Heie Treier: Creativity invaded Saaremaa
On 10 July the most prestigious exhibition of
contemporary art, the Saaremaa Biennial, was opened in the
mediaeval castle of Kuressaare. The title of this biennial
carried on the theme of the previous, 1995 biennial:
Fabrique d'Histoire - Fabric of History. At a time when
history is being re-written both in Estonia and over the
whole of Eastern Europe, artists and theorists are
fascinated by the question: what is the post-Cold War
interpretation of history and how should we cope with the
tough psychological, political, economical and everyday
problems that we have inherited?
Since the modern world is orientated towards constant
change, the aim of such art is to preserve a vision of
history so that as society rushes into the future it may
maintain a realistic perception of its own essence amidst
the ever increasing simulations of the information
society.
International context
On the world scale the Saaremaa Biennial belongs to the
numerous younger biennials or triennials - in addition to
the large exhibitions in Cairo, Kwangju, Istanbul,
Johannesburg et al, there is now a Florence fashion
biennial, a Berlin media biennial, and the Rotterdam
Manifesta in Europe, and a Santa Fe Biennial in the USA. The
Saaremaa Biennial is the only one of its kind in the
territory of the former USSR or in Scandinavia. It is an
exceptional event in many respects - grown out of a festival
of photography, the curators Eve and Peeter Linnap started
with conceptualist photos and extended their interest to
installations, films, and paintings; in comparison to the
other biennials mentioned above, Saaremaa Biennial is a very
small and concentrated event. This time, 37 artists from 10
countries participated.
Disappearance of the enemy
When an art exhibition carries the title Invasion, it may
seem at first sight that it is dealing with a dangerously
militaristic topic, and indeed, one can find such art in
Kuressaare, which is based on documentary material:
museological installation by Anto Juske and Lennart
Mänd which shows how the German troops conquered the
islands off Estonia's western coast in 1917; Estonian
geopolitical history as visualised by Marko Laimre; Jaanus
Vald's work based on a military dictionary that was supposed
to help Russians to occupy Estonia in 1940, etc. But the
contemporary notion of invasion is broader - it encompasses
different forms of violence, such as criminality, assaults
on works of art, covert or direct everyday and psychic
terror, forced migration or invading foreign territory,
tourism, and so on.
Any invasion presupposes the existence of polarity, where
those taking part have been cast in the roles of a conqueror
and a victim, but the roles are naturally not strictly
fixed. During the Cold War the world was divided into two
antagonistic camps and both treated the other as 'the
enemy'. Such a mentality was also expressed in art.
In the period after the Cold War, a terminological shift
has taken place. 'The enemies' have suddenly disappeared
without trace, there aren't any left! Theoreticians refer to
all kinds of otherness, categorising those as 'Others' who
live right here next to us. The importance of being
well-disposed towards the 'Others' and not behaving
aggressively towards them, is being emphasised. The
philosopher Andrew Benjamin spoke about invasion as the
crossing of some real or imaginary border, whereas there are
no pure identities anywhere. The identity of the 'other'
becomes part of 'my' identity - 'the other' is both "apart
from me" and "a part of me".
Assaults and strategies of survival
In an art project, the opposition between 'me' and 'the
other' creates the intrigue, which causes an impossible
situation: 'the other' cannot be clearly separated from 'me'
and 'me' cannot be clearly identified, because there is an
ever continuing process of mutual influence. These works
demonstrate all kinds of assaults, whether on art,
personality, culture, territory or people.
Any assault presents a challenge that cannot be ignored;
the victim has to cope somehow. At the biennial, artists
consciously detach themselves from the mentality of a
victim, instead they analyse the current situation and
possible ways of escape.
Incorporating the assault and creating a new
identity
Felix Gmelin (Sweden) re-creates works of art that have
been assaulted, showing the creative dialogue between the
assaulted and the assaulter. Lizzie Calligas (Greece)
interprets a burglar's attack on her work of art as part of
its identity. Maria Hedlund (Sweden) follows the barely
visible traces of a stranger in her home.
Moulding invasion into a work of art
Anto Juske and Lennart Mänd (Estonia) analyse sine
ira et studio the conquest of the islands off Estonia's
western coast in 1917, and Marko Laimre (Estonia) presents
an even wider general picture of Estonian political history.
In the photos of Mari Laanemets (Estonia), children's hands
have scratched part of their faces white, since they are
dealing with the dead. Roman Stanczak (Poland) has turned
his aggression against Soviet period furniture as a symbol,
destroying the angst-inducing anonymity of mass design.
Martin Sjöberg (Sweden) shows brutal street violence,
associating it with the violent nature of pop music.
Opening the abscesses of historical taboos and
national complexes by surgical intervention
Boris Mikhailov, Sergei Bratkov and Sergei Solonski
(Russia) ease the tension between Russians and Germans using
gross humour. Jan Kaila (Finland) analyses Finno-Russian
relations, focusing on the former secret military base in
Porkkala, not far from Helsinki. Jaanus Valt casts light on
a document which has long been a taboo - a Russian-Estonian
military phrase book from 1940.
Showing the deep tragedy caused by historical
invasions
Gintautas Martynaitis (Lithuania) has drawn up from
memory what he experienced in his youth in Siberia. Ernest
Pujol (Cuba/USA) also exhibits the tragedy of refugees,
based on autobiographical facts - as a four year old boy he
emigrated with his two year old brother from Cuba to the
USA. Tiny white children's shirts are like the spirits of
dead children. Anthony Haughey shows forced migrations from
his homeland Ireland as part of a bigger picture.
Making invisible invasion visible, i.e. to become
aware of it
Killu Sukmit (Estonia) and Thierry Geoffrey/Colonel
(France) visualise tourism as one aspect of invasion.
Ann-Sofi Siden (Sweden) brings to us the persecution mania
of a demented New York shrink, who was especially suspicious
of his neighbours. Vibeke Tandberg (Sweden) parodies Western
missionary activities in Africa, whose role is not so much
helping the needy as satisfying their own narcissism.
Real problems, not 'art' problems
In the background of such works are often
autobiographical motifs, either personal or national
experience that lends such art suggestiveness. Those are
real problems, not 'art' problems, and the role of an artist
is to alleviate tensions, explain the torment of collective
unconsciousness.
As for Estonian artists, it seems, strangely enough, that
their relationship with the most painful topics of our own
past, such as mass emigration to the West and deportations
to Siberia, has remained indirect, almost non-existent.
Although those large-scale topics have been tackled in
detail in written form, they have not been visualised in
art. The reasons are worth analysing. Therefore it is
especially edifying in the local context to watch a video by
Victor Burgin titled Venise.
Mystifications
Most popular of the mystifiers, Joan Fontcuberta from
Barcelona, represents a distinct movement in contemporary
art: by creating apparently credible simulations of a
non-existent Russian astronaut Yuri Istotchnikov he reveals
the mechanisms of lying.
Whereas Soviet ideology legitimised huge historical lies
by substantiating them 'scientifically', the lies which
circulate in today's media, business and politics do not
need any justification and everyone has to discover them on
his own. Lauri Astala (Finland) shares Fontcuberta's
thoughts by looking for a mystical formula of history with
the help of Umberto Eco and so does Andrus Kõresaar
(Estonia) who displays the non-existent hierarchy of a
non-existent insect civilisation. Both works are very
powerful both visually and conceptually.
The Saaremaa Biennial is at present the most successfully
functioning event of contemporary art in the Baltic
countries and fully merits its excellent reputation. Estonia
does exist on the map of contemporary art.
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