Non in 2009 and says her new gallery is “devoted to artists who embrace a non-disciplinary art practice resulting in new languages and artistic experiences.” She keeps her space open to new possibilities and has an ambitious roster of young up and coming artists, which she takes to international art fairs around the world.

Depo

Depo, also known as the Tütün Deposu (which means tobacco factory), was first used as an exhibition space during the 9th Istanbul Biennial in 2005. It pleasantly surprised many viewers to discover such an authentic place where you could see and hear what’s going on at the gallery downstairs through the cracks in the wooden floors. Anadolu Kültür, an 8-year-old civil initiative and an NGO focused on community development through arts and culture, took up the run-down four-story building in 2008 and turned it into a well-kept non-profit venue.

Because of its square-foot advantage, most of the time Depo plays host to large-scale group shows. Its stated mission is to act as a catalyst in facilitating relations between the cultural worlds of Turkey, South Caucasus, the Middle East and the Balkans so you can see a lot of international, politically charged shows here.

Sanat Limanı

Antrepo 5, a venue also made familiar to the art audience through the biennials, turned into Sanat Limanı this year as part of the efforts of Istanbul Capital of Culture 2010 Agency to make contemporary art more accessible and visible to the public.

Led by Beral Madra, the head of Visual Arts department at the Agency, the 3,600 square-meter space on the waterfront in Kabataş was set up as an exhibition venue until the end of this year to host international and local art shows funded by the Agency. The venue opened with four different shows in June, among which the video show of 10 international women artists stood out.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/refreshingly-contemporary-young-galleries-in-town-96.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/articles/refreshingly-contemporary-young-galleries-in-town-96.html Thu, 17 Mar 2011 03:00:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Beyazıt Tower: The New Weatherman]]> Istanbul’s historical Beyazıt Tower will once again be used to signal the weather forecast. Following an opening ceremony that was held on January 26, the 261 year-old tower, which remains a symbol of the city, will be lit to reflect the next day’s weather forecast as part of a project that is supported by Siemens, Osram Inc. and Istanbul University. Blue lighting will indicate clear skies, green will indicate rainy weather, yellow will indicate fog, while red will indicate snow. The 85-meter tall tower, located in the courtyard of Istanbul University’s main campus, was originally built as a fire watchtower, a function that it continues to perform today.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/beyazit-tower-the-new-weatherman-76.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/beyazit-tower-the-new-weatherman-76.html Wed, 02 Mar 2011 20:48:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Istanbul Contrasts]]> “Istanbul Contrasts” edited by Hossein Amirsadeghi is a new book dedicated to the cultural, artistic, and intellectual melting pot that is Istanbul. This large coffee-table book features photos and interviews with some of the most influential players from the world of art, design, lifestyle and academia in Istanbul, offering an insider’s take on the city. As well as photographs of various aspects of city life, this book also features essays by Murat Belge, Elif Şafak, and Andrew Finkel, some of the most relevant writers on Istanbul today.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/istanbul-contrasts-75.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/istanbul-contrasts-75.html Wed, 02 Mar 2011 20:43:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Vakko's Architectural Win]]> The Vakko Fashion Center and Power Media Center has been selected as the Best Workspace by Wallpaper* Magazine Design Awards 2011. The building was designed by the New York practice REX, led by Joshua Prince-Ramus. The architects’ goal was to combine the functions of Vakko’s fashion empire with CEO Cem Hakko’s media venture The Power Group.

Remarkably, the building was constructed in just a few months. This is partly due to the fact that the project actually merged two unfinished projects. The exterior of the building is modified from an abandoned hotel project, while the interior was done using adapted plans from a cancelled US commission. Because the half-built hotel could not be hidden, it was instead surrounded by glass in order to allow views through to the inner building. While the outer sections of the building contains offices, the inner structure houses meeting rooms, showrooms, an auditorium and radio facilities for PowerFM. Using innovative thinking and design, Vakko and its partners have managed to create one of the most significant new additions to Istanbul’s architectural landscape.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/vakkos-architectural-win-74.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/vakkos-architectural-win-74.html Wed, 02 Mar 2011 20:29:00 +0200
<![CDATA[8 Turks: Sculpting their way through the US]]> The Sculpture Objects and Functional Art (SOFA) expositions that will be held in New York and Chicago this year will feature the work of eight Turkish artists. The SOFA exposition serves as a platform for prominent international galleries and dealers to showcase artwork from the worlds of design and fine arts, and is visited by tens of thousands of prospective buyers, gallery and museum representatives.

Artists Ayhan Tomak, Ebru Döşekçi, Semra Ecer, Yıldanur Ketenci, Malik Bulut, Meral Değer, Nejat Kavvas, and Serdar Seremet will participate at the exposition. The Turkish Cultural Foundation will be sponsoring all eight artists as part of its mission to expand international opportunities for Turkish artists and to promote Turkish modern art. SOFA New York will be held on April 14-17 and SOFA Chicago November 4-6.

www.sofaexpo.com

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/8-turks-sculpting-their-way-through-the-us-73.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/8-turks-sculpting-their-way-through-the-us-73.html Wed, 02 Mar 2011 19:52:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Yao Lu’s New Sceneries]]> “Yao Lu’s New Sceneries” will be on display at the Istanbul Modern Photograph Gallery until May 22. Yoa Lu, winner of 2008 BMW Paris Photo Modern Photography Award, often deals with the theme of modernization in China in his photography. In this exhibit, what at first glance appear to be classical Chinese landscape paintings reveal something quite different and unexpected upon closer inspection.

Lu photographs mountains of garbage and rubble that are covered in green netting, and then digitally enhances them with images of trees, boats, and pagodas, to create a powerful social commentary on the value placed on development and urbanization over the environment in modern-day China. This show, curated by Engin Özdenes, features 31 photographs, 11 of which were taken specifically for the exhibit.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/yao-lus-new-sceneries-72.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/agenda-highlights/yao-lus-new-sceneries-72.html Wed, 02 Mar 2011 18:53:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Broken Manifestos]]> 'Broken Manifestos', an exhibit by Turkish artist Inci Eviner, will be held at the Musee d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris between January 14 – April 3. Eviner, who lives and works in Istanbul, is a multi-media artist, working with paper, canvas, and video. She has been an artist in residence at the Villa Raffet as part of SAM Art Projects since August 2010. One of the most prominent artists on the contemporary Turkish art scene, she has taken part in numerous biennales in Istanbul and overseas. Recurring themes in Eviner’s work include women’s status in society, the global citizen, and politics. For this current exhibit, she presents a series of three installations.

www.mam.paris.fr

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/broken-manifestos-71.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/broken-manifestos-71.html Tue, 01 Mar 2011 16:21:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Henrik Isaksson @ SODA]]> SODA, a contemporary art and design space, will be exhibiting the work of Swedish artist Henrik Isaksson Garnell from his series ‘Un-plugged’ and PollY.

Curated by Nina Grundemark, the show includes photographs, video installations and original sculptures that the artist has made by combining natural organisms with cables and wires to create what he calls “new life forms”. The result is otherworldly objects and photographs that look like they emerged from a sci-fi movie, new life forms that are simultaneously creepy and beautiful.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/henrik-isaksson-soda-64.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/henrik-isaksson-soda-64.html Thu, 24 Feb 2011 02:32:00 +0200
<![CDATA[30th International Istanbul Film Festival begins in April]]> The 30th International Istanbul Film Festival, organized by the Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts and sponsored by Akbank,will take place between April 2-17. The festival aims to encourage the development of cinema in Turkey and to promote the commercial distribution of high-quality films in the Turkish market. A special gala was held at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival in February to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the festival and to promote Turkish cinema.

This year’s program will have multiple sections, including: The international Golden Tulip Competition open to fiction, documentary, and animated films; Turkish Cinema 2010-2011; The Council of Europe Film Award (FACE) Competition within Human Rights in Cinema; and special the matised sections. Highlights include Mike Leigh’s “Another Year”, the film adaptation of “Norwegian Wood” based on the novel by acclaimed Japanese author Haruki Murakami, Julian Schnabel’s latest film “Miral”, “Portiche”, “Rabbit Hole”, “Never Let Me Go”, and many more. Tickets go on sale in March through Biletix and the films will be shown at numerous venues throughout the city.

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/30th-international-istanbul-film-festival-begins-in-april-63.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/30th-international-istanbul-film-festival-begins-in-april-63.html Thu, 24 Feb 2011 02:23:00 +0200
<![CDATA[Baksı Museum: Changing the Facade of Bayburt]]> Bayburt is a small town that is unfamiliar even to most Turks, due in large part to its remote location in the northeast region of the country. Yet with his hard work and vision in establishing the Baksı Museum, artist and academic Hüsamettin Koçan, is slowly changing this. Originally from Bayburt but now based in Istanbul, Koçan noticed that the tradition of producing handicrafts, such as pottery and ceramics, was quickly dying out in his village. Due to the severity of the weather, most of the villagers are forced to migrate in order to find employment opportunities, with many never returning and taking their skill-sets with them.

As a result, the knowledge behind the production of handicrafts is beıng lost and forgotten. Alarmed by this situation, Mr. Koçan decided to establish the Baksı Museum to revitalize the local economy while also preserving the tradition of local handicrafts. This museum successfully brings together contemporary and traditional arts, and has six sections including an exhibition hall (where folk art motifs, glass, ceramics, and pottery are presented), the Bayburt House, which displays traditional Bayburt architecture, a workshop where villagers weave and make ceramics, and a library. Recognizing his tremendous economic and cultural contribution to the region, Mr. Kocan has been honored with the Turkey’s Changemakers award by the Sabancı Foundation.

www.baksi.org

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http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/baksi-museum-changing-the-facade-of-bayburt-55.html http://www.theguideistanbul.com/articles/arts-entertainment/news/baksi-museum-changing-the-facade-of-bayburt-55.html Wed, 23 Feb 2011 00:06:00 +0200