• Symposium

Les Anonymes / The anonymous / Die Anonymen / Sine nomine / Ανώνυμος - Keynote

A weekend about anonymity, invisibility and publicity

Dates

  • Fr 02.02., 17:00–18:30

Artists

  • Mustafa Emin Büyükcoşkun
  • Hou Hanru
  • Ruth Noack
  • Slavs and Tatars

Language

  • English

Register

No registration required.

Admission

The symposium is free of charge, plus entrance fee (except on Fridays).

To the exhibition

As if it were a Greek symposium

What civilization has done to women’s bodies is no different than what it’s done to the earth, to children, to the sick, to the proletariat; in short, to everything that isn’t supposed to “talk,” and in general to whatever the knowledge-powers of government and management don’t want to hear, which is thus relegated to exclusion from all recognized activity, relegated to the role of a witness.” 
*
Tiqqun, Preliminary Materials for a Theory of the Young Girl 

On February 2 and 3, internationally renowned artists and curators Mustafa Emin Büyükcoşkun, Hou Hanru, Ruth Noack, and Slavs and Tatars will gather for reflecting on diverse forms, notions, and references of ‘anonymity’. 

A symposium was a social gathering in ancient Greece where people would come together to eat, drink, and engage in circles of academy, parliament, and friendship since the exchange of ideas and engagement in lively debate were crucial roles for a citizen. Sharing food and drink in this setting was seen as a way to foster a sense of camaraderie and cultivate a convivial atmosphere that encouraged open discussion and debate. Departing from an existing piece by Sarkis, shown as part of his current exhibition 7 Tage, 7 Nächte at Kunsthalle Baden-Baden, and borrowing its title, we propose to exercise ideas, thoughts, and conversations around this term: "Anonymous" refers to something unknown or unnamed. When used to describe a person, it means that the individual's identity is not revealed or made public. In online contexts, it often refers to someone who contributes content without revealing their real name or personal details. Anonymous contributions are common in online forums, message boards, and websites where people can share information or express their opinions without disclosing their identities.

Introduced by Misal Adnan Yildiz, who conceived this weekend as a dedication to Sarkis´ multilayered practice, this invitation attempts to reflect on the contemporary role of institutions in a highly polarized public sphere, where anonymity is seen as a resistance to digital control, border politics and techniques of criminalization, rather than as a right of collective existence and defining authorship otherwise. To trigger further conversations, all the speakers received a quotation from Tiqqun, a collective from Paris, who produced philosophical journals in two issues from 1999 to 2001 as an invitation. After a keynote speech by Ruth Noack, one of the artistic directors of documenta 12, three sessions with extended conversations will unfold that focus on relevant specific projects, including references to the Istanbul Biennial, Saturday Mothers, among others.

The symposium will continue on Saturday, February 3, from 2 to 5 pm, with Emin Büyükcoşkun, Hou Hanru and Slavs and Tatars.

Keynote

Ruth Noack: Witnessing - From Statement to Action

(Including blessings and an introduction 90min with Q&A)

Served with greens

“I am triggered by a quote that claims that women, earth, the sick, children, and the proletariat have been relegated to the role of the witness - by whom and to what, Tiqqun never makes quite clear. As part of their politics, Tiqqun remains anonymous to this day. I am more interested in another kind of politics: Politics that are initiated when we become visible to each other in acts of witnessing. My lecture will attempt to grapple with films, works of art, and exhibitions that can be seen to contribute to this politics.”

with references to

  • A Question of Silence, 1982, 92 min, by Marlene Gorris

  • Saint-Omer, 2022, 122 min, by Alice Diop

Ruth Noack (1964), curator, art historian, writer, and teacher, was Executive Director of The Corner at Whitman-Walker in Washington, D.C. between 2019 and 2021. Noack curated documenta 12 with Roger M. Buergel (2007). Recent exhibitions include The Mental Body, and Stay Alive to Life. Resilience in Times of Covid and When We First Arrived... Her series Sleeping with a Vengeance, Dreaming of a Life (2018-2020) was shown in Athens, Prague, Beijing and Stuttgart. Former president of AICA Austria, author of a monograph on Sanja Iveković, editor of Agency, Ambivalence, Analysis. Approaching the Museum with Migration in Mind (2013), Noack published numerous essays and lecturmed internationally for over 30 years.