Art Encounters Foundation invites you to the photography exhibition Poetics of Politics by the artists Michele Bressan, Dani Ghercă, Nicu Ilfoveanu and the guest artist, Alexandra Croitoru, which will present a series of works made in collaboration with Ana Conțu, Ioana Dumitrescu, Sonia Lupșa, Crăița Niga, Cătălina Pintilie, Roberta Roată.
Curated by Belgian art critic and curator Sam Steverlynck, this project was conceived as an exhibition diptych held at Harlan Levey Projects in Brussels (June 10 – July 15, 2023) and the Art Encounters Foundation in Timisoara (September 21 – October 28, 2023), within Timișoara 2023 – European Capital of Culture.
If Harlan Levey's exhibition focused on the transition from communism to a market economy, a particularly important topic for a whole generation of artists since the early 1990s, the exhibition at Art Encounters will expand this issue, offering a reflection on the oscillation between the ruins of the past and certain possibilities for the present, both from a personal and political perspective.
Thus, the Timisoara exhibition brings together the works of an emerging generation of Romanian photographers who graduated from the Academy of Arts in Bucharest, where many of them also teach. Growing up after the 1989 Revolution and experiencing firsthand the sudden transition from communism to capitalism, as well as its long-lasting social, political, economic and urban effects, these artists are distinguished by a relatively common practice and a cautious approach to of using images for various narratives and a meta-reflexive way of dealing with the photographic medium. Preferring a conceptual rather than a documentary approach, the photographs practically reflect on a period of economic, social and technological transition, examining the notion of the image in all its forms.
Experimenting with different modes of presentation, switching between analog and digital, projected image and moving image, but also sometimes incorporating found images and text, they aim to overcome the limitations of the still image and thus expand its possibilities. And although they do not deliberately declare themselves political, their way of looking at society carries within itself a political dimension expressed through an experimental, aesthetic and poetic visual language.
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Dani Ghercă (b. 1988) lives and works in Bucharest, Romania. Ghercă’s work reflects on the current transition to a new phase of human consciousness and the impact of technology on our sense of self, relationship with others, and environment. His work explores the relationship between urbanization and the human experience. He uses photography to examine the notion of urbanity, scale, and disconnection. In his photographic quest, he aims to transmit a feeling of confusion, awe, and claustrophobia to the viewer.
Nicu Ilfoveanu (b. 1975) lives and works in Bucharest, Romania. Active in the field of photography, film, and photo books, Nicu Ilfoveanu is credited with a particular position in Romanian contemporary arts. He graduated from the National University of Arts Bucharest, where he is currently teaching photography. His work is characterized by an unexpected and unpredictable interplay between personal and documentary, sublime and trivial, and evidence and hidden subjects.
Michele Bressan (b. 1980) is a visual artist working with photography and film, based in Bucharest since 1993. His work focuses on documenting aspects of the Romanian post-communist reality, using the photographic medium as a means of artistic research. By the practice of portraying his surroundings through series having the typology of a subjective journal, or by a more distant approach, he offers a comment and at the same time, the possibility to relate to a scene, witnessing the particularities and mechanisms of a society in a slow transition process.
Alexandra Croitoru (b. 1975) is a visual artist and curator, currently teaching at the Photo-Video department of The National University of Arts Bucharest. Together with students and alumni of the UNArte Photo-Video department, Ana Conțu, Ioana Dumitrescu, Sonia Lupșa, Crăița Niga, Cătălina Pintilie and Roberta Roată, she made a series of black and white portraits, mimicking the body language and attributes of the male-dominated history of portraiture. By posing with precarious ‘armors’ made from ordinary domestic objects, they not only deconstruct the language of power of this classical genre but also inject it with a sense of playfulness and feminism. The pictures are printed on textiles, often associated with domesticity and femineity. Titled Ways to Protect Your Mind, Body and Spirit (2023), the series also refers to vulnerability and resilience in a post-pandemic world. By appropriating a visual language from the past, the artists want to propose a future based on collectivity and participation.