Tag: Kutlug Ataman

  • Istanbul Takes New York: A Look at 4 Fall Shows From Turkey’s Surging Art Scene

    Istanbul Takes New York: A Look at 4 Fall Shows From Turkey’s Surging Art Scene

    semercioglu gulay green apple 1

    Courtesy the Artist and Leila Heller Gallery

    Gulay Semercioglu’s “Green Apple,” 2011, wire, screws, wood

    by Rachel Corbett

    Published: October 24, 2012

    A still from Ali Kazma’s “Absence,” 2011, 2 channel video, endless loop / Courtesy C24

    In recent years, art analysts have alternately described the rise of the Turkish market as both a bubble and a long-brewing boom. Whichever turns out to be true in the long run, there’s no denying its explosion. Sotheby’s London launched its first auction dedicated to modern and contemporary Turkish art in 2009, bringing in $1.3 million during the inaugural edition. The next year, sales nearly doubled.

    Galleries appear to have taken note. While the prices at the Sotheby’s sale in April cooled a bit, dealers in New York have organized a crop of shows devoted to Turkish artists this fall. From galleries specializing in the Middle East, like Chelsea’s Leila Heller, to the more Euro-centric Sperone Westwater, here’s a look at where to spot the group of trendy Turks in the months to come:

    Kutlug Ataman, “Mesopotamian Dramaturgies,” at Sperone Westwater, November 1-December 22

    Newly represented by Sperone Westwater, Ataman is making something of a comeback in the west after showing predominantly in the Middle East and Europe for nearly a decade. The series of four video installations that comprise “Mesopotamian Dramaturgies” is firmly rooted in his native landscape, however, often highlighting the tensions of modernization in Turkey. At the start of the Arab Spring, for instance, Ataman filmed a formation of rushing waterfalls and projected the images onto multiple screens, reminding viewers that destruction and purification can occur simultaneously.

    Gulay Semercioglu, “Variations on Line,” Leila Heller Gallery, October 11-November 12

    Istanbul-based painter Gulay Semercioglu makes her U.S. solo debut at Leila Heller with a collection of architectural abstractions woven from razor-thin metal wires and mounted into wooden frames. The work draws upon the history of her hometown, Gaziantep, which was known for its wire-woven textiles. “My grandfather, when he was bored or unhappy, used to resort to weaving,” she explained in a statement. “My grandmother used to win prizes for her embroidery and jewelry. It’s in my genes and in the process.”

    Yigit Yazici, “Nobody’s Business but the Turk’s,” Tally Beck, November 14-January 6

    A fixture on the Istanbul pop art scene, Yazici brings 12 fluorescent paintings to the Lower East Side’s contemporary Asian gallery Tally Beck next month. Yazici tarts up everyday imagery, such as motorcycles and furniture, with maze-like layers of neon paint. Earlier this year, in consistently Warholian fashion, Yazici designed an Absolut Istanbul label with a cartoonish tableau of the Galata Tower on the Bosphorous. He will return to the U.S. in December to attend Art Asia Miami with Tally Beck.

    Ali Kazma, “In It,” at C24 Gallery, November 7-December 22

    Video artist Ali Kazma has been busy: he recently closed a solo show at the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C., and will be representing Turkey in the 2013 Venice Biennale. In the meantime, he is bringing a series of new and old works to Chelsea’s C24 Gallery for his first solo show in New York. Curated by French critic Paul Ardenne, the multi-screened videos are being shown together to create a new environment that explores time and energy. Kazma also had a video in the inaugural exhibition at C24, a gallery launched last year by a group of Turkish collectors and a New York attorney.

    via Istanbul Takes New York: A Look at 4 Fall Shows From Turkey’s Surging Art Scene | Artinfo.

  • Ataman’s ‘mid-career retrospective’ opens at İstanbul Modern

    Ataman’s ‘mid-career retrospective’ opens at İstanbul Modern

    A major selection from Turkish artist Kutluğ Ataman’s works is going on public display today at the İstanbul Modern in what is billed as the first-ever retrospective in Turkey of the internationally acclaimed contemporary artist.

    “The Enemy Inside Me,” curated by İstanbul Modern’s chief curator, Levent Çalıkoğlu, is billed by the museum as a “mid-career retrospective” and it brings together Ataman’s milestone video installations.

    Running through March 6, 2011, at the İstanbul Modern’s temporary exhibit hall, “The Enemy Inside Me” presents 11 major works by the artist, starting from “Women Who Wear Wigs,” a four-screen video installation from 1999, made up of interviews with four Turkish women who discuss the reasons they have had to wear wigs. Another video on display is “Beggars,” a 2010 work by Ataman, which was never before exhibited in Europe and which is co-commissioned by the London-based Thomas Dane Gallery and the São Paulo Art Biennial 2010.

    Ataman’s videos document the lives of marginalized individuals who explicitly give voice to their own obsessions, their relations with micro and macro power structures and verbalize straightforwardly their subliminal issues. “I am not interested in exposing these people and turning them into a show,” Ataman is quoted as saying about his preference of these characters in a press release about the exhibition on the museum’s website. “I only work with people that I see myself in.”

    Ataman, who particularly owes his reputation in art circles to the social and political consciousness in his works, first made his mark in contemporary art with his works displayed at the 1997 İstanbul Biennial.

    The 49-year-old Ataman, who pursued a successful international career exhibiting in distinguished museums and prestigious biennials around the world, has exhibited very few of his works in Turkey to date and this exhibition is “designed as a mid-career retrospective to celebrate the homecoming of the İstanbul-born artist after an international career spanning 13 years,” the museum said.