4–27 September 2014
Latvian Centre for Contemporary Art
Alberta Street 13
Riga
Latvia
For the sixth year now, the Survival Kit International Contemporary Art Festival will be taking place in Riga. The festival runs from 4 to 27 September, and this year forms part of the Riga 2014 European Capital of Culture programme. More than 70 participants from 25 countries are taking part in the festival, with the Utopian City as this year’s theme. Participants include Isola Art Centre (Italy), Nir Evron (Israel), Andreas Angelidakis (Greece), Ukrainian artists group Predmetiv, Belgian artists Anouk De Clercq and Aglaia Konrad, Julita Wojcik (Poland) and others.
Survival Kit is an annual contemporary art festival that has been organised by the Latvian Centre for Contemporary Art since 2009, when it began as a reaction to the global economic crisis, which forced the public to find new survival strategies and encouraged artists to discover new ways of existing. The festival’s strategy each year has been to highlight an area in Riga where there are empty buildings, linking this with the city’s development and urban planning trends and problems, and providing alternative scenarios. Riga is one of the rare European capital cities which lack such institutions as a contemporary art museum and a concert hall, and is the reason why two different buildings have been purposefully selected for the festival event this year to highlight this problem. The two venues are Vāgnera Hall and the former Boļševička Textile Factory, which is being considered as a possible site for the contemporary art museum.
The artists whose works will be represented at the festival are Aglaia Konrad (Belgium), Alicja Karska & Aleksandra Went (Poland), Alnis Stakle (Latvia), Alte Schweden (Sweden), Andreas Angelidakis (Norway, Greece), Anouq de Clercq (Belgium), Augustas Serapinas (Lithuania), Bárbara Wagner & Benjamin de Búrca (Brazil/Germany), Catalina Niculescu (Romania), Evelīna Deičmane (Latvia), Ēriks Božis (Latvia), Hiwa K (Iraq), Grzegorz Klaman (Poland), Inga Erdmane (Latvia), Isola Art Centre (Italy), Janin Walter (Germany), Jesper Just (Denmark), Jun Yang (Canada), Katarina Lundgren (Sweden), Katrīna Neiburga & Andris Eglītis (Latvia), Kristīne Alksne (Latvia), Lawrence James Bailey (Netherlands), Łukasz Surowiec (Poland), Maider López (Spain), Mariam Natroshvili & Detu Jintcharadze (Georgia), Mārtiņš Roķis (Latvia), Nicolas Grospierre (Poland), Nir Evron (Israel), Reinis Hofmanis (Latvia), Timo Toots (Estonia), Topp & Dubio (Netherlands), Visible Solutions (Estonia) and others.
As well as the showing of contemporary art works, a variety of events will also be held during the festival, among them being Ryoji Ikeda’s (Japan) audio visual concert, datamatics [ver.2.0] on 7 September and the “Urban Utopia: Art and Culture as a Tool for Exploring and Researching a City” international symposium, which will take place from 12 to 14 September. Foreign lecturers and local experts will focus on a variety of areas which affect the urban environment—anthropology, sociology, philosophy and others. The co-curator of the symposium is JonasBüchel, Director of Urban Institute Riga. Various other events are also planned throughout the festival—artists’ performances, lectures and readings.
Solvita Krese, curator of the Survival Kit Festival, comments on this year’s theme, Utopian City, as follows: “Looking back at the history of utopian ideas, we end up in the relatively recent past. There we can find surprising modernist visions, the splendour and failure of the dominating ideology, and searches for alternative living spaces and awareness of places through the framework of various subcultures.” The co-curator of the Festival is Aneta Szylak, Director of the Alternativa Festival in Poland. For the first time, the festival will also be taking place in Umea, where it is being organised by Verkligheten, Bildmuseet and partners.
Survival Kit is the most noticeable and internationally best-known contemporary art festival in Latvia. Each year, the Festival attracts and involves up to 15,000 visitors. The festival is organised by the Latvian Centre for Contemporary Art, an internationally active non-government cultural organization, which provides an independent viewpoint on current and recent events through the prism of art.