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"Transcultures": Megaron Mousikis.


Curated by the director of the National Museum of Contemporary Art This article is about National Museum of Contemporary Art, Romania. For other Museums named Museum of Contemporary Art, see Museum of Contemporary Art.

The National Museum of Contemporary Art (Muzeul Naţional de Artă Contemporană
 in Athens, Anna Kafetsi, "Transcultures" gathered together the work of an impressive group of artists, among them Gary Hill, Mona Hatoum, Wolfgang Laib, Shirin Neshat, and Bill Viola, who were asked to address the subject of identity in relation to the modern condition of encounter, interaction, and confrontation between different cultures. Greece might be, in fact, an ideal place for dealing with such a topic, not so much because it hosted last year's Olympics, but because exploring the variables of human nature while rooting them in displacement and journeying has preoccupied the Greeks since ancient times.

Addressing the issue of forced migration, Emily Jacir's twelve photographs from the series "Bethlehem and Ramallah, April 2002," and a work in progress titled Memorial to 418 Palestinian Villages Which Were Destroyed, Depopulated de·pop·u·late  
tr.v. de·pop·u·lat·ed, de·pop·u·lat·ing, de·pop·u·lates
To reduce sharply the population of, as by disease, war, or forcible relocation.
 and Occupied by Israel in 1948, 2001-, connected the show to one of the world's most unstable and troubling places. The former work documented the daily life of the inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
 of two towns that form an epicenter of the Palestinian-Israeli military conflict; the latter featured a refugee tent embroidered em·broi·der  
v. em·broi·dered, em·broi·der·ing, em·broi·ders

v.tr.
1. To ornament with needlework: embroider a pillow cover.

2.
 with the names of Palestinians displaced from their homes. Less specifically, but with equal force, Kendell Geers spoke about the persisting potential for danger in his Akropolis Redux Refers to being brought back, revived or restored. From the Latin "reducere."  (The Director's Cut), 2004, in which he displayed rolls of security fencing on steel shelves, arranging his installation in a configuration that suggested a storage room inside a military facility or a film studio. According to Geers, "What is considered violent or dangerous in one culture is not in another. I work with danger, violence, transgression, and taboo because I believe it's the only way to confront the ideological makeup of a person." The same is true of other political works in the show.

Yet the most engaging works in "Transcultures" were those that dealt with the condition of today's world in a more meditative than polemical fashion. Do-Ho Suh's Staircase II, 2004, enchanted en·chant  
tr.v. en·chant·ed, en·chant·ing, en·chants
1. To cast a spell over; bewitch.

2. To attract and delight; entrance. See Synonyms at charm.
 with the immateriality im·ma·te·ri·al·i·ty  
n. pl. im·ma·te·ri·al·i·ties
1. The state or quality of being immaterial.

2. Something immaterial.

Noun 1.
 of a narrow staircase leading to a platform, both made of pink translucent nylon, suspended a few feet below the ceiling. The piece floated in space as if accessible to the senses only. A glowing jukebox speaker attached to the wall and slowly revolving while emitting a sound mix of Tibetan, Gregorian, and Islamic chants, Kim Sooja's Mandala mandala (mŭn`dələ), [Skt.,=circular, round] a concentric diagram having spiritual and ritual significance in Hindu and Buddhist Tantrism. , Zone of Zero, 2004, might be one of the most beautiful readymades ever found. The only paintings in the show, George Hadjimichalis's three near-monochromes on wood, Burial X, Burial XI, Burial XII, 2004, recalling tombstones tombstones

a cellular phenomenon in pemphigus vulgaris; rows of basal cells of the epidermis remain attached to the basal membrane, reminiscent of rows of tombstones.
, suggested that one might approach death as a subject of contemplation rather than of protest or rage. Danae Stratou spent ten months traveling to seven locations in various parts of the world, from Brazil to India to Austria, known for their splendid, large rivers, and filmed those places while sailing in a small boat. The resulting installation, The River of Life, 2004, comprising seven videos presented simultaneously in a panoramalike structure, shows places where beauty often meets decay. Stratou managed to convey with her camera that even as we are crossing cultures in an unprecedented fashion, the world at large keeps minding its daily existence--and remains quite oblivious to the presence of the traveler.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
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Title Annotation:ATHENS
Author:Bartelik, Marek
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:4EUGR
Date:Jan 1, 2005
Words:543
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