Home Works 6: A Forum on Cultural Practices
May 14th–26th, 2013
Ashkal Alwan
Beirut
info [at] ashkalalwan.org
T +961 1 423879
Ashkal Alwan is happy to invite you to Home Works 6, its multidisciplinary forum on cultural practices which takes place every 2–3 years in Beirut.
Curated by Christine Tohme, the 6th edition of the forum will include lectures, screenings, publications and performances—as well as the exhibition program curated by Tarek Abou El Fetouh and the X-Apartments project produced by Matthias Lilienthal with the participants of Ashkal Alwan’s Home Workspace Program 2012–13.
For a detailed programme and to register, please visit www.ashkalalwan.org.
The 6th edition of Home Works is inspired by tinkerings heard on side streets, rooftops, hallways, and in stadiums, living rooms, classrooms, and storage spaces. These are experienced as sites of excavation—and of trial: Trial as an act of hearing and rehearsal; trial as glimpsed through the fallible strata of history. As long as it’s in effect, as long as it’s living, a verdict, like history, cannot be annexed to the past. We remain in this transitional and indefinite trial until we agree on the authority which will adjudicate. Until when should we wait for this authority to come forth? Perhaps it is in preparation for the arrival of the judge that we become individual citizens. Or perhaps it is the judge who, by adjudicating, makes us into individuals. Should then those informal spaces—those rooftops, classrooms and hallways—be inducted into the structure of the trial? And if so, what would remain of these tinkerings?
—Christine Tohme
The exhibition program for Home Works 6 adopts strategies of spatial and temporal transferences, reenacting three key exhibitions that took place at transitional moments in history: the first Alexandria Biennial in 1955; the First Arab Art Biennial in Baghdad in 1974; and the exhibition China/Avant-Garde in Beijing in 1989. Inspired by Ibn Arabi’s concept of time as a fluid place and place as a frozen time, the exhibition examines the locations and conditions of the present, which finds itself once again at a historical juncture. The exhibition summons the past and present of Baghdad, Alexandria and Beijing to Beirut 2013, suggesting leaps among these different epochs and locales, and among the basic laws that have governed (and continue to govern) our culture and our thought. The exhibition does not seek to redraw a historical map. Rather, it presents a body of contemporary artworks against three crucial events—all of which were fuelled by important political, social and artistic movements—as a layer in time and place that is at once conductive and disruptive.
—Tarek Abou El Fetouh
The participants of this year’s Home Workspace Program take you on a tour of private homes—those carefully protected spaces where human beings play out the largest part of their lives, their conflicts, laughter, hopes and disappointments, safe from the public eye. Carried out a number of times in different cities around the world, X-Apartments is as much a domestic as it is an urban intervention—inviting the viewer to test their expectations of other people’s intimate realities, and to experience their own city through new eyes, as if seeing it for the first time. In its Beirut edition, X-Apartments is also largely a project about walking, in a city that tries to block the activity of walking as much as possible.
—Matthias Lilienthal
With Haig Aivazian, Pilar Albarracín, Burak Arikan, Tarek El-Ariss, Marwa Arsanios, Mohammad Al Attar, Kader Attieh, Rayya Badran, Hoda Barakat, Tony Chakar, Park Chan-Kyong, Waddah Charara, Boris Charmatz / Musée de la Danse, Ali Cherri, Paed Conca, Ibrahim Daoud, Omar Dewachi, Nikita Dhawan, Tony Elieh, Mohamed Elshahed, Cao Fei, Mahdi Fleifel, Simon Fujiwara, Ahmed Ghoneimy, Charbel Haber, Joana Hadjithomas, Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Marwan Hamdan, Julia Holter, Iman Issa, Parine Jaddo, Khaled Jarrar, Khalil Joreige, Cemal Kafadar, Mazen Kerbaj, Lara Khaldi, Mahmoud Khaled, Mazen Khaled, Yazan Khalili, Kristine Khouri, Moon Kyungwon, Sarmad Louis, Maha Maamoun, Basim Magdy, Jumana Manna, Sophia Al Maria, Ahmed Mater, Radhouane El Meddeb / La Compagnie de Soi, Seo Min-Jeong, Nadim Mishlawi, Rabih Mroué, Yasser Mroué, Ahmed Naje, Joe Namy, Ziad Nawfal, Adel Nassar, Reza Negarestani, Sidsel Nelund, Wang Ningde, Joshua Oppenheimer, Zeynep Oz, Haig Papazian, Johann Pillai, Marta Popivoda, Walid Raad, Khalil Rabah, Milo Rau, Nora Razian, Omar Abou Saada, Ghalya Saadawi, Yazan Al Saadi, Walid Sadek, Roy Samaha, Lina Saneh, Sharif Sehnaoui, Sam Shalabi, Wael Shawky, Catarina Simão, Nida Sinnokrot, Mounira Al Solh, Rania Stephan, Meg Stuart / Damaged Goods, Subversive Films, Song Ta, Rayyane Tabet, TkH – Walking Theory, Ho Tzu Nyen, Chris Votek, Dilek Winchester, Paola Yacoub, Zeynep Yasa Yaman, Samar Yazbek, Akram Zaatari, 98weeks.
Home Works 6 main supporter: Fondation Saradar
Home Works 6 was made possible with the generous support of Philippe Jabre Association, Ford Foundation, Robert Matta, Sharjah Art Foundation, Goethe Institut – Beirut, Tamari Foundation, Jimmy Traboulsi, British Council in Beirut, Joumana Asseily, Heinrich Böll Foundation MEO, Rana Sadik & Samer Younis, Nour Salame, Allianz Kulturstiftung, Aishti Foundation, French Institute in Beirut, Tamara Corm, Nader Hariri, Raya Nahas, Arab Fund for Arts and Culture (AFAC), Anonymous, Oslo (Nayla Audi), Anonymous, Aramex, DAAD.