Exhibition TRACING SPACES: STOP & GO. NODES OF TRANSFORMATION AND TRANSITION
Space for
Engaged Architecture, as part of the Faculty of Architecture at BUT, will open
an exhibition by the Austrian collective Tracing Spaces “Stop and Go. Nodes of
Transformation and Transition”. The exhibition will run from 25 November 2022
to 22 January 2023 in the warehouse space of the legendary Prior department
store (TESCO, now OC Dornych), which is scheduled for demolition in 2023.
The
research project Stop and Go, led by curators and artists Michael Zinganel and
Michael Hieslmair, examined post-socialist changes in the nodes of
transnational mobility and migration along the pan-European traffic corridors
of a triangle described by Vienna, Tallinn and the Bulgarian-Turkish border.
The three case studies are presented primarily in the form of large-scale
diagrams and abstract maps of the roads, networks and urban archipelagos along
the transnational routes the research team travelled in their Ford Transit
transporter van. In Prior, there will also be objects exhibited that the
curators brought back ‘from the field’ on their research journeys. It also
includes semi-documentary video works by other artists in the form of large-scale
projections.
The term
Pan-European transport corridors refers to the transport connections between
former Eastern and Western European countries, the expansion of which is a core
project of EU infrastructural planning: Road transport corridors represent
monuments to the modernisation of both states and states unions, which are
planned, built and expanded under political and economic pressure (including
ecological counter-arguments). At the same time, however, they also stand for a
great reserve of imagination and imaginaries to which individuals and
institutions attach many dreams (and nightmares). These corridors function like
magnets, attracting both things and individuals who move along them or
accumulate around them. These experiences are registered and reflected in
official control body statistics, mass media news clips, stories of the daily
lives of road users and residents, research reports and artworks.
Especially
at nodes where traffic flow is interrupted — such as bus terminals, ferry
ports, park places for international lorry drivers (TIR), motorway service
stations, logistics centres, formal and informal markets or border crossing
stations along the corridors. The strategies of both the state (and supra-state)
institutions and large-scale companies can be discerned, as well as the motives
and biographies of the actors passing through them. In the process, a more
dynamic model of urbanity emerges from networked archipelagos that sometimes
transform from non-places to intimate anchors of their multilocal existence in
everyday life.
On Thursday
24 November at 18:00 will be the exhibition opening and curators’ talk. During
the duration of the exhibition, there will be a discussion with the Czech
authors of the Steel Cities project on the architecture of logistics in Central
and Eastern Europe, film screenings and guided tours of the former Prior
building with architectural theorist Šárka Svobodová and architect Eva
Truncová. The department store, built between 1980 and 1984 based on a project by
architects Zdeněk Řihák and Zdeněk Sklepek, was the most modern shopping centre
in Moravia at the time. Its demolition is planned for 2023, and in its place a
complex of six buildings with offices, shops and rental apartments will be
built.
events:
24. 11. 2022 • 18:00
opening + curators’ talk Michael Hieslmair and Michael Zinganel
14. 12. 2022 • 17:00
Prior guided tour
14. 1. 2023 • 15:00
Prior guided tour
21. 1. 2023 • 15:00
Prior guided tour
curatorial
team: Michael Hieslmair | Michael Zinganel
The
collective Tracing Spaces was founded in 2012 by historians, architects,
artists and curators Michael Hieslmair and Michael Zinganel in Vienna. As an
independent, interdisciplinary research platform, they conceive and produce
projects, exhibitions, publications and other formats on the topics of urban
research, mobility, tourism and migration, as well as research-based art and artistic
research projects. Since summer 2015they have been running a project space at Viennese
Nordwestbahnhof, one of the last inner-city logistics hubs, where a
multi-layered multimedia cartography of the migration and mobility experiences
of actors working there is being successively created, embedded in the social
milieu of the logistics landscape.
with objects from: Noël Burch | Boris Despodov | Thomas
Grabka | Martin Grabner | Michael Hieslmair | Emiliya Karaboeva | Mindaugas
Kavaliauskas | Matthias Klos | Vesselina Nikolaeva | Katarzyna Osiecka | Zara
Pfeifer | Tarmo Pikner | Maximilian Pramatarov | Rimini Protokoll | SO
MAT-Archive | Allan Sekula | Gabriele Sturm | Las Vegas Studio | Tatjana
Vukosavljević | Želimir Žilnik | Michael Zinganel
production: Karolína Plášková | Viola Rösch | Ruslan Dimov |
Daniel Bemberger | Eva Truncová
graphic
design: Pavel Holomek
translations:
Moudrý překlad
project
support: Lucie Zádrapová | Adéla Šoborová
supervision:
Jan Kristek
The
research project Stop and Go has been headed by Michael Zinganel and Michael Hieslmair—both
historians, architects, artists and curators— from Vienna, in cooperation with
human geographer Tarmo Pikner from Tallinn and anthropologist and historian
Emiliya Karaboeva from Sofia. The project was funded by the Vienna
Science and Technology Fund (WWTF) [Wiener Wissenschaft-, Forschungs- und Technologiefonds] and
hosted by the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna.
FB Event
Inserted by | Šoborová Adéla |
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