The Other designs
Historical authenticity as artistic project
(2014)
Beton 7, Athens, GR
Artists: Natasa Biza, Roland Regner, Romy Rüegger, Vassilis Vlastaras
Curators: Heiko Schmid, Kostis Stafylakis
“All countries are burdened by their history, but the past weighs particularly heavily on Greece.” This sentence opens up historian Richard Clogg’s book, A concise history of Greece. And Clogg, at the beginning of his book further speaks of a “burden of antiquity” Greece is carrying, but leaves no suggestion of how history can develop ‘weight’ at all.
To explain this “burden” all countries have in regard to their past, and using Greece as an example, one has to explore various historical layers. A starting point could be the initial unveiling by central-European archaeologists of ancient historical sites in Greece during 19th century. Another point to consider would be the architectural developments in Athens which, during the same period, began to use the classicist “language of forms” thus proclaiming a certain central-European image of antiquity. And in considering these exemplary two points one must also take into account that these “developments” were subject to local adaptations and revisions skewing the perception of a historical “authenticity”. With reciprocal affinity, both western and local/diasporic classicism and romanticism shape the imaginary / aesthetic horizon which fashions the Greek attitude towards its history.
The exhibition and publication project The Other designs, adopts a critical viewpoint shared by many contemporary academics that highlights how the institutionalization of antiquity as “national heritage” has shaped an ideological framework for experiencing and performing a national identity. This viewpoint kick starts an approach to the idea that nations such as Greece are in some way a multifaceted constellation of projections. The Other designs, aims to contribute to the current re-examination of historical authenticity by reflecting upon the status of national identity as a kind of “artistic” setup.
The publication contextualizing the exhibition consists of texts by Sofia Bempeza (Artist, Art Theorist, Assistant Professor for Art & Media at Zürich University of the Arts), Robin Klimecki (Lecturer, University of Bristol), Elpida Rikou (Anthropologist and Artist), Eleana Yalouri (Assistant Professor, Dept of Social Anthropology, Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences) as well as of the curators of the exhibition Heiko Schmid (Assistant Professor for Art- and Cultural Theorie, Zurich University of Arts) and Kostis Stafylakis (Art Theorist, Teaching Fellow in “Research-based Art” at the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Unit of the Athens School of Fine Arts). The publication includes artistic research projects contributed by Greek artists Natasa Biza, Vassilis Vlastaras and Zafos Xagoraris and Swiss artist Romy Rüegger. The publication was developed by the Swiss-German artist Roland Regner as a contribution to the exhibition.
The project is supported by the “Dossier Internationales” of Zurich University of Arts.