NGBK Neue Gesellschaft für Bildende Kunst

Theater of Peace

01 May - 13 Jun 2010

Floating Lab Collective, Silence as Presence / NGBK 2010
THEATER OF PEACE

Friedensschauplätze

Every day, theaters of war around the world are at the center of media attention. Working for peace on the other hand is unspectacular, slow, and not very appealing. How can a place, an initiative, an artistic work become a theater of peace? What alternative perspectives can be used to counter asymmetrical conditions of visibility? Is it even possible to make peace visible, to represent it?
The exhibition brings together artistic and activist strategies that make visible the hidden stories behind the different scenes of crisis around the world, intervene into public discourse, and resist the logic of war.

With exhibition contributions from Larissa Sansour/Oreet Ashery (Jerusalem, London, Copenhagen), Floating Lab Collective (Washington D.C.), Mazen Kerbaj (Beirut), Solo7 (Nairobi-Kibera), Graine Théâtre/Espace Masolo (Paris/Kinshasa), Artists Without Walls (Israel/Palestine), Victor Gama (Angola), Robby Herbst (Los Angeles), David Reeb (Tel Aviv), Jan Caspers/Anne König/Vera Tollmann/Jan Wenzel (Leipzig), Akim (Berlin), Grete Aagaard (Aarhus), Stefan Kaegi/Rimini Protokoll (Berlin/Zurich), Sandra Schäfer/Elfe Brandenburger (Berlin), Zentrum für politische Schönheit (Berlin), Institut Design2Context (Zurich), Sabine Horlitz/Oliver Clemens (Berlin), Projekt Grenzgeografien: Philipp Misselwitz/Tim Rieniets (Istanbul/Zurich), Samidoun media team/Kharita: Solidarity Maps (Lebanon), Mona Fawaz/Ahmad Gharbieh/Mona Harb (Beirut), Steven Rowell (Berlin/Los Angeles), Decolonizing Architecture (Bethlehem), The Center for Landuse Interpretation (Los Angeles), Christiane Wehr/Ulf Treger (Hamburg), Lize Mogel/Dario Azzellini (New York/Berlin), OFOG (Sweden), Netzwerk Friedenssteuer (Germany), Women Videoletters (int.), Rosa Heide (Neuruppin and elsewhere), Clown Army (int.), G8 TV (int.), Elke Beyer and Anita Kaspar with the project group “Theater of Peace“


Showing the perspective of the defeated without forcing them into the passive role of the victim

The armed conflicts currently being carried out around the world are mostly asymmetrical. This asymmetry is reflected in superior military strength, economic disparity, and in the power of definition: where one side alone controls the circulation of images and information in the media, the other tries to draw (media) attention to itself with acts of violence. Other strategies are needed to create a kind of visibility and the conditions for peaceful solutions. Thus Elias Sanbar speaks of a “return to visibility” in relation to the film culture that has developed in Palestine since the Oslo Accords. Then again, visibility is not only the basic requirement for lasting solutions but also the natural domain of art.

Making asymmetrical constellations visible in space

The THEATER OF PEACE project introduces strategies that make visible the hidden problems and stories behind the different scenes of crisis around the world. This includes an analysis and description of the spatial constellations that constitute the stage and context of conflicts, which are made visible in the maps produced by a number of different critical projects. We are interested in the moment of reversal that turns a theater of war into a peaceful scenario.

Introducing the activities of intervening artists and initiatives for peace

The focus of the project is on the activities of activists and artists who intervene into concrete situations with specific demands while at the same time jump-starting processes beyond their own immediate spatial and temporal environments. A small stage in the exhibition space will function as a THEATER OF PEACE, where initiatives can introduce themselves and discussions, plays, and film screenings will take place.

Web platform http://www.theaterofpeace.org

We understand the THEATER OF PEACE / FRIEDENSSCHAUPLÄTZE project as an intersection in space and time allowing the participating initiatives, activists, and artists to remain connected beyond the exhibition itself. We have created a website to function as a platform of exchange, mapping theaters of peace around the world. Following the example of the Women Videoletters initiative, activists from around the world who are not able to come to the exhibition themselves are invited to submit video interviews reporting about their experiences working for peace. The interviews will be presented on the web platform, where artists and activists can also introduce themselves and make their own material available.
 

Tags: Oreet Ashery, Larissa Sansour, Vera Tollmann