
Tales of Places
A Master of Arts Thesis Exhibition curated by Zeljka Himbele
March 12-26, 2006
Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY
Gallery Hours: Wednesday- Sunday 1:00-5:00 pm
Tales of Places is concerned with intimate relationships to particular surroundings.
Connecting with places today appears to be more dynamic and fluid. Increased mobility
and essential, variously generated changes in our surroundings complicate feeling
of belonging and ways of defining one's identity. The artists-Chantal Akerman,
Janine Antoni, Dunja Sablic, Anri Sala, Berni Searle, Karina Aguilera Skvirsky
and Sandra Sterle-address these phenomena in their works by showing their own
relationships to particular places. A "place" is seen here as a complex notion
delivered through artists' individual experiences. Personal memories, histories,
interaction with family and wider surrounding communities and descriptions of
localities are closely entangled with the artists' emotions and sensations.
Consequently, the works represent both the artists' past and their own
present.

Sandra Sterle, Round Around, 1996/7 (video still)
Courtesy of the artist
My deepest appreciation goes to the artists Chantal Akerman, Janine Antoni, Dunja
Sablic, Anri Sala, Berni Searle, Karina Aguilera Skvirsky and Sandra Sterle for
making the inspiring works and participating in the exhibition.
Thanks for the tremendeous support to Marcia Acita, Rhea Anastas, Julie Ault, Norton
Batkin, Lynne Cooke, Tom Eccles, Colleen Egan, Nico Israel, Kay Larson, Susan Leonard,
Ivo Mesquita, Linda Norden, Michael Pilon and the installation team at CCS, Tatjana
von Prittwitz und Gaffron, Letitia Smith and my dearest friends - the class of 2006.
Special thanks to Dan Oki, Dia Art Foundation, New York, Galerie Chantal Crousel,
Paris, Jessica Murray Projects, New York, Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York and
Michael Stevenson Gallery, Cape Town.
The exhibition would not have been possible without the support of my loving family,
friends and Kristian.



Karina Aguilera Skvirsky, The Observation Gallery, 2004 (video stills)
Courtesy of the artist
Exhibition essay: Tales of Places
A long time ago a term place left its exclusively geographical denotation.
Gradually, its meaning has become multi-layered and fluid. Places more rapidly
change their appearances and meaning considering the global accelerations of
communication, commuting and consumerism. It seems that the urge to somehow
react against rapidly changing concepts of surroundings and to rethink personal
relationship with place gain importance in a time when notions of places are
lost or complicated.
The exhibition Tales of Places links together several works that unravel
artists' concern with defining their identity and the possibility of belonging.
Personal histories and collective memories are set in motion through works that
investigate artists' intimate relationships to particular surroundings. By merging
their memories and imagination, the artists rediscover a potential of a tale-
an intimate, highly personalized idiom-as a particular artistic strategy in
contemporary art practice.
In Sandra Sterle's video Round Around the artist, dressed in traditional
clothing borrowed from a peasant woman from the Croatian island of Mljet, runs until
exhaustion, around an olive tree, in a personal ritual set in the original
location of the island. The duration of Sterle's continuous action is underlined by
the technical device of a video medium-the act of running is put in slow motion.
The action expresses the desire to connect with local and cultural legacies.
Touch by Janine Antoni shows the artist walking on a tightrope on the beach
against the background of a horizon. Occasionally, the line of the rope and the
horizon-metaphorically, known surroundings and the walk towards an undefined
destination-coincide and touch to be again separated in the next moment. The
motif of horizon for Antoni indicates leaving one place and widening one's
horizons but always simultaneously remembering previous places and related
memories (i.e., the beach in Freeport, Bahamas on which Antoni grew up)-the
movement between places here is presented as a recurrent dynamic action.
Berni Searle's still images capture silhouette cut- outs made of red crêpe paper—of photographs of the artist's friends and family—that were then submerged in water . The moments of their gradual disintegration were recorded by a camera. A few of these moments were transformed into the printed stills; therefore, they have become suspended in time. They symbolically represent different intensities of memories; those that are clear and recognizable and those that have almost completely disappeared.
In The Observation Gallery by Karina Aguilera Skvirsky the camera moves slowly through a building space . Occasionally it records outdoor views as seen from the windows. The images are accompanied by an audio component, a text taken from Marcel Proust's Remembrance of Things Past, sporadically interrupted by sounds taken from crowded New York surroundings. The text narrated tells about the possibility of locating oneself and recovering personal memories.
Dunja Sablic in her CD-ROM project Vila Velebita investigaties personal and
family history as well as the history of a Croatian town of Bakar. Through the
structure and technology of a CD-ROM, the original photographic material is
manipulated. The work avoids linear narration. Users navigate through numerous
data, without a fixed agenda and without the necessity of going through all of
it. This work literally points to the variety of personal and collective memories,
as well as a complex notion of place that is formed through them. Recalling the
memories and stories from one's surroundings and the attempt to define relationships
that inform a place, is seen here as a never ending, transitory state.
Chantal Akerman's A Family in Brussels is an audio record of a performance of
the artist reading. The "stream of consciousness" text contains autobiographical
references to family, belonging and distance. The text encompasses multiple
subjectivities, shifting between first and third person as Akerman tells the
story of her mother's life, and consequently, of herself as well.
One part of Anri Sala's work Byrek is a continuous slide projection—a
text written by the artist that recalls his emotional ties to his family and personal
history, symbolically materialized in a traditional dish. On the adjacent wall a video
is screened, which contains images of an elderly woman's hands making the dish in a
kitchen, a familiar, protected and timeless place. These images are regularly
interrupted by outdoor views on planes moving across the sky. The video is
projected onto a paper screen with the copy of the grandmother's letter. The
intimate content of the letter is mixed with the detailed sketches-instructions for
Sala to make the dish. In Byrek, Sala underlines his personal memories as
important and constitutive part of his present.
Exhibition Checklist and Layout:
1. Sandra Sterle (b. 1965. Lives and works in Split and Amsterdam.)
Round Around, 1996/7
DVD, color and sound, 9' 7''
Courtesy of the artist
Berni Searle (b. 1964. Lives and works in Cape Town.)
2.
By the River, 2005, 1/3
3. By the River (Traces), 2005, 1/3
4. Along the Way, 2005, AP
5. Along the Way (Traces) , 2005, 1/3
archival pigment ink on cotton rag paper
Courtesy of Michael Stevenson Gallery, Cape Town
6. Anri Sala (b. 1974. Lives and works in Berlin.)
Byrek, 2000
DVD, color and sound, 21'43''
Print on paper
Slide, 35 mm
Courtesy of Galerie Chantal Crousel, Paris
7. Dunja Sablic (b. 1978. Lives and works in Rijeka.)
Vila Velebita, 2003
CD-ROM, mixed media installation
Courtesy of the artist
8. Karina Aguilera Skvirsky (b. 1967. Lives and works in New York.)
The Observation Gallery, 2004
DVD, color and sound, 3' 30''
Courtesy of the artist and Jessica Murray Projects, New York
9. Janine Antoni (b. 1964. Lives and works in New York.)
Touch , 2002
DVD, color and sound, 9' loop
Marieluise Hessel Collection on permanent loan to the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College
Courtesy of the artist and Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York
10. Chantal Akerman (b. 1950. Lives and works in Paris.)
A Family in Brussels, 2003
Book and 2 CDs, 110'
Courtesy of the artist and Dia Art Foundation, New York

Exhibition installation views

Sandra Sterle, Round Around, 1996/7 (installation view)

Installation view: Berni Searle, from left to right: Along the
Way;
Along the Way (Traces), By the River; By the River (Traces), 2005
© Chris Kendall 2006

Anri Sala, Byrek, 2000 (installation view)
© Chris Kendall 2006

Anri Sala, Byrek, 2000 (installation view)
© Chris Kendall 2006

Dunja Sablic, Vila Velebita, 2003 (installation view)
© Chris Kendall 2006

Karina Aguilera Skvirsky, The Observation Gallery, 2004 (installation view)
© Chris Kendall 2006

Installation view- left: Sandra Sterle, Round Around, 1996/7;
right: Berni Searle, Along the Way; Along the Way (Traces)
© Chris Kendall 2006

Installation view- left: Dunja Sablic, Vila Velebita, 2003;
right: Sandra SterleRound Around, 1996/7
© Chris Kendall 2006

Installation view- left: Chantal Akerman, A Family in Brussels, 2003;
right: Janine Antoni , Touch , 2002
© Chris Kendall 2006

Installation view- left: Anri Sala, Byrek, 2000;
A Family in Brussels, 2003
© Chris Kendall 2006