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Ayse Erkmen: Barbara Weiss.


"Possessions" simply does not do justice to the range of meanings associated with "Habseligkeiten," the title of Ayse Erkmen's latest exhibition. Nor can other common English translations--"belongings," "things," "stuff"--capture the word's rich roots: Haben (property), Seele (soul), selig (meaning both "deceased" and "blessed"), Seligkeit (the bliss of salvation or sheer joy). In German, the term is customarily used to describe the effects, always few and often worthless, left behind by a modest person; personal valuables taken in haste Adv. 1. in haste - in a hurried or hasty manner; "the way they buried him so hurriedly was disgraceful"; "hastily, he scanned the headlines"; "sold in haste and at a sacrifice"
hastily, hurriedly
 by someone on the move: things kept through expediency ex·pe·di·en·cy  
n. pl. ex·pe·di·en·cies
1. Appropriateness to the purpose at hand; fitness.

2. Adherence to self-serving means:
 as opposed to necessity. Often portable. Habseligkeiten are possessions that can bear fresh signs of dispossession The wrongful, nonconsensual ouster or removal of a person from his or her property by trick, compulsion, or misuse of the law, whereby the violator obtains actual occupation of the land. Dispossession encompasses intrusion, disseisin, or deforcement. : migration, exile, death.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Erkmen, who divides her time between Berlin and Istanbul, subtly addresses local context wherever she exhibits. "Habselig-keiten" was recently named the most beautiful German word by the Deutscher Sprachrat (German Language Council). As newspapers fielded suggestions for beautiful words, other debates were droning drone 1  
n.
1. A male bee, especially a honeybee, that is characteristically stingless, performs no work, and produces no honey. Its only function is to mate with the queen bee.

2.
 on regarding Turkey's impending im·pend  
intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends
1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending.

2.
 membership in the European Union European Union (EU), name given since the ratification (Nov., 1993) of the Treaty of European Union, or Maastricht Treaty, to the

European Community
 and the supposed failure of Turkish immigrants to integrate into Germany. Erkmen suggested other kinds of unions and barriers by cordoning off one room with a chain of silver rings. Made in Turkey for men and women, the elaborately crafted bands have no stones; riddled with cavities where diamonds would usually sparkle See SPARQL. , they appear as Habseligkeiten, in the sense of worthless effects. Yet in Turkey, silver plays a significant role, with stones or without, in displays of wealth. Such silver rings--like the Turkish language Turkish language, member of the Turkic subdivision of the Altaic subfamily of the Ural-Altaic family of languages (see Uralic and Altaic languages). Turkish is the official language of Turkey and one of the official languages of Cyprus.  itself--might be among the portable possessions a migrant takes from Turkey to Germany; they also belong to the cherished Habseligkeiten of movement and expediency.

Questioning culturally biased interpretations of value, Ring (all works 2005) seems to turn the question around the relationship between men and women. While the rings are not wedding bands, the chain links both genders together while acting as a border, if not an impasse im·passe  
n.
1. A road or passage having no exit; a cul-de-sac.

2. A situation that is so difficult that no progress can be made; a deadlock or a stalemate: reached an impasse in the negotiations.
, between two spaces. Since the rings remain empty, they suggest that Turkish gender relations are creating a division that otherwise does not exist and a debate from which Turks remain absent. The rings reflect the absence of Turkish words among the most beautiful in Germany, although the language is the second most widely spoken within the country's borders. Erkmen demonstrated that borders have different forms of visibility by completely sealing off another room in the gallery with a solid wall. Visitors couldn't enter the room, let alone see it; only a sign on a window reading kleine hintere Kammer (small black cabinet) alerted passersby on the street to the room's existence.

In Scenic Overlooks, Erkmen offered an homage to a way of experiencing images that is slowly dying out. Eighty-four landscapes--generic desert, mountain, and forest images purchased from a data bank--were projected onto the barrier wall. These oversize o·ver·size  
n.
1. A size that is larger than usual.

2. An oversize article or object.

adj. o·ver·size also o·ver·sized
Larger in size than usual or necessary.

Adj. 1.
 electronic postcards "unfolded" gradually in uneven sections, from top to bottom, like an image file opening on a computer with a slow modem connection. Before ever-faster computers began to make images appear in one flash on the monitor, how many people looked at how many images as if they were tapestries or scrolls casually expanding downward across the screen? Since it takes fifty-eight minutes to look over all of Erkmen's scenes, there is plenty of time to ponder the answer.
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Title Annotation:Exhibition by Ayse Erkmen, "Possession" between Turkey and Germany
Author:Allen, Jennifer
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:7TURK
Date:Jun 22, 2005
Words:542
Previous Article:Kris Martin: Sies + Hoke.(Exhibition)
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