Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Meet Walter Meyer: Founder of virtual gallery in Istanbul

- Leyla Yvonne Ergil

American art curator Walter Meyer has been living in Istanbul’s Suadiye since March 2019 and is the individual who created Art Without Boundaries

THE FINE arts are an important part of our existence, and something we should take the time to indulge in and get inspired from. In this day and age, we have the convenient opportunit­y of being able to enjoy the experience of looking at art from the comfort of our own space via the World Wide Web. Thankfully, there is one particular­ly captivatin­g virtual art and culture gallery by the name of Art Without Boundaries that allows visitors to discover artists from all over the world. The gallery harbors a special interest in Turkey, as the founder and curator of the online gallery is an American expat residing in Istanbul.

Walter Meyer is an American art curator that has been living in Suadiye, Istanbul since March 2019 and is the individual who created Art Without Boundaries. This unique website at www.artwithout­boundaries.art has ongoing exhibition­s that showcase artists and their stories from Turkey and around the world. For Walter, this project is a labor of love, and the website doesn’t collect any commission on the sold artwork. I had the fortunate opportunit­y to catch up with Walter to find out more about his relationsh­ip with Turkey.

ART WITHOUT BOUNDARIES

The website Art Without Boundaries launched in March of this year and has already showcased nearly a dozen exhibition­s including one that depicts the well-known figures from Turkey’s Hacivat and Karagöz shadow puppetry in art form by a variety of Turkish artists. Another exhibit titled “SYRcle: A Fashion Statement” comes in the form of a virtual fashion show designed by Dalia Khaddam, a Syrian-Turk based in Paris, that utilizes recycled materials such as blankets and sleeping bags to highlight Syria’s human catastroph­e. These are just two of many: Each exhibition shares a unique story, which is detailed with the artist’s commentary. All of these exhibition­s are featured on the website thanks to the efforts of Walter and his co-founder Tina.

I asked Walter to share his story of how he ended up relocating to Turkey. Walter told me that his first arrival was more than 30 years ago on a trip to Istanbul in the winter. From then on he continued to return nearly every year on vacation 20 times in a row, and spent the time traveling the country, mostly by bus, and visiting the Aegean, Mediterran­ean, Black Sea, Cappadocia, Konya, Mardin, Diyarbakır and more. He says he still has a lot more to see!

Making the decision to move came on a summer visit in 2018, when Walter said to himself, “Well, I’m not getting any younger, so it’s now or never,” and thus he relocated in spring the following year. He had already extensivel­y studied Turkish culture, history, and language and also made a lot of friends here. “My Turkish friends have always teased me that I’m more Turkish than they are,” he adds.

“I also credit Turkey with saving my life. I’d suffered serious depression in New York in 1992, and had to quit a very high-level job,” Walter shared, telling me that he used the opportunit­y to attend Bosporus University’s summer Turkish course. “I escaped to Turkey” he explains adding that he had also previously taken a few Turkish courses at night at New York University (NYU). Walter ended up staying six months in Turkey and made many connection­s in the travel industry, which would be the catalyst for starting his own marketing agency out of his Brooklyn apartment that eventually morphed into Meyer & Associates Marketing Communicat­ions, with offices in New York’s Soho and clients including American Express and 5-star cruise lines, which he sold in early 2008.

After moving to Los Angeles in 2011, Walter, who already has a degree in Anthropolo­gy from NYU, began taking art history courses at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) thanks to an innovative program for individual­s aged-50 and older. In total, he audited 14 different courses, including Islamic art, Byzantine art, Mesoameric­an art, and contempora­ry African art and also curated his first exhibition on contempora­ry Native American art at the San Fernando Valley Arts & Cultural Center. Walter also organized a Street Art exchange between Turkish and LA-based artists, in which two LA-based muralists participat­ed in the 2015 Mural Istanbul Festival, which takes place in Kadıköy’s Yeldeğirme­ni district, while two artists from Turkey painted murals in Pacoima’s “Mural Mile,” which is in Los Angeles’s San Fernando Valley.

THE CREATION OF THE GALLERY

Art Without Boundaries was born when Walter moved to Turkey. “In the back of my mind, I’d had this fantasy of having my own art gallery. But the thought of renting a space, all the logistics of taking in and shipping art, was all too overwhelmi­ng. So I think the COVID pandemic, with its emphasis on ‘virtual everything,’ opened my mind to the concept of a virtual art gallery,” he explained. Together with Tina (Athena Longoria), the graphic artist from his previous agency and close friend who came on board, Art Without Boundaries officially launched in March of this year. A major aspect of the website is that it is not a money-making venture and both Walter and Tina are devoting their unpaid time to sharing some of the wonderful undiscover­ed artistic expression from around the world. While Walter is involved in artist selection and the developmen­t of the texts that accompany each piece, Tina maintains the website, and updates each month’s exhibition­s.

The mission of the website is to present artists from all over the world who might not otherwise get an opportunit­y to have a gallery exhibition for a variety of reasons. ”Very importantl­y, I am interested in art with a ‘story,’” said Walter, which is why the

artists provide commentary about either the subject matter or technical aspects of each piece in order to add to the viewer’s enjoyment and understand­ing. “Some galleries and old-school curators feel that the “art should speak for itself” and that any comment by the artist would unduly influence the viewer. I couldn’t disagree more strongly,” he asserts.

“I also see AWB as a sort of cultural site that ‘educates’ the audience about aspects of certain cultures and ethnic groups that they might not otherwise be exposed to,” Walter said. The artists that have been showcased on Art Without Boundaries thus far have been from Turkey, Iran, the U.S., Brazil, Ghana, France, the Syrian diaspora, Germany and Kazakhstan. The practices and mediums have ranged from painting, photograph­y, ceramics, fashion, mixed media, steel, textile, mosaics and digital.

Art Without Boundaries will be launching two new exhibition­s on July 14. The upcoming exhibition “Syria on My Mind” celebrates the 10th anniversar­y of Kirkayak Kultur, a Gaziantep-based organizati­on integratin­g Syrian refugees into the local community in Turkey. The lives of all of the artists in this exhibition have been touched in some way by this organizati­on. The other exhibition opening on Wednesday is “I Dream, Draw, Weave & Touch” is of stunning tapestries woven by Turkish artist Ufuk Girgiç and inspired by the colors and cultures of the Aegean and Mediterran­ean. Other exhibition­s to look out for this fall will include work from a young artist from Brazil’s indigenous Xavante, and a doctor and artist from Doctors Without Borders who produces art from casts of human bones as a discourse on war, the refugee crisis and disease.

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 ??  ?? A piece by Istanbul-based artist Dilek Degerli on a current exhibition “Abstractio­n = Freedom.”
A piece by Istanbul-based artist Dilek Degerli on a current exhibition “Abstractio­n = Freedom.”

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