All posts tagged elsewhereness

Screening in Duesseldorf.

Elsewhereness:Yokohama will be screened in Germany. Yokohama was the first in the Elsewhereness series by me and Robert Willim. The other videos can be seen at http://www.elsewhereness.com

About the screening.

Directors Lounge presents experimental films all around Japan

We will participate in this year´s 日本デ , the 10th Japan-Day in Duesseldorf, celebrating the 150 anniversary of Japanese-German diplomatic relations.

DL: Short Cuts to Japan, screened on october, 15 at the Black Box cinema will be dedicated to Japan in experimental cinema and video art. Films included will cover a wide range of “Japans”, from fictional to historical to personal…

films by Ciro Altabás, Marina Chernikova, André Werner, YukihiroTaguchi,   Jean Gabriel Périot, Matthew Dotson & Bart Woodstrop, Anders Weberg & Robert Willim, GUP-py, Kazuhiko Kobayashi, Akinori Okada & Masataka Ohta (pictured: Ansoku No Basyo, 2010)

curated by Julia Murakami

many thanks to Sascha Lueck and whiteconcepts for their support!

Black Box Kino im Filmmuseum ‎, Schulstr. 4, 40213 Duesseldorf

October 15, 2011, 8 pm (admission free!)

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New elsewhereness video. This time Milton Keynes.

Elsewhereness:Milton Keynes
2011

Duration 03:00

Video:Anders Weberg :: weberg.se
Sound:Robert Willim :: robertwillim.com

Commissioned by The 2nd International Visual Methods Conference in Milton Keynes, UK. visualmethods.org/​

Project url: elsewhereness.com/​

ELSEWHERENESS

The Elsewhereness series deals with questions of site specificity, juxtaposing the nomadic with the place-bound. Early site specific artworks in the 1960-70 were often massive in form and commented the commodifications of the prevailing artworld. Many works were made in harmony with artist Richard Serras expression” to remove the work is to destroy the work”. The work was place-bound. Site specific art has since then been mixed and transformed. Often its about the social, about engagement and relations between people living in a certain place and visiting artists.

Elsewhereness twist these approaches. It is instead about the ephemeral, about alienation and non-presence. It takes the possibilities of digital media for site specific art to its extreme. It’s also in a way a caricature of the ideas of the art worlds commissions creating a “one place after another”-dynamic that Miwon Kwon writes about in her discussion of the history of site specific art (2002). Elsewhereness is about the artists NOT being there. The artists are elsewhere, touching from a distance.

Elsewhereness is based on a number of site specific audio-visual works. The works are made solely from audio and videomaterial found on the web, material that emanate from a specific place. The audiovisual pieces are manipulated and composed into a surreal journey through an estranged landscape. The films are based on the culturally bound and stereotypical preconceptions of the artists.

The finished Elsewhereness work can be downloaded into a media player or mobile phone and enjoyed when walking around the surroundings of the specific place, from where the material emanate.

Previous commissions:
ELSEWHERENESS:NEW ORLEANS, Commissioned by Ethnographic Terminalia 2010, New Orleans. USA.
ELSEWHERENESS:UTRECHT, Commissioned by IMPAKT 2010, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
ELSEWHERENESS: MANCHESTER, Commissioned by FutureEverything 2010, Manchester, UK.
ESLEWHERENESS: CAPE TOWN, CAPE 09 Art Biennale, 2009, Cape Town, South Africa.
ELSEWHERENESS: YOKOHAMA, Dislocate 08 Festival, 2008, Yokohama/Tokyo, Japan.

As the series expands, a number of places will be joined into a web of surreal associations, saying something about the various places but also about cultural preconceptions.

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Screening 2 films tonight in Berlin.


Screen from Elsewhereness:Utrecht
urban research
program 2:
imaginary spaces — virtual vision

Tuesday, 15 February 20:00

All screenings free admission | No accreditation required | Space is limited, the early bird catches a seat.

The 7th Berlin International Directors Lounge, the festival for contemporary media and film.
10th to 20th of February, art house meinblau, Pfefferberg. (map)
Schoenhauser Allee 176 / Christinenstr. 18, 10119 Berlin
U Senefelder Platz | Tram M8 | Bus 240 | U Rosa-Luxemburg Platz |

Program

In the Aboriginal tradition “Dreamtime” is the ancient time of the myths. However, in Western concepts, the waking dreams in cities rather manifest a possible future, something that has the potential to become manifest from its yet virtual possibilities. According to Walter Benjamin, the day-dreaming of popular myths discloses potentials of future changes; and following those principles, the Situationists propagated dérive, the aimless strolling in the city as a cure against the false desires of the society of spectacle.

The artists in this Urban Research program use vernacular, mundane urban settings and landscapes for their dreaming and imaginative shifts from the ordinary and expected. They may be read as much more than just a happy visual game.

Anders Weberg SE
Elsewhereness: Cape Town 2min 7s 2009

Marina Chernikova NL
Metro V 2min 30s 2009

GUP-py DE/JP
Out of the Sky ­ Back into the Sky 9min 4s 2010

Henry Gwiazda US
something/the/you 4min 58s 2009

Morehshin Allahyari IR
Over There Is Over Here 5min 43s 2010

Sarah Breen Lovett AU
Expanded Architecture 04: Window Wound 1min 20sec 2010

Susanne Wiegner DE
just midnight 3min 37s 2010

Valentina Ferrandes IT
The Oyster Effect 11min 52s 2010

Anders Weberg SE
Elsewhereness: Utrecht 4min 7s 2010

André Chi Sing Yueng DE
The work 3min 35s 2010

Andrew de Freitas NZ/ CN
L’Espace Quotidien 10min 46s 2010

Julie Meyer FR
Eclipse 1min 20s 2009

Tina Willgren SE
The Polymoids 2min 51s 2010

Vera Frenkel CN
Once Near Water: Notes from the Scaffolding Archive 15min 26s 2008

Anders Weberg SE
Elsewhereness: Utrecht 4min 7s 2010

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Screening in the Himalayan mountains.

Elsewhereness:Cape Town by me and Robert Willim as part of the City Breath project curated by Kai Losgott will be screened at  Sattal a magnificent place in the Himalya mountains not too far in distance to New Delhi, where the annually CeC – Carnival of e-Creativity is taking place – 18-20 February 2011.

More info about the event–> http://www.theaea.org/cec_cac/cec11/index.htm

CITY BREATH Festival of Video Poetry and Performance
4 South African cities.  20 short experimental films.  4 minutes each.

CITY BREATH. 2009.  01:07:11.  DVD.  Experimental film selection from South Africa.
Curator / director:  Kai Lossgott.
Filmmakers / artists / choreographers / poets:  Terry Westby-Nunn, Louise Coetzer, Lolette Smith, Colleen Alborough, João Oreccia, Khanyisile Mbongwa, James Tayler, Niklas Zimmer, Mandilakhe Yengo, Alude Mahali, Ananda Fuchs, Tanya van Schalkwyk, Mduduzi Nyembe, Bandile Gumbi, Maia Grotepass, Mark Wilby, Fabian Oliver Wargau, Nileru, Jeanette Ginslov, Erica Luttich, Anni Snyman, Koeka Stander, Rat Western, Maaike Bakker, Sean Buch, Emma Jane Laurence, Anders Weberg, Robert Willim
As screened in Cape Town, Johannesburg, London, Berlin, Edinburgh, Grahamstown, Vancouver, and Marseille.

Whichever film you watched, it’s unlikely that you would have ever seen anything like it before.“Cue, National Arts Festival, Grahamstown

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Exhibition at the KZNSA Gallery in Durban, South Africa.


Elsewhereness:Cape Town by me and Robert Willim as part of the City Breath project.

CITY BREATH Festival of Video Poetry and Performance
4 South African cities.  20 short experimental films.  4 minutes each.

25 January 2011, 6:00 PM until 19 February 2010Multi-media Room, KZNSA Gallery
http://www.nsagallery.co.za/current_electric.htm

CITY BREATH. 2009.  01:07:11.  DVD.  Experimental film selection from South Africa.
Curator / director:  Kai Lossgott.
Filmmakers / artists / choreographers / poets:  Terry Westby-Nunn, Louise Coetzer, Lolette Smith, Colleen Alborough, João Oreccia, Khanyisile Mbongwa, James Tayler, Niklas Zimmer, Mandilakhe Yengo, Alude Mahali, Ananda Fuchs, Tanya van Schalkwyk, Mduduzi Nyembe, Bandile Gumbi, Maia Grotepass, Mark Wilby, Fabian Oliver Wargau, Nileru, Jeanette Ginslov, Erica Luttich, Anni Snyman, Koeka Stander, Rat Western, Maaike Bakker, Sean Buch, Emma Jane Laurence, Anders Weberg, Robert Willim
As screened in Cape Town, Johannesburg, London, Berlin, Edinburgh, Grahamstown, Vancouver, and Marseille.

Link to full program.

Whichever film you watched, it’s unlikely that you would have ever seen anything like it before.“Cue, National Arts Festival, Grahamstown

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Delhi International Arts Festival December 11-12.

Elsewhereness:Cape Town as part of the CologneOFF VI, City Breath curated by Kai Losgott is screened
by The Academy of Electronic Art in New Delhi under the title: “Edgelogue”
date 11-12 December 2010
location: Alliance Francaise New Delhi

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Elsewhereness:New Orleans at the Du Mois Gallery, New Orleans. Opening tonight November 19.

Elsewhereness:New Orleans

Video:Anders Weberg
Sound:Robert Willim

Project url: http://www.elsewhereness.com

Commissioned by Ethnographic Terminalia2010
ethnographicterminalia.org/

Ethnographic Terminalia 2010 has centered its exhibitions at the Du Mois Gallery in the Freret Corridor of New Orleans.  We are curating the work of twenty-three artists in this unique converted shotgun-style house.  This year we are particularly excited to be showing the first North American installation of Susan Hiller’s The Last Silent Movie. The exhibition is open from 11am to 7pm, Thursday to Saturday until December 4th.  We are holding an opening reception on November 19th at 7pm.

Du Mois Gallery
November 7th to December 4th, 2010
4921 Freret St., New Orleans [link to map]
Thu-Sat 11 am – 7 pm

Artists:  Ryan Burns, Anthony Callaway, Candy Chang, Roderick Coover, Lina Dib, Dada Docot, Kate Hennessy and Richard Wilson, Susan Hiller, Ahmad Hosni. Jenn Karson, Stephanie Keith, Ian Kirkpatrick, Jan Lemitz, Nicola Levell and Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas, Tom Miller, Fiamma Montezemolo, Juan Orrantia, Simon Rattigan, Dona Schwartz, Trish Scott, Travis Shaffer, Trudi Lynn Smith, Stephanie Spray, Patricia Tusa & Don Fels, Robert Willim & Anders Weberg

Elsewhereness:New Orleans
Elsewhereness: New Orleans is the latest part in the Elsewhereness series. Following cities like Yokohama, Cape Town, Manchester and Utrecht it’s now time for New Orleans. The Elsewhereness series deals with questions of site specifity, juxtaposing the nomadic with the placebound. Early site specific artworks in the 1960s – 70s were often massive in form and commented on the commodification of the prevailing artworld. In keeping with artist Richard Serra’s expression “to remove the work is to destroy the work”, most of this work was place-bound. Site specific art has since then been transformed. Often it is about the social, about engagement and relations between people living in a certain place and visiting artists.

Elsewhereness subverts these approaches. It is instead about the ephemeral, about urban alienation and non-presence. It takes the possibilities for digital media in relation to site specific art to its extremes. It is also in a way a parody of the history of site specific art creating “one place after another”, a dynamic that Miwon Kwon (2002) writes about in her discussion of the history of site specific art. Elsewhereness is about the artists NOT being there. The artists are elsewhere, touching from a distance.

The works in the Elsewhereness series are made solely from audio and video material found on the web, material that emanates from a specific place, in this case the place is New Orleans. The audiovisual pieces are manipulated and composed into a surreal journey through an estranged landscape, based entirely on the culturally bound and stereotypical preconceptions of the artists about the actual location.

Elsewhereness is also a comment on ethnographic practices, which are often associated with empirical intimacy and the possibility of coming close to people in various contexts. In some art, and often site-specific art, ethnography has been embraced. Hal Foster (1995) writes some critical words about this in “The Artist as Ethnographer”. Elsewhereness is not a reverberation of Fosters’ critique, but it can still give some perspective on ethnographic and socially oriented site-specific art. Within ethnography and socially oriented site-specific art we’ll often find certain ideals embraced: participation, proximity and ideas about being “loyal to the field”, bearing witness, giving voice to people etc. Elsewhereness is instead a site-specific work where distance and even alienation is evoked. Not in order to achieve some kind of nihilistic stance, but to examine the elongations of the site-specific and the ends of ethnography.

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Screening in Johannesburg, South Africa November 6-7.

Elsewhereness:Cape town as part of the City Breath project will be screened at the Bioscope in Johannesburg November 6-7.

CITY BREATH Festival of Video Poetry and Performance
4 South African cities.  20 short experimental films.  4 minutes each.

6 November 2010, 8:00 PM
7 November 2010, 3:30 PM

The Bioscope, Main Street Life, Johannesburg

As screened in Cape Town, London, Berlin, Edinburgh, Grahamstown, Vancouver, and Marseille
Please note the same films will be screened both nights.

CITY BREATH. 2009.  01:07:11.  DVD.  Experimental film selection from South Africa.
Curator / director:  Kai Lossgott.
Filmmakers / artists / choreographers / poets:  Terry Westby-Nunn, Louise Coetzer, Lolette Smith, Colleen Alborough, João Oreccia, Khanyisile Mbongwa, James Tayler, Niklas Zimmer, Mandilakhe Yengo, Alude Mahali, Ananda Fuchs, Tanya van Schalkwyk, Mduduzi Nyembe, Bandile Gumbi, Maia Grotepass, Mark Wilby, Fabian Oliver Wargau, Nileru, Jeanette Ginslov, Erica Luttich, Anni Snyman, Koeka Stander, Rat Western, Maaike Bakker, Sean Buch, Emma Jane Laurence, Anders Weberg, Robert Willim.

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Interview with me and Robert Willim about our Elsewhereness work.

By Sabine Niederer & Koen Poelhekke
Impakt Festival 2010.

http://www.impakt.nl/index.php/artworks/interview_Anders_Weberg_Robert_Will

KP: What are your (creative) backgrounds?
RW: I have been working quite a while with ethnographic research and cultural analysis, currently I’m associate professor at Lund University. In this work I’ve been mixing cultural theory with ethnographic fieldwork. Parallel with this practice I’ve been working with different kinds of music and sound projects, mostly with electronic tools.

AW: I have been working as an artist and filmmaker full time for the last 15 years. As with Robert I also have a musical background playing in various electronic bands.

KP: How do these backgrounds connect to the current focus of your work?
RW: My work as a cultural analyst has been crucial for how the concepts of our artworks has been developed. The ideas often stem from questions related to my research, like spatiality, questions about representation and the potential and shortcomings of different media.

KP: Have you been working together before the Elsewhereness projects, and if so on what kind of projects?
RW: Yes, we first started to collaborate  in 2003 when Anders made a video to a project I curated called Industrial Cool. The first project that we made together that can be related to ideas in Elsewhereness was called Surreal Scania (2006). Here we started to examine the relationship between place and representation, and how imaginary geographies could be evoked. Since then we have made a number of other projects, all relating to some kind of imaginary geographies or the surreal dimensions of place representation. Many of them juxtaposing the site-specific with the digitally dispersed. This year we took these ideas a step further with the live-performance Sweden for Beginners, which we perform at various venues. In the performance we use electronic improvisation to evoke stereotypes about Sweden.

KP: The Elsewhereness projects are well-balanced combinations of sound and image. What comes first when composing and editing the work: sound or image?
AW & RW: Sound and image emerge parallel in the project. One of the main ideas with the series is to examine the relationship between distance and closeness, alienation and intimacy. So we have chosen to work in a way that also evoke these relationships. We start by having a discussion about the city we are about to approach. Then isolated from each other we collect images and sounds. We also make the first sketches of image and sound in solitude. Anders compose the images, Robert the sound. Then some time into the project we have the wedding moment when image for the first time meet sound. In this way we try to surprise ourselves and find room for the serendipitous. The final composition is made in a more close dialogue. So, this is a way for us to accentuate the relationship between distance and closeness, which is central for the ideas behind Elsewhereness.

KP: You’ve stated you want to subvert traditional forms of site-specific art, what is your main motivation for doing so?
RW: I guess that there are a number of reasons for this. One is rooted in my background in ethnographic research. Site-specific art has (according to Miwon Kwon and others) during the last decades been oriented towards social dimensions, this parallel with the emergence of a number of community-arts-projects, where dialogue and interaction is in focus. In these contexts ethnography has often been used. Ethnography, with a colonial genealogy and coupled to disciplines like anthropology, ethnology and sociology has become more and more widespread. It is often used when researchers are about to approach the eveyday lives of people. It is often associated with a kind of empirical intimacy and possibilities to come close to and gain knowledge about what people do, feel and practice in different contexts. In art, and often site-specific art, ethnography has been embraced. Hal Foster write some critical words about this in ”The Artist as Ethnographer”. We don’t want to reverberate Fosters’ critique, but we still want to give some perspective on ethnographic and socially oriented site-specific art. Within ethnography and much social oriented site-specific art we’ll find certain ideals embraced: participation, proximity and ideas about being ”loyal to the field”, bearing witness, giving voice to people etc.”. We wanted to instead make a site-specific work where distance and even alienation is instead evoked. Not in order to achieve some kind of nihilistic stance, but instead to examine the elongations of the site-specific and the ends of ethnography.

Another reason for dealing with the site-specific is grounded in a striving for not being labelled ”new media artists”. We certainly use new media, we are interested in the potential and shortcomings of the digital, but we do not make art that is only about new media. Instead we find more interesting couplings to different kinds of site-specific artists in our focus on ”imaginary geographies”. I can see some relationships to the ways that Robert Smithson worked with ideas about ”site” and ”non-site” in his land art, when monumental works like Spiral Jetty was represented in different forms in galleries. He used photos but also soil and stones that was removed from the places of the artworks  to galleries to create links between the sites and non-sites. Similar relationships between the site-specific, the situational and more distant representations can be found in the walks and works of Richard Long or Hamish Fulton. Our imaginary geographies are attempts to by digital means evoke and further examine these questions.

SN: The Elsewhereness projects are rather dark, sometimes even with a melancholy or gothic feel. Why do you think this is?
AW: This has become the affective hallmark of all our works. There is a similarity among the different works that in a way put them in the same parallel universe. I think one reason for that is growing up in Sweden and it’s darkness and gloom. The other is the musical bands that meant a lot to me during the teenage years like Kraftwerk, Einstürzende Neubaten, Depeche Mode, Sisters of Mercy and so on. I think they subconsciously still have an impact on all the work I do.

RW: I have some reflections on why I always end up in this emotional landscape. I guess that questions about place and belonging have some kind of resonance for me since both my parents came as refugees to Sweden from different countries. I carry their stories with me, stories about displacement, abandoned places and lost homes.

KP: How do you select your materials? Do you specifically query the Web for landmarks that symbolize the city you are working with? For example churches and universities, or is it a random selection of city-related materials that you then rework into an audiovisual assemblage?
AW & RW: The search is more serendipitous than systematic.

KP: Are you happy to hear that people see a resemblance with the city? Or is your aim not to catch the spirit of the city you depict?
RW: There should be some resemblance with the different cities. But there should also be similarities between the different cities, that blur the site-specific. This play between similarity and difference can be a comment to antropologist Marc Augé’s ideas about non-places. In the book ”Non-Places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity” he used the term non-places to describe urban localities that he meant lacked significant features. He wrote about airports, motorways, supermarkets or hotel rooms as examples of non-places. I wouldn’t agree with Augé’s a bit formulaic stance.  But it is interesting to play with the ideas about what creates a non-place or the meaning of significant features of places. In Elsewhereness there is some kind of ”non-placeness” evoked. Namely the homogenous character of decay and decomposition. I’m intrigued by the ways that ruins are places where order is challenged. After a while the initial complexity of  decay and decomposition processes turn into entropic similarity. Patterns become fragmented and broken down. If you search the web for the myriad of sites where urban explorers have presented photos from various  ruins and abandoned places you first become struck by the intriguing complexity of urban decay. After a while, when you have seen X numbers of urbex galleries you are instead struck by the homogenous character of the various ruins. Concrete, metal, glass and abandoned stuff decay in a similar manner all over the world. Then again, look closer and you will find differences. I guess, that this kind of play between similarity and difference can be found in Elsewhereness. So, yes we are happy that people see resemblances with the different cities. But we are even more happy if they also see something else.

KP: Is there a city in particular that you would love to work with? What makes a city attractive to depict? Do you need a lot of presumptions about a city? Or very few ideas about what the city would look like? Are some cities more difficult to depict in this project then others?
AW & RW: I guess we fanticise about different cities to include in the series. Why not Manaus, Jerusalem, Nuuk or Los Angeles. But what have struck us with Elsewhereness is how affects, associations and the character of the piece emerge when we start working with a specific city. Utrecht was for an example not on any wishlist of cities to work with. But when we started working with it, it became a suggestive process.

KP: How much Elsewhereness are you planning to create before the Web of surreal associations is complete? Will it ever be?
AW & RW: There is still no visible endpoint or event horizon where the series will be sucked into the black hole of completion. The only problem we have is that we mustn’t have visited the cities we work with. So if we travel too much  the web of possible cities will inexorably diminish, hehe.

SN: You’re making the works available for downloading and watching on mobile phones, pda’s etc. Would you recommend people to watch for instance Elsewhereness: Utrecht when in town? Or on the contrary, is this something to experience when in a different place, just like you when you made the work?
AW & RW: We encourage people to experience the work with a handheld device and headphones if they visit the specific cities. But we would also encourage people to watch the work when ”off-site”. In this way we want people interested in Elsewhereness to reflect on the significance of the framing of different representations. Another way to enjoy Elsewhereness is to watch the different parts in sequence to explore the play between similarity and difference. This kind of sequential viewing would be good to experience in a dark rom with a large screen and a good speaker system.

SN: Anything else you’d like to tell the viewer before they watch Elsewhereness: Utrecht?
AW & RW: Just enjoy, be lustful out there, and we would love to hear about how you experience the work.

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Elsewhereness:New Orleans

In November a new piece of the Elsewhereness series will be exhibited in New Orleans, as part of the show Ethnographic Terminalia 2010. Other artists include Susan Hiller and Fiamma Montezemolo.

From the prospectus on the website:

”No longer content to theorize the ends of the discipline and possibilities of new media, new locations, or new methods of asking old questions, those associated with Ethnographic Terminalia are working in capacity to develop generative ethnographies that do not subordinate the sensorium to the expository and theoretical text or monograph.

Ethnographic Terminalia is an initiative designed to celebrate borders without necessarily exalting them.  It is meant to be a playful engagement with reflexivity and positionality; it seeks to ask what lies beyond and what lies within disciplinary territories.  As an initiative to bring contemporary art practices in closer proximity to forms of anthropological inquiry, Ethnographic Terminalia is primarily concerned with creating opportunities for the exhibition of non-traditional projects. The terminus is the end, the boundary, and the border; of course the terminus is also a beginning as well as its own place, its own site of experience and encounter.”

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