Difference between revisions of "Gulag Institute for Contemporary Arts and Cultures"

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The [[Gulag Institute for Contemporary Arts and Cultures|Gulag Institute]] is a production vehicle for various art and art-related projects by a loosely connected collective of artists, among them [[Zoran Srdić Janežič]], [[Gorazd Krnc]], [[Jana Putrle Srdić]], [[Ida Hiršenfelder]], [[Neža Mrevlje]] and [[Aleksandra Saška Gruden]]. All of them are interested in various artistic mediums yet primarily work within the fields of visual and performance art, sometimes augmented with poetry, puppetry and music.
 
The [[Gulag Institute for Contemporary Arts and Cultures|Gulag Institute]] is a production vehicle for various art and art-related projects by a loosely connected collective of artists, among them [[Zoran Srdić Janežič]], [[Gorazd Krnc]], [[Jana Putrle Srdić]], [[Ida Hiršenfelder]], [[Neža Mrevlje]] and [[Aleksandra Saška Gruden]]. All of them are interested in various artistic mediums yet primarily work within the fields of visual and performance art, sometimes augmented with poetry, puppetry and music.
  
Gulag is not an art group as such, and its project feature a number other artists who thus form the periphery of this enterprise. The institute puts great store in reflecting the questions of art and art systems and has consequently organised several programmes to address them one way or another.  
+
Gulag is not an art group as such, and its projects feature a number of other artists who thus form the periphery of this enterprise. The institute puts great effort in reflecting the questions of art and art systems and has consequently organised several programmes to address them.  
 
}}
 
}}
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==
  
In 1999 [[Zoran Srdić Janežić]] and some of his fellow visual artists founded Modri krog (''Blue Circle''), an organisational framework for setting up exhibitions, street art interventions and festivals for presenting their visual and multimedia artworks.  
+
In 1999, [[Zoran Srdić Janežić]] and some of his fellow visual artists founded Modri krog (Blue Circle), an organisational framework for setting up exhibitions, street art interventions and festivals for presenting their visual and multimedia artworks.  
  
In [[established::2007]] this was succeeded by the establishment of The Gulag Institute for Contemporary Arts and Cultures, which set its horizons of activity somewhat more ambitiously and broadly. Gulag's founders were the curator and writer on contemporary art [[Petja Grafenauer]], the poet and visual arts producer [[Jana Putrle Srdić]], the painter and video artist [[Gorazd Krnc]] and the aforementioned Zoran, a sculptor, visual artist, puppeteer and performer.  
+
In [[established::2007]], this was succeeded by the establishment of the Gulag Institute for Contemporary Arts and Cultures, which set its horizons of activity somewhat more ambitiously and broadly. Gulag's founders were the curator and writer on contemporary art [[Petja Grafenauer]], the poet and visual arts producer [[Jana Putrle Srdić]], the painter and video artist [[Gorazd Krnc]] and the aforementioned Zoran, a sculptor, visual artist, puppeteer and performer.  
  
 
==Projects==
 
==Projects==
  
As a rule Gulag's projects merge various artistic genres like sculpture, poetry, body-art, sound art, video, public interventions, performance art and so on. Among their basic underlying themes one can find the issues of social control, the underlying violence and intercultural repression.
+
As a rule, Gulag's projects merge various artistic genres such as sculpture, poetry, body-art, sound art, video, public interventions, performance art and so on. Among their basic themes are issues of social control, implicit violence and intercultural repression.
  
Public interventions are possibly Gulag's most often used media of communicating their art. For example, in collaboration with [[MKC Maribor Youth Culture Centre]], the [[Performa Festival]] and [[Maribor, European Capital of Culture 2012]] Gulag co-produced the innovative street performance 'Intellectual Whores', which engaged 17 educated thinkers tho "whore" their knowledge on the streets of Maribor by discussing with their "tricks" poetry, sculpture, art films, psychoanalysis and other topics. A similar project was later enacted during the [[Lighting Guerrilla Festival]], when female intellectuals and artists offered their knowledge to passers-by in toilets-art objects designed by sculptors.
+
Public interventions are possibly Gulag's most often used media for communicating their art. For example, in collaboration with [[MKC Maribor Youth Culture Centre]], the [[Performa Festival]] and [[Maribor, European Capital of Culture 2012]], Gulag co-produced the innovative street performance ''Intellectual Whores'', which engaged 17 educated thinkers to "whore" their knowledge on the streets of Maribor by discussing poetry, sculpture, art films, psychoanalysis and other topics with their "tricks". A similar project was later enacted during the [[Lighting Guerrilla Festival]], when female intellectuals and artists offered their knowledge to passers-by in toilet-art objects designed by sculptors.
  
The exhibitions organised by Gulag focus on emerging art with a special focus on sculpturing and new media. They feature artists such as [[Maja Smrekar]], [[Mito Gegič]], [[Urša Vidic]], [[Otto Urpelainen]], [[Sanela Jahić]], [[Borut Savski]], [[Gorazd Krnc]] and [[Zoran Srdić Janežič]].  
+
The exhibitions organised by Gulag focus on emerging art with a special focus on sculpture and new media. They feature artists such as [[Maja Smrekar]], [[Mito Gegič]], [[Urša Vidic]], [[Otto Urpelainen]], [[Sanela Jahić]], [[Borut Savski]], [[Gorazd Krnc]] and [[Zoran Srdić Janežič]].  
  
A prominent place in Gulag's production is taken by poetry combined with various other media of expression – video, visual and sound art, artist's books. They thus search for new ways to expose and radicalise poetry, an art form which they also address via workshops and public performances. An interesting project was Ej bejba, kaj maš s to poezijo? / Hey baby, what’s with this poetry? – an experimental poetry and dance performance, which dealt with research on the act of writing and the social role of poetry.   
+
Poetry combined with various other media of expression – video, visual and sound art, artist's books – occupies a prominent place in Gulag's production. Gulag thus searches for new ways to expose and radicalise poetry, an art form which the group's members also address via workshops and public performances. An interesting project was ''Ej bejba, kaj maš s to poezijo?'' / Hey baby, what's with this poetry? – an experimental poetry and dance performance, which dealt with research on the act of writing and the social role of poetry.   
  
Staged works by Gulag also include the theatre performance Little red Riding Hood, a dance performance with shadow puppets for adults and children, produced at [[Stara Elektrarna - Old Power Station]].  
+
Staged works by Gulag also include ''Little Red Riding Hood'', a dance performance with shadow puppets for adults and children, produced at [[Stara Elektrarna - Old Power Station]].  
  
 
===Contemporary Art Tea Parties===
 
===Contemporary Art Tea Parties===
  
These "parties" were first organised from 2006 to 2009 (in co-production with [[KUD Mreža Arts and Culture Association]] and [[Alkatraz Gallery]], in 2009 they accompanied the [[Biennial of Graphic Arts]]) and then re-launched in 2013. These monthly meetings aim to promote discussion and constructive dialogue about contemporary art and take place at various venues. Topics such as writing about art, activism, comic books, street art, presentations of young artists, artist's books and so on addressed via round table discussions, lectures and seminars.  
+
These "parties" were first organised from 2006 to 2009 (in co-production with [[KUD Mreža Arts and Culture Association]] and [[Alkatraz Gallery]]. In 2009, they accompanied the [[Biennial of Graphic Arts]]) and then re-launched in 2013. These monthly meetings aim to promote discussion and constructive dialogue about contemporary art and take place at various venues. Topics such as writing about art, activism, comic books, street art, presentations of young artists, artist's books and so on addressed via round table discussions, lectures and seminars.  
  
 
==Theatre design ==
 
==Theatre design ==
  
An part of the Gulag Institute is also its workshop for the planning and realisation of stage scenery and design; paintings, various mechanisms, three-dimensional objects, prototypes, etc. It manufactures puppets, masks, mascots, props, scenic and costume elements for [[SNG Drama Ljubljana]] (''Scenes from an Execution''), [[SNG Maribor]] (''7 Stories''), [[SNG Nova Gorica]] (''Skurt''), [[Slovene People’s Theatre (SLG) Celje|SLG Celje]] (''The Flags''), [[Mladinsko Theatre]] (''King Lear''), and other smaller theatres.
+
A part of the Gulag Institute is also its workshop for the planning and realisation of stage scenery and design; paintings, various mechanisms, three-dimensional objects, prototypes, etc. It creates and builds puppets, masks, mascots, props, scenic and costume elements for [[SNG Drama Ljubljana]] (''Scenes from an Execution''); [[SNG Maribor]] (''7 Stories''); [[SNG Nova Gorica]] (''Skurt''); [[Slovene People’s Theatre (SLG) Celje|Celje City Theatre]] (''The Flags''); [[Mladinsko Theatre]] (''King Lear''); and other smaller theatres.
  
 
==Publications==
 
==Publications==
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Gulag Institute publishes catalogues and artist's books. The latter are often a part of a wider art project that includes different media. Such was the ''Proteus anguinus Carnium'', presented at the exhibition ''Prints and Impressions'' (April 2012) at the [[International Centre of Graphic Arts, Ljubljana]]. To name another example, the institute published an artist's book of 40 drawings of cat-like creatures by [[Zoran Srdić Janežič]] titled ''Tomislav Vrečar: I'm watching a friend in the morning, how he is playing with a cat'' (2008) after a poem by [[Tomislav Vrečar]].
 
Gulag Institute publishes catalogues and artist's books. The latter are often a part of a wider art project that includes different media. Such was the ''Proteus anguinus Carnium'', presented at the exhibition ''Prints and Impressions'' (April 2012) at the [[International Centre of Graphic Arts, Ljubljana]]. To name another example, the institute published an artist's book of 40 drawings of cat-like creatures by [[Zoran Srdić Janežič]] titled ''Tomislav Vrečar: I'm watching a friend in the morning, how he is playing with a cat'' (2008) after a poem by [[Tomislav Vrečar]].
  
Gulag also runs a web magazine called G-Zine, a blog for reflections on modern art.
+
Gulag also runs a web magazine called ''G-Zine'', a blog for reflections on modern art.
  
 
==Partnerships and collaborations==
 
==Partnerships and collaborations==
  
Besides the ones already mentioned Gulag's occasional partners include the literary journal [[Poiesis]], the [[Alkatraz Gallery]], [[Strip Core]] (and its [[Lighting Guerrilla Festival]]), [[Škuc Gallery]], [[Theremidi Orchestra]], [[Young Rhymes]], [[Layer House]], the [[International Feminist and Queer Festival Red Dawns]] and quite some others.  
+
Besides those already mentioned, Gulag's occasional partners include the literary journal [[Poiesis]], the [[Alkatraz Gallery]], [[Strip Core]] (and its [[Lighting Guerrilla Festival]]), [[Škuc Gallery]], [[Theremidi Orchestra]], [[Young Rhymes]], [[Layer House]], the [[International Feminist and Queer Festival Red Dawns]] and others.  
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
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[[Category:Šiška Cultural Quarter]]
 
[[Category:Šiška Cultural Quarter]]
 +
[[Category:Updated 2020]]

Latest revision as of 09:32, 3 June 2020




Contact
Zavod za sodobne umetnosti in kulture Gulag
Ul. Janeza Pavla II. 5, SI-1000 Ljubljana
Phone386 (0) 1 232 3502
Past Events
Show more




The Gulag Institute is a production vehicle for various art and art-related projects by a loosely connected collective of artists, among them Zoran Srdić Janežič, Gorazd Krnc, Jana Putrle Srdić, Ida Hiršenfelder, Neža Mrevlje and Aleksandra Saška Gruden. All of them are interested in various artistic mediums yet primarily work within the fields of visual and performance art, sometimes augmented with poetry, puppetry and music.

Gulag is not an art group as such, and its projects feature a number of other artists who thus form the periphery of this enterprise. The institute puts great effort in reflecting the questions of art and art systems and has consequently organised several programmes to address them.


Background

In 1999, Zoran Srdić Janežić and some of his fellow visual artists founded Modri krog (Blue Circle), an organisational framework for setting up exhibitions, street art interventions and festivals for presenting their visual and multimedia artworks.

In 2007, this was succeeded by the establishment of the Gulag Institute for Contemporary Arts and Cultures, which set its horizons of activity somewhat more ambitiously and broadly. Gulag's founders were the curator and writer on contemporary art Petja Grafenauer, the poet and visual arts producer Jana Putrle Srdić, the painter and video artist Gorazd Krnc and the aforementioned Zoran, a sculptor, visual artist, puppeteer and performer.

Projects

As a rule, Gulag's projects merge various artistic genres such as sculpture, poetry, body-art, sound art, video, public interventions, performance art and so on. Among their basic themes are issues of social control, implicit violence and intercultural repression.

Public interventions are possibly Gulag's most often used media for communicating their art. For example, in collaboration with MKC Maribor Youth Culture Centre, the Performa Festival and Maribor, European Capital of Culture 2012, Gulag co-produced the innovative street performance Intellectual Whores, which engaged 17 educated thinkers to "whore" their knowledge on the streets of Maribor by discussing poetry, sculpture, art films, psychoanalysis and other topics with their "tricks". A similar project was later enacted during the Lighting Guerrilla Festival, when female intellectuals and artists offered their knowledge to passers-by in toilet-art objects designed by sculptors.

The exhibitions organised by Gulag focus on emerging art with a special focus on sculpture and new media. They feature artists such as Maja Smrekar, Mito Gegič, Urša Vidic, Otto Urpelainen, Sanela Jahić, Borut Savski, Gorazd Krnc and Zoran Srdić Janežič.

Poetry combined with various other media of expression – video, visual and sound art, artist's books – occupies a prominent place in Gulag's production. Gulag thus searches for new ways to expose and radicalise poetry, an art form which the group's members also address via workshops and public performances. An interesting project was Ej bejba, kaj maš s to poezijo? / Hey baby, what's with this poetry? – an experimental poetry and dance performance, which dealt with research on the act of writing and the social role of poetry.

Staged works by Gulag also include Little Red Riding Hood, a dance performance with shadow puppets for adults and children, produced at Stara Elektrarna - Old Power Station.

Contemporary Art Tea Parties

These "parties" were first organised from 2006 to 2009 (in co-production with KUD Mreža Arts and Culture Association and Alkatraz Gallery. In 2009, they accompanied the Biennial of Graphic Arts) and then re-launched in 2013. These monthly meetings aim to promote discussion and constructive dialogue about contemporary art and take place at various venues. Topics such as writing about art, activism, comic books, street art, presentations of young artists, artist's books and so on addressed via round table discussions, lectures and seminars.

Theatre design

A part of the Gulag Institute is also its workshop for the planning and realisation of stage scenery and design; paintings, various mechanisms, three-dimensional objects, prototypes, etc. It creates and builds puppets, masks, mascots, props, scenic and costume elements for SNG Drama Ljubljana (Scenes from an Execution); SNG Maribor (7 Stories); SNG Nova Gorica (Skurt); Celje City Theatre (The Flags); Mladinsko Theatre (King Lear); and other smaller theatres.

Publications

Gulag Institute publishes catalogues and artist's books. The latter are often a part of a wider art project that includes different media. Such was the Proteus anguinus Carnium, presented at the exhibition Prints and Impressions (April 2012) at the International Centre of Graphic Arts, Ljubljana. To name another example, the institute published an artist's book of 40 drawings of cat-like creatures by Zoran Srdić Janežič titled Tomislav Vrečar: I'm watching a friend in the morning, how he is playing with a cat (2008) after a poem by Tomislav Vrečar.

Gulag also runs a web magazine called G-Zine, a blog for reflections on modern art.

Partnerships and collaborations

Besides those already mentioned, Gulag's occasional partners include the literary journal Poiesis, the Alkatraz Gallery, Strip Core (and its Lighting Guerrilla Festival), Škuc Gallery, Theremidi Orchestra, Young Rhymes, Layer House, the International Feminist and Queer Festival Red Dawns and others.

See also

External links

Zavod za sodobne umetnosti in kulture Gulag +
Zavod za sodobne umetnosti in kulture Gulag +
SI-1000 Ljubljana +
Ul. Janeza Pavla II. 5 +
The Gulag InstituteThe Gulag Institute is a production vehicle for various art and art-related projects by a loosely connected collective of artists, among them Zoran Srdić Janežič, Gorazd Krnc, Jana Putrle Srdić, Ida Hiršenfelder, Neža Mrevlje and Aleksandra Saška Gruden.sandra Saška Gruden]]. +
The Gulag Institute is a production vehicle for various art and art-related projects by a loosely connected collective of artists, among them Zoran Srdić Janežič, Gorazd Krnc, Jana Putrle Srdić, Ida Hiršenfelder, Neža Mrevlje and Aleksandra Saška Gruden. +
+386 / 1 232 3502 +
Ljubljana +
SI-1000 +
EmailThis property is a special property in this wiki.