Dear all

Thank you for delivering it by oberlist network and list, if it is possible.
Info is below.



Best regards

Marianna Hovhannisyan

coordinator of Summer Seminars, 2010

_______________________________________



INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF ART CRITICS

AICA – ARMENIA



H. Kotchar str #13/99, 0012 Yerevan, Armenia

Tel: +374 10 264619, Fax: +374 10 270472

E-mail: naz.karo...@gmail.com

* 5th Summer Seminars for Art Curators*

* Aesthetic Communities and Contextual Translation of Communal Art*

*August 15-20, 2010, Yerevan and Ijevan, Armenia*

 Call for Participation

There is always a loss in any work of interpretation, and this does not
necessarily refer to the loss of the original meaning (the original
historical context or the authenticity of an art work) as such but to the
loss of the original conditions of reception.  In regard to the Soviet art
of Stalinism and beyond, art critic Viktor Tsupitsyn argues in The
Museological Unconscious that these works were produced with the collective
aspect of reception embedded in the very production and he describes this
phenomenon as a “collective museological unconscious.” With the loss of the
communal aspects of seeing which came with the demise of communism, these
monuments of the times past are inherently deterritorialized and displaced
when viewed in the context of Western representational structures, which
condition an atomized, isolated and individuated viewer. The question then
is, how is it possible to recapture or rather representationally translate
communal reception when the embedded specificity of communist community has
itself undergone such a radical transformation? What is the role of the
curator in the perceptual politics that perpetuates through and around a
work of art? Can a work of art intended for a collective optical unconscious
in the original context of its production create new forms of undetermined
and situational communities when exposed, represented and reinterpreted
anew? What happens to the work when both its intended message and its
addressee are lost? What becomes of a specific community in which the work
is situated? What is the role of the one –the critic, curator, historian and
writer, who exposes, reinterprets and repositions the communal work?

Would like to pose the double question of communal art’s function within
communities in which these works are physically located as well as the
aesthetic communities that come into being temporarily around a work of art.


The program is comprised of two parts. The first part entitled “Aesthetic
Communities and Contextual Translation of Communal Art” will take place in
Yerevan, in August 15-17th, while the second part “The Communal Function of
a Monument” will be held in Ijevan, in August 18-20, a city located in
Northern Armenia and close to the Georgian and Azerbaijani borders.  For the
first part in Yerevan we would like to invite proposals that deal with
various theoretical frameworks, historical experiences and examples of
aesthetic communities and contextual aspects of reception in terms of the
production of aesthetic experience.  The second part takes the artistic
forum called “International Symposium for Sculpture” organized in Ijevan in
1985-1991 by art critic Saro Sarukhanian in the context of perestroika
politics and dissipation of pressure of the centralised bureaucratic and
ideological apparatus of the communist party as a starting point to pose
questions related to curatorial practices. Can these practices be connected
to community art or it is an artistic prerogative to produce a communally
visible and viable art? How can aesthetic objects from the past  be engaged
in re-evaluation of a site specific public sculpture in ways that this
re-evaluation may empower local communities to engage in the striving for
cultural and social change?  How can we communally re-evaluate the work in
ways   that might permit escape from oblivion on the one hand and
sacralisation on the other?

The Program is structured to accommodate daily lectures by invited
specialists, round-table discussions and presentations by the participants.
The presentations should focus on curating and aesthetic communities or
curating community art.

There is no fee for participation. However, the participants are expected to
cover their own travel and accommodation costs. AICA-Armenia does not
provide funding for logistics.

*To participate, please send us your CV and a 300 word abstract of your
proposed presentation by May 15th, 2010.*

*All materials should be sent to Marianna Hovhannisyan at
m.a.hovhannis...@gmail.com*

* --------------------------------------------------------*

Summer Seminars for Contemporary Art Curators is an annual initiative
organized by AICA-Armenia <http://www.aica.am/>. It brings together newly
practicing art curators from various contexts in a series of seminars,
lectures, practical workshops, presentations and visits to art spaces in
Yerevan. It started in 2006, and is organized annually during every summer.
One of the objectives is to contribute to the development of the education
of cultural practitioners, and specifically curators.

During the four years of activity the Summer Seminars for Contemporary Art
Curators has fostered a strong partnership with a number of institutions and
individuals, and particularly, SCCA-Ljubljana’s World of Art curatorial
program, SCCA-Alma-Aty, Beral Madra Centre for Contemporary Art in Istanbul,
Townhouse Gallery in Cairo and the University of Plymouth’s Critical Spaces
research group in the UK.

Follow it on:  Website <http://naac.am/aica/html/eng/ssc.html> /
Blog<http://summerschoolforcuratorsyerevan.blogspot.com/>/
Facebook <http://www.facebook.com/group.php?v=info&ref=ts&gid=82916853392> /
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