Dear All, <br>We are happy to host the second research congresses of FORMER WEST at the Architecture Faculty of Istanbul Technical University, Istanbul during 4-6 November 2010.<br>regards, <br>pelin tan.<br><div class="gmail_quote">
<br><b>On Horizons: Art and Political Imagination, <br>the second in the series of FORMER WEST Research Congresses, <br>takes place on 4–6 November 2010 at Istanbul Technical University, Istanbul. </b><br><br>The Congress revolves around the theoretical notion of the “horizon” and its place within artistic production and political imagination today. If, as it is commonly assumed, the global political and cultural changes of 1989 left the world bereft of a sense of politics as striving towards a future—a horizon as it were—then we are left with the perpetual caretaking of the existing state of things. Given this apparent endgame of liberal democracy, how can we insist that it is possible to imagine and to realize another world, to posit the horizon anew?<br>
<a href="http://www.formerwest.org" target="_blank">www.formerwest.org</a><br><br>Venue: Istanbul Technical University, Taşkışla Campus, Room 109.<br>Language: English (simultaneous translation into Turkish is provided)<br>
Admission: free (registration is required).<br><br>PROGRAM<br><b>4 November 2010 (Thursday)<br>Positing the Horizon in Art, Philosophy, and Politics</b><br>On its first day, the Congress explores the notion of the horizon in<br>
contemporary art and critical theory. Taking as our starting point the idea<br>that the horizon is what frames our sense of direction of possibility and<br>impossibility, the contributors speculate along two lines of orientation.<br>
On the one hand, the question of how and where the horizon must be<br>situated in order to be effectual is considered. On the other, the issue of<br>the horizon as an image is explored, in order to connect political<br>imaginaries and artistic production. In this sense, the horizon is produced<br>
in the intersection between aesthetics and politics.<br><br>Moderator:<br>Boris Buden<br>(cultural critic and writer, Berlin)<br>13.00–13.15<br>Welcome by Maria Hlavajova (artistic director,<br>BAK, Utrecht and FORMER WEST) and Fulya<br>
Erdemci (director, SKOR, Amsterdam)<br>13.15–13.45<br>Opening Remarks by Maria Hlavajova<br>13.45–14.00<br>Introduction to the day by Boris Buden<br>14.00–14.40<br>Expecting the Unexpected: Once more on the<br>“Horizon of Expectations”<br>
Lecture by Peter Osborne<br>(philosopher and writer, London)<br>14.40–14.50<br>Questions<br>14.50–15.15<br>Coffee Break<br>15.15–15.55<br>Projects in the Absence of Signposts<br>Lecture by Çağlar Keyder<br>(sociologist, Istanbul/Binghamton, NY)<br>
15.55–16.05<br>Questions<br>16.05–16.45<br>Rear View Vision: History Enthusiasm and<br>History Anxiety<br>Lecture by Julie Ault<br>(artist and writer, New York)<br>16.45–16.55<br>Questions<br>16.55–17.15<br>Coffee Break<br>
17.15–17.55<br>Vectors of the Possible: Art between Spaces of<br>Experience and Horizons of Expectation<br>Lecture by Simon Sheikh<br>(curator and critic, Copenhagen/Berlin)<br>17.55–18.05<br>Questions<br>18.05–19.30<br>
Discussion with Julie Ault, Çağlar Keyder, Peter<br>
Osborne, and Simon Sheikh<br>Reviewer:<br>Erden Kosova<br>(art critic, Istanbul)<br><br><br><b>5 November 2010 (Friday)<br>Horizontality Enacted</b><br>Whereas the metaphor of a horizon suggests an expansive outlook and a<br>
field of possibilities, the notion of horizontality is associated with being<br>on a single plane with little sense of orientation. Is horizontality a form of<br>spatial production driven by the principle of radical equality? How might<br>
this shift our understanding of the public and the commons? Contributors<br>examine how various geographies of horizontality, both conceptually and<br>in practice, are played out in urban forms, exhibition making, institutions<br>
and social organization. The enactment of horizontality is seen as the link<br>between the “space of experience” and the “horizon of expectation.”<br><br>Moderator:<br>Vivian Rehberg<br>(art historian and critic, FORMER WEST research<br>
curator, Paris/Utrecht)<br>10.00–10.15<br>Introduction to the day by Fulya Erdemci<br>(director SKOR, Amsterdam)<br>10.15–10.55<br>The Exhibition as an Archive<br>Lecture by Beatriz Colomina<br>(architecture historian and theorist, New York)<br>
10.55–11.05<br>Questions<br>11.05–11.45<br>Practicing Art. Imagining Politics<br>Lecture by Shuddhabrata Sengupta<br>(artist and writer, member of Raqs Media Collective,<br>Delhi)<br>11.45–11.55<br>Questions<br>11.55–12.15<br>
Coffee Break<br>12.15–12.55<br>The Communist Horizon<br>Lecture by Jodi Dean<br>(political theorist and writer, Geneva, NY)<br>12.55–13.05<br>Questions<br>13.05–14.30<br>Discussion with Beatriz Colomina, Jodi Dean, and<br>
Shuddhabrata Sengupta<br>14.30–16.00<br>Lunch Break<br>16.00–17.30<br>Conversation with Bülent Diken (social theorist,<br>Lancaster) and Wouter Vanstiphout (architectural<br>historian, Rotterdam)<br>17.30–19.00<br>Conversation with Vasif Kortun (curator and writer,<br>
director of Platform Garanti Contemporary Art<br>Center, Istanbul) and Lisette Lagnado (curator and<br>writer, São Paulo)<br>Reviewer:<br>Övül Durmuşoğlu<br>(curator and writer, Istanbul/Berlin)<br><br><br><br><b>6 November 2010 (Saturday)<br>
Reclaiming a Horizon—Art as Political Imaginatio</b>n<br>How are new horizons imagined, speculated upon, visualized, and<br>materialized through contemporary art? This question concerns not just<br>the historical and conceptual connections (and divisions) that have long<br>
existed between aesthetics and politics, but also the political tendencies<br>that can be found in artistic production after 1989. How is a particular<br>kind of politics of representation and representation of politics articulated<br>
in contemporary artistic production, art theory, curatorial work, and<br>through the production and dissemination of cultural discourses more<br>generally? And how does this connect to the aesthetic dimension of<br>contemporary politics? The task is not only to look at the relationship<br>
between art and politics, but to see art as political imagination.<br>Moderator:<br><br>TJ Demos<br>(art historian and critic, London)<br>10.00–10.15<br>Introduction to the day by TJ Demos<br>10.15–10.55<br>In Free Fall: A Thought Experiment<br>
Lecture by Hito Steyerl<br>(filmmaker and writer, Berlin)<br>10.55–11.05<br>Questions<br>11.05–11.45<br>Aesthetic Horizons<br>Lecture by Gerald Raunig<br>(philosopher and art theorist, Zürich)<br>11.45–11.55<br>Questions<br>
11.55–12.15<br>Coffee Break<br>12.15–12.55<br>On Horizons and Discourse<br>Lecture by Ernesto Laclau<br>(political theorist, Buenos Aires/London)<br>12.55–13.05<br>Questions<br>13.05–14.30<br>Discussion with Ernesto Laclau, Gerald Raunig, and<br>
Hito Steyerl<br>14.30–16.00<br>Lunch Break<br>16.30–18.00<br>Conversation with Robert Sember (artist and<br>activist, member of Ultra-red, New York) and Dmitry<br>Vilensky (artist and activist, member of Chto Delat?/<br>
What is to be done?, St. Petersburg)<br>
18.00–18.30<br>Wrap up and Conclusions by Maria Hlavajova and<br>Simon Sheikh<br>18.30<br>Closing Reception<br>20.00<br>Congress concludes<br>Reviewer:<br>Pelin Tan<br>(sociologist and art historian, Istanbul)<br><br><br>
further info: <a href="mailto:info@formerwest.org" target="_blank">info@formerwest.org</a>, <br><br><font color="#888888"><br><br clear="all"><br>
-- <br>---<br>Pelin Tan<br><a href="http://www.tanpelin.blogspot.com" target="_blank">www.tanpelin.blogspot.com</a><br><a href="http://www.yagmurboreg.blogspot.com" target="_blank">www.yagmurboreg.blogspot.com</a><br><a href="http://www.slowfoodanadolu.com" target="_blank">www.slowfoodanadolu.com</a><br>
</font></div><br><br clear="all"><br>-- <br>---<br>Pelin Tan<br><a href="http://www.tanpelin.blogspot.com">www.tanpelin.blogspot.com</a><br><a href="http://www.yagmurboreg.blogspot.com">www.yagmurboreg.blogspot.com</a><br>
<a href="http://www.slowfoodanadolu.com">www.slowfoodanadolu.com</a><br>