CENSORED: An ongoing archive of silenced voices

CENSORED: An ongoing archive of silenced voices

Laveronica Arte Contemporanea

December 23, 2024
CENSORED: An ongoing archive of silenced voices
December 30, 2024–April 5, 2025
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Laveronica arte contemporanea
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97015 Modica Ragusa
Italy
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Laveronica Arte Contemporanea is pleased to announce the opening of CENSORED, an exhibition on regimes of visibility and power. CENSORED, curated by Marco Scotini, aims to provide visibility to all those works removed from exhibition contexts for political reasons or give voice to those art projects pre-emptively withdrawn from public display. The exhibition is less about censorship in general and more specifically about state political censorship.

The so-called Western democracies barely had time to digest the thesis of The Age of Surveillance Capitalism when the covid pandemic gave them the chance to see just how far state authoritarianism had come since the 2008 financial crisis. Perhaps, it was already too late to realise that control-come-business of digital platforms was no longer the only challenge facing today’s democracies. The alliance between market liberalism and nationalist authoritarianism is the driving force behind the forms of power we face. Even censorship, which we believed to be a remnant of totalitarianism, has reappeared—not only as a form of control but also as a tool with which to silence all forms of opposition to the powers-that-be. And always hand in glove with the unfettered movement of free market forces.

But is this simply a return of the kind of censorship that reached its peak in the twentieth century? Or is a new configuration of power and its scope for perpetuating it now in play? A form of censorship expressed via algorithms and digital sovereignty is at work today, along with the more traditional forms of intelligence agencies and judicial forces, expressing the two-fold nature of contemporary capitalism: violence and institution, liberality and censorship, governmentality and war, hypermodernity and neoarchaism. Public censorship and repression have only intensified with the rise of the ideology of the new European right. The fact that these measures pass in the form of ethnic and racial motivations rather than class-based “legitimations” should not however make us lose sight of the original matrix behind all this: something that lies at the heart of the radical asymmetries of contemporary capitalism.

With the coverage and subsequent removal of the work of the Indonesian art collective Taring Padi at the last Kassel documenta, what was already in place with the motion against the BDS movement deployed by the German Bundestag in May 2019 ends up in the public eye and appears to be at the origin of alarming censorship and a repressive escalation in the name of a “philosemitic McCarthyism” that did not need to wait for Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel to embark on its crusade. A wave of state-imposed bans, deletions, censorship, defamation and discrimination has never ceased to repeatedly hit artists, intellectuals, journalists, civilian population, until the final resolution against anti-Semitism “Never Again Is Now” a month ago. 

In this sense, the CENSORED exhibition sets out to oppose these conditions by trying to bring together a number of cases of international artists whose works have undergone the same treatment and have been withdrawn. One need only cite the well-known and recognised examples of Candice Breitz (whose exhibition and lecture in Germany were cancelled) and Daniela Ortiz whose works at the Bundeskunsthalle in Bonn were required to be examined and evaluated by anti-Semitism experts.

Despite everything, independent forces are organising everywhere against the various attempts at cultural domination. The CENSORED exhibition joins these antagonistic forces by presenting itself as a judicial repository in which various types of works are stored, each documenting time, place and reasons for the censorship: inviting the public to take a stand in assessing the events taking place. It is no coincidence the Galleria Laveronica finds itself promoting such an exhibition, since on various occasions, many of its artists have been affected by such coercive treatment.

Artists: Nanni Balestrini and Luigi Nono, Candice Breitz, Claire Fontaine, Rolando Certa (Antigruppo Siciliano), Dora García, Igor Grubić, Marcelo Expósito, Grup Etcetera, Adelita Husni Bey, Emily Jacir, Maryam Jafri, Rabih Mroué, Ahmet Ögüt, Daniela Ortiz, Paloma Polo, Oliver Ressler, Renato Spagnoli, Jonas Staal.

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Laveronica Arte Contemporanea
December 23, 2024

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