ANRI SALA.GALERIE JOHNEN & SCHOTTLE Anri Sala's video Byrek, 2000--named after a traditional Albanian salted pastry-- shows the hands and forearms of an elderly woman kneading kneading, n a massage technique in which the whole hand is moved in a circular pattern while the fingers and thumbs squeeze the tissues beneath. a batch of dough with the precise motions of a much-practiced routine. She rolls the dough out until it is very thin; it occupies nearly the whole screen. She then fills it with cheese, meat, and spinach spinach, annual plant (Spinacia oleracea) of the family Chenopodiaceae (goosefoot family), probably of Persian origin and known to have been introduced into Europe in the 15th cent. , rolls it into a spiral shape, and finally places it inside a round baking pan. The camera follows this procedure from a single angle, only occasionally turning toward the window as an airplane makes its track across the sky. The woman's wordless, ritual-like action is accompanied by the banging of kitchen utensils and disturbed only by the engine noise of the approaching and disappearing airplanes. The Tirane-born Sala first drew international attention with his video installation Intervista-Finding the Words, 1998, in "After the Wall: Art and Culture in PostCommunist Europe" (Moderna Museet Moderna museet, the Museum of Modern Art, Stockholm, Sweden, is a state museum located on the island of Skeppsholmen in central Stockholm, that was first opened in 1958. Its first manager was Pontus Hultén. , Stockholm, 1999-2000), and at Manifesta 3 in Ljubljana with the short film Nocturnes
Nocturnes is an orchestral composition in three movements by the French composer Claude Debussy. , 1999. Like those works, Byrek is concerned with the question of cultural identity and the relationship between the past and memory. But while Intervista focused on the layering of official and personal histories-or, more precisely, on the discrepancy between the sanctioned portrayal of Albania, which was run along Stalinist lines under Enver Hoxha Enver Hoxha , (IPA /ɛn'vɛɾ 'hɔʤa/ until 1985, and the reconstruction of this image by the artist's mother--Byrek approaches the theme from a more intimate perspective. The pastry that lends its name to the work seems to function for Sala like Proust's madeleine--as a trigger of memories. The video is projected Onto a paper screen on which a handwritten hand·write tr.v. hand·wrote , hand·writ·ten , hand·writ·ing, hand·writes To write by hand. [Back-formation from handwritten.] Adj. 1. letter from Sala's grandmother has been reproduced. Visible through the projected images, the letter contains, among other things, instructions for making byrek. A text by Sala projected on a facing column explains the role the weekly baking and eating of the pastry played in his family when he was a child, and how the ritual of the common meal gradually dissolved as first his sister and then he went to study abroad. In the video, this theme of departure is underlined by the motif of the airplane. Sala counters the emotional and narrative aspect of the texts with the video's simple, almost severe form: The nearly static camera, the slow pace evocative e·voc·a·tive adj. Tending or having the power to evoke. e·voc a·tive·ly adv. of a different time, and the simple, precisely staged images make it clear that he is concerned less with biographical reappraisal than with a model of memory that aims to turn individual, apparently unimportant un·im·por·tant adj. Not important; petty. un im·por tance n. details and images into something productive--even though, or precisely because, they threaten to slip into such stereortypes as the traditional image of a woman providing her family with food. The fact that the woman we see is not Sala's grandmother but an Albanian woman who emigrated to Brussels forty years ago underscores the moment of reconstruction, or projection, that is as inherent in the process of personal memory as in the imagining of cultural identity. The latter may be found in Sala's installation only as displacement or transition, just as the relationship between language and image (or even of language to itself) is always mediated me·di·ate v. me·di·at·ed, me·di·at·ing, me·di·ates v.tr. 1. To resolve or settle (differences) by working with all the conflicting parties: and thus permeated with distance. |
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