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Venue: Gropius Bau
Born 1984 in Istanbul, TR – lives and works in Vienna, AT, and Berlin, DE
Consisting of an animated film and strips of digital prints installed along metal grids, Aykan Safoğlu’s project looks back on his teenage years at the German-Turkish public high school İstanbul Erkek Lisesi, popularly known as Istanbul Boys’ High School—one of the oldest and most renowned in Turkey. While the curriculum advocates westernized notions of emancipation and liberation, its foundation is rooted in the longstanding military and strategic relationship between Turkey and Germany and served to assert German cultural superiority. The school building once housed the headquarters of the Ottoman Public Debt Administration (OPDA), a European-controlled organization established in 1881 to collect, through taxes, the money owed by the Ottoman Empire to European companies.
Critically reflecting on his personal educational trajectory and the school’s history, Safoğlu touches upon repressed family incidents and the German colonial interest in Asia Minor at the turn of the twentieth century, which somehow seem perfectly intertwined. Safoğlu’s work Null-Defizit (in Ablehnung) [Zero Deficit (In Refusal), 2020] examines the emotional landscape of “indebtedness” in relation to questions of German education, artistic formation, and naturalization in Germany. This history and personal biography come together in the imagery used in the video work Hundsstern steigt ab [Dog Star Descending, 2020], which the artist describes as “an imaginative, resistant retrospective vision.” The video takes inspiration from the memory of a trip Safoğlu made with his parents to Imroz, an island in the north of the Aegean Sea (today within Turkish borders). It shows strips of photographs being reassembled and animated on a scanner bed while an inner dialogue with his parents unfolds.
Proposing a visual script for strategies to deal with the shortcomings, but also the potentiality, of this feeling of indebtedness, Safoğlu transposes a Western terminology of queer civic rights—coming out—into an unlikely yet reparative epistemology: “an attentive feeling-seeing.”
Florencia Portocarrero
III: La familia son quiénes se alegran con nuestros actos diarios. Detrás de las curadoras de la XI
María Berríos, Agustín Pérez Rubio
Conversation
O Bailado do Deus Morto
Flávio de Carvalho
Play
THE MOBILIZATION
Nicolás Cuello
Text
BLM KOREA ARTS
#BlackLivesMatter #BLMKoreaArts
Young-jun Tak
Statement
IV: How Fear Can Dismantle a Body. Vis-a-Vis with two of four curators of the 11th Berlin Biennale
María Berríos, Lisette Lagnado
Conversation
Undocumented Rumours and Disappearing Acts from Chile
María Berríos
Essay
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Born 1984 in Istanbul, TR – lives and works in Vienna, AT, and Berlin, DE
Consisting of an animated film and strips of digital prints installed along metal grids, Aykan Safoğlu’s project looks back on his teenage years at the German-Turkish public high school İstanbul Erkek Lisesi, popularly known as Istanbul Boys’ High School—one of the oldest and most renowned in Turkey. While the curriculum advocates westernized notions of emancipation and liberation, its foundation is rooted in the longstanding military and strategic relationship between Turkey and Germany and served to assert German cultural superiority. The school building once housed the headquarters of the Ottoman Public Debt Administration (OPDA), a European-controlled organization established in 1881 to collect, through taxes, the money owed by the Ottoman Empire to European companies.
Critically reflecting on his personal educational trajectory and the school’s history, Safoğlu touches upon repressed family incidents and the German colonial interest in Asia Minor at the turn of the twentieth century, which somehow seem perfectly intertwined. Safoğlu’s work Null-Defizit (in Ablehnung) [Zero Deficit (In Refusal), 2020] examines the emotional landscape of “indebtedness” in relation to questions of German education, artistic formation, and naturalization in Germany. This history and personal biography come together in the imagery used in the video work Hundsstern steigt ab [Dog Star Descending, 2020], which the artist describes as “an imaginative, resistant retrospective vision.” The video takes inspiration from the memory of a trip Safoğlu made with his parents to Imroz, an island in the north of the Aegean Sea (today within Turkish borders). It shows strips of photographs being reassembled and animated on a scanner bed while an inner dialogue with his parents unfolds.
Proposing a visual script for strategies to deal with the shortcomings, but also the potentiality, of this feeling of indebtedness, Safoğlu transposes a Western terminology of queer civic rights—coming out—into an unlikely yet reparative epistemology: “an attentive feeling-seeing.”
Florencia Portocarrero
Flávio de Carvalho: Fazenda Capuava
Archive of Lisette Lagnado
Photographs
Struggle as Culture: The Museum of Solidarity, 1971–73
María Berríos
Essay
Maternidades subversivas
María Llopis
Monograph
Queer Ancient Ways: A Decolonial Exploration
Zairong Xiang
Monograph
A World Without Bones
Agustín Pérez Rubio
New Look
Flávio de Carvalho
Performance
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Born 1984 in Istanbul, TR – lives and works in Vienna, AT, and Berlin, DE
Consisting of an animated film and strips of digital prints installed along metal grids, Aykan Safoğlu’s project looks back on his teenage years at the German-Turkish public high school İstanbul Erkek Lisesi, popularly known as Istanbul Boys’ High School—one of the oldest and most renowned in Turkey. While the curriculum advocates westernized notions of emancipation and liberation, its foundation is rooted in the longstanding military and strategic relationship between Turkey and Germany and served to assert German cultural superiority. The school building once housed the headquarters of the Ottoman Public Debt Administration (OPDA), a European-controlled organization established in 1881 to collect, through taxes, the money owed by the Ottoman Empire to European companies.
Critically reflecting on his personal educational trajectory and the school’s history, Safoğlu touches upon repressed family incidents and the German colonial interest in Asia Minor at the turn of the twentieth century, which somehow seem perfectly intertwined. Safoğlu’s work Null-Defizit (in Ablehnung) [Zero Deficit (In Refusal), 2020] examines the emotional landscape of “indebtedness” in relation to questions of German education, artistic formation, and naturalization in Germany. This history and personal biography come together in the imagery used in the video work Hundsstern steigt ab [Dog Star Descending, 2020], which the artist describes as “an imaginative, resistant retrospective vision.” The video takes inspiration from the memory of a trip Safoğlu made with his parents to Imroz, an island in the north of the Aegean Sea (today within Turkish borders). It shows strips of photographs being reassembled and animated on a scanner bed while an inner dialogue with his parents unfolds.
Proposing a visual script for strategies to deal with the shortcomings, but also the potentiality, of this feeling of indebtedness, Safoğlu transposes a Western terminology of queer civic rights—coming out—into an unlikely yet reparative epistemology: “an attentive feeling-seeing.”
Florencia Portocarrero
#fight4rojava
Graffiti
Freiheit für Chile!
Anonymous
Photo album
I: Junto a las curadoras de la XI Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art
Renata Cervetto, Lisette Lagnado
Conversation
A World Without Bones
Agustín Pérez Rubio
Grupo Experimental de Cine en acción
Gabriel Peluffo
Drawing
Museo de la Solidaridad Salvador Allende (MSSA) in Berlin
A conversation between María Berríos and Melanie Roumiguière
Conversation
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
Venue: Gropius Bau
Born 1984 in Istanbul, TR – lives and works in Vienna, AT, and Berlin, DE
Consisting of an animated film and strips of digital prints installed along metal grids, Aykan Safoğlu’s project looks back on his teenage years at the German-Turkish public high school İstanbul Erkek Lisesi, popularly known as Istanbul Boys’ High School—one of the oldest and most renowned in Turkey. While the curriculum advocates westernized notions of emancipation and liberation, its foundation is rooted in the longstanding military and strategic relationship between Turkey and Germany and served to assert German cultural superiority. The school building once housed the headquarters of the Ottoman Public Debt Administration (OPDA), a European-controlled organization established in 1881 to collect, through taxes, the money owed by the Ottoman Empire to European companies.
Critically reflecting on his personal educational trajectory and the school’s history, Safoğlu touches upon repressed family incidents and the German colonial interest in Asia Minor at the turn of the twentieth century, which somehow seem perfectly intertwined. Safoğlu’s work Null-Defizit (in Ablehnung) [Zero Deficit (In Refusal), 2020] examines the emotional landscape of “indebtedness” in relation to questions of German education, artistic formation, and naturalization in Germany. This history and personal biography come together in the imagery used in the video work Hundsstern steigt ab [Dog Star Descending, 2020], which the artist describes as “an imaginative, resistant retrospective vision.” The video takes inspiration from the memory of a trip Safoğlu made with his parents to Imroz, an island in the north of the Aegean Sea (today within Turkish borders). It shows strips of photographs being reassembled and animated on a scanner bed while an inner dialogue with his parents unfolds.
Proposing a visual script for strategies to deal with the shortcomings, but also the potentiality, of this feeling of indebtedness, Safoğlu transposes a Western terminology of queer civic rights—coming out—into an unlikely yet reparative epistemology: “an attentive feeling-seeing.”
Florencia Portocarrero
Feminist Health Care Research Group
Web archive
Touching Feeling. Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity
Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
Monograph
Maternidades subversivas
María Llopis
Monograph
Glossary of Common Knowledge
L’Internationale Online
Glossary
Hatred Among Us
Lisette Lagnado
Essay
COVID-19 VIDEOS
Carlos Motta
Video
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.
By using this website you agree to the use of cookies in accordance with our data privacy policy.