|
Smack Mellon Multiplex presents LEGAL ALIENS
Changing Territories, Shifting Identities, Moving Images
Curated by Ofri Cnaani and Rotem Ruff
Artists' reception: Saturday, December
2nd, 4-7pm
Exhibition Dates: December 2, 2006 - January 14, 2007
Dan Acostioaei, Evident of The Vanishing Points
Francisca Benitez, Garde l'Est
Gautam Kansara, Grandma, Gautam, and Ghalib
Dana Levy and Marc Lafia, Sing to Me and
Tell Me Your Story
Esperanza Mayobre, Santa Esperanza
Adrian Paci, pilgrIMAGE
Sharon Paz, Wondering Home
Karina Aguilera Skvirsky, The Conversation
Shoba, Joy Division
Torolab, 9 Families
Jenny Vogel, We Love You Germany, Thanks for Everything
Amidst the current climate of immigrant stigmatization,
the political platform of immigration reform and the threat
to criminalize immigrants, their families, employers, landlords
and associates, Smack Mellon presents a diverse look at the
complexity of global immigration.
This third incarnation of Multiplex – Smack Mellon’s
annual video exhibition revisioning the modern Cineplex--transforms
the gallery into a multi-theater cinema space featuring the work
of twelve artists from around the world. Legal Aliens is
guest curated by Ofri Cnaani and Rotem Ruff.
Curators’ statement
We pack, we get ready to leave, we look back – a gaze from
in between – since we are suspended in between places,
in between different time zones, in between identities. This
gaze, however, is potent; it starts a never-ending process of
questioning, where identities are created as binaries, conflated
and blurred, never to be resolved. Legal Aliens explores
the techniques used to create and negotiate identity and the
inherent paradox of simultaneously being at home and away that
underwrites them.
These works define the artist as an eternal
insider/outsider. They
propose a nuanced and complex account of migration and displacement
that renders the process as an existential state of being, a
vantage point that is often disconnected from any physical act.
While completing an artist residency in Cleveland, Ohio, Romanian
artist Dan Acostioaei observed the city’s
Romanian community. The result, Evidence of the Vanishing
Points, is a series of videos that captures
the anecdotal and the ceremonial within everyday life. Acostioaei’s
videos present life that is in a constant "negotiation
between previous mental horizons and the status quo." The
works examine questions about imaginary community and possibility
of belonging.
Karina Aguilera Skvirsky’s work deals
with the effect of the Alien, when conceived of as a possible
threat, and how it bears upon the delicate balance between
private and public implementation of power. The Conversation is
a documentary-like reverie about the roles of the state and
the individual played out through an exchange between a U.S.
policeman and a photographer. The conversation, conducted
in Italian, accentuates the otherness of the photographer and
the implicit danger in a routine, almost banal, interaction
with the authorities.
Artist Francisca Benitez’s Garde l'Est presents
the haunting image of bundles nesting in Parisian trees. The
bundles are the personal effects belonging to Afghani immigrants.
The tree trunks connect two parallel realities, that of French
society and that of illegal immigrants, faceless and displaced.
Living in the city, yet apart from it, they are often "on
the wait" – for another odd job, for continuing their
journey. Far away from their roots, the immigrants’ suspension,
physical and mental, is embodied in their belongings hanging
from the trees.
In Gautam Kansara’s Grandma, Gautam,
and Ghalib, the artist’s Grandmother translates
classic Hindi and Urdu love songs. Using the first person
to utter a passionate rendition of the lyrics, she often addresses
Gautam as though he were her lover, weaving together the realities
of memory and lived experience. The viewer bears witness to
an emotional outpouring of love and loss where the boundaries
of fiction and reality become blurred, confused and ultimately
irrelevant.
Over 50 people from 35 different countries, currently living
in Tel Aviv, Israel, were invited by Dana Levy and Marc
Lafia to sing a song from their homeland. The result, Sing
to me and tell me your story, is a multilingual collage,
which by grouping the idiosyncratic experiences of the dispersed,
unconnected immigrants, points to a potential for their political
empowerment and self-assertion through song.
"Virgin of Esperanza, Mother of Immigrants" is an installation
by Esperanza Mayobre. By placing an image of
herself holding an American passport and green card on the ubiquitous
saint worship candles, she creates a figure named ‘Santa Esperanza’ (Saint of Hope), the
patron of the immigrants. This iconoclastic work ironically comments on the
American dream and the notion of the ‘self-made man’ as
well as its (paradoxical) transformation into an object for devotion,
prayer and desperate hope.
In Wandering Home, Sharon Paz deals
with the fragility of the notion of ‘home.’ The work
gazes at the interior of a New York apartment gradually being
stripped from its furniture and its identity, while the exterior
changes rapidly from one deserted landscape into another. ‘Home’ is
no longer a secure place. The act of displacement renders home
a symbol, while the process of estrangement crystallizes one’s
sense of belonging. Ironically, at this exact moment ‘being
at home’ embodies its full meaning.
A meditation on religion,
identity, and the power of the image in a global age is presented in Adrian
Paci’s pilgrIMAGE. The work revolves around the Virgin
Mary of Shkodra, an icon that disappeared from Paci’s
native village church in the 15th century and resurfaced
later in Rome, where it has become known as the Madonna del Buonconsiglio. Paci returns to his Albanian
village and projects the image of the lost icon on the walls of his village
church. In this pilgrimage, the image travels, creating a simulacrum that in
turn is used for empowering art.
In Joy Division, artist Shoba stands
beneath the iconic Brooklyn Bridge, passionately performing his
interpretation of Passover by the British band Joy Division.
The song, hardly recognizable in its new incarnation, serves
as a metaphor for the cultural hybridity and the transformation
that is inherent to the process of immigration. Borrowing
from a multitude of cultures rather than just his own, the song
serves as a witty reflection on the artist as an immigrant.
Tijuana based collective Torolab is invested
in redefining notions of emergency architecture. By researching
the martial culture of those who live at the far end of the economic
system, Torolab offers a unique perspective on transitions between
countries, polices and economics. In 9 Families, Torolab
documented the practice of recycling industrial materials, which
have been trashed from the border’s Northern side, and
questions the dynamic conditions of socio-political flexibility
and exchange that are inherent to the geopolitics of the border
zone.
"Sri Lanka 'National Handball Team' Disappears
in Germany," reported a small blurb on CBS News. Most surprised
were the people of the small village of Wittislingen in Germany,
who hosted the Sri Lankan team for a local tournament. After
the match the Sri Lankans disappeared and were nowhere to be
found. A brief inquiry yielded that a Sri Lankan national handball
team never existed, and that the rather well organized scam
enabled 23 illegal immigrants to obtain European Union visas.
In We Love Germany:
Thanks For Everything… Jenny Vogel deals
with the aftermath of the incident, as she presents the story
from the point of view of the villagers of Wittislingen.
Back to Past Exhibitions
|
|
|