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"Time of the Storytellers": Kiasma.


With four works from Russia and ten from former Soviet republics, "Time of the Storytellers: Narrative and Distant Gaze in Post-Soviet Art" took viewers on a tour east of Helsinki. Although the region is not, in fact, all that far from Finland geographically, its numerous cultures can seem far removed. Some works, such as two video pieces by Kazakh artists emphasized difference: A game of polo played with a sheep's head Coordinates:

Sheep's Head, also known as Muntervary (Irish: Rinn Mhuintir Bháire 
 for a ball is shown in Said Atabekov's four-channel video Battle for the Square, 2007; a shamanistic dance on snowy mountaintops appears in Almagul Menlibaeva's Apa, 2003, an installation featuring videos projected onto furniture, mirrors, and scrims. The show might have seemed to be hurtling along the same path as those Stalin-era folk exhibitions in which Kazakhs, Kalmyks, and Chukchi danced with mad gusto under the hammer and sickle hammer and sickle
n.
An emblem of the Communist movement signifying the alliance of workers and peasants.


hammer and sickle
Noun
. But the work that Russian curator Victor Misiano has gathered from these outer regions turns out to offer much more than synthetic exotica ex·ot·i·ca  
pl.n.
Things that are curiously unusual or excitingly strange: such gustatory exotica as killer bee honey and fresh catnip sauce.
.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The first floor of the exhibition, consisting almost entirely of large projections, opens with Gulnara Kasmalieva and Muratbek Djumaliev's A New Silk Road: Algorithm for Survival and Hope, 2006. The five-channel piece balletically traces the transport of goods backward along the old silk road, as scrap metal is brought through the mountain passes of Kyrgyzstan to be exchanged in Western China for cheap clothing and other goods. Evoking the global back and forth of power played out along the region through the last five centuries, the projections entrance with a rhythmic choreography. But the sleek installation only partly succeeds in transforming the sensorial sensorial /sen·so·ri·al/ (sen-sor´e-al) pertaining to the sensorium.

sen·so·ri·al
adj.
Of or relating to sensations or sensory impressions.
 onslaught of the Kyrgyz market into a high-tech stereoscopic stereoscopic /ster·eo·scop·ic/ (ster?e-o-skop´ik) having the effect of a stereoscope; giving objects a solid or three-dimensional appearance.

ster·e·o·scop·ic
n.
1.
 thrill--leaving the viewer uncomfortably aware of Helsinki's conspicuous and long-held position as a cushy cush·y  
adj. cush·i·er, cush·i·est Informal
Making few demands; comfortable: a cushy job.



[Origin unknown.
 viewing platform to the exotic East.

A more unexpected, though no less cinematic, approach to anthropological tourism is Pavel Braila's work Barons' Hill, 2006, a detailed study of the palatial pa·la·tial  
adj.
1. Of or suitable for a palace: palatial furnishings.

2. Of the nature of a palace, as in spaciousness or ornateness: a palatial yacht.
 show-houses that the Roma elite of Soroca, Moldova, keep for special events; most of the time, they live in simple huts nearby. As no fewer than six large synchronized video projections trace steady if somewhat disorienting dis·o·ri·ent  
tr.v. dis·o·ri·ent·ed, dis·o·ri·ent·ing, dis·o·ri·ents
To cause (a person, for example) to experience disorientation.

Adj. 1.
 paths, zooming and panning over intricate tile work, wrought-iron fencing, window-sash treatments, oil portraits of family members, figurines, and ornate crockery, a Bach concerto plays hypnotically on the sound track, furthering the domestic fantasy of these famously nomadic See nomadic computing.  people.

Upstairs, among wall works, sculptures, and monitors arranged more tightly (and haphazardly) than in the impressive screening areas below, was Kazakhstan. Blue Period, 2002-2005, by Elena and Victor Vorobyev, residents of the Kazakh city of Almaty. The work documents the recent ubiquity of an electric shade of turquoise known as kok. The color figures in the Kazakh flag, and now it appears everywhere: Photographs show it on grave markers, garbage cans, political banners, chocolate wrappers, and houses throughout the country. The piece interrogates the use of color as a political symbol--and yet, in contrast to the fiery accents of Soviet red, these turquoise surfaces are too mundane and scuffed to hold any ideological charge; rather, they seem to inoculate in·oc·u·late
v.
1. To introduce a serum, a vaccine, or an antigenic substance into the body of a person or an animal, especially as a means to produce or boost immunity to a specific disease.

2.
 the landscape against ideological vigor.

Although the Vorobyevs' work takes the form of an enormous wall of photographs, the show overall seems to elevate the multichannel Using two or more paths for transmission or processing. It can refer to a variety of architectures including (1) multiple I/O channels between the CPU and peripheral devices, (2) multiple wires in a cable, (3) multiple "logical" channels within a single wire or fiber or (4) multiple  video installation to the level of epic poem. The phrase "distant gaze" in the exhibition's subtitle perhaps suggests that a strategic removal can enhance the immersive potential of a narrative--demonstrated here in sound and light. It was not all that long ago that the primary function of art in Russia and Central Asia was to use regional nationalism to dress up an ideology pumped in raw from Moscow, so perhaps it follows that the artists of "Time of the Storytellers" are more inclined to draw from within and head out from there.
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Author:Newman, Emily
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUFI
Date:Dec 1, 2007
Words:633
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