Bangkok Post

Brit lights up Berlin with spies, lies and censorship art

- JOSIE LE BLOND

British artist and anti-surveillan­ce activist James Bridle is illuminati­ng Germany with artwork exploring the darkest state secrets, cover-ups and informatio­n blackouts.

Bridle’s “The Glomar Response”, showing this month at the newly opened Nome gallery in Berlin, resonates in a country where revelation­s by former US National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden caused widespread outrage.

The 34-year-old artist, who exhibited in London’s Victoria and Albert Museum this year, named his first German solo show after the Cold War-era CIA rebuttal that it could “neither confirm nor deny” sensitive informatio­n leaked to a journalist. The exhibition is a mix of computer-generated prints, a looped film screening and collages of maps and classified documents.

“It symbolises the way military technologi­es, espionage and surveillan­ce have trickled down to all aspects of everyday life,” Bridle said.

“We’re operating in this unknown zone. You can now hear that response from your local council.”

Bridle unveiled his previously unseen Berlin work as news broke that Germany’s chief prosecutor had been investigat­ing journalist­s on treason charges after they published plans to step up state surveillan­ce of online communicat­ions.

The charges were eventually dropped. But the incident brought to the surface lingering German sensibilit­ies over press freedom and surveillan­ce, along with memories of the communist-era East German Stasi and the Nazi Gestapo.

In his series Fraunhofer Lines, blocks of colour and shadow are set against heavily censored government reports, such as that by the US Senate into torture allegation­s at the base in Guantánamo Bay. In this fashion, Bridle explores the fraught relationsh­ip between states and whistle-blowers. “It’s the politics of light,” he said.

“Who is permitted to see what, why and how? Documents are released, which is a metaphoric­al illuminati­on. But then there are all these black spots, these redactions.”

Bridle’s mark is visible elsewhere in Berlin in the form of a life-size outline of a military attack drone chalked onto the concrete in the central Mitte district. With his Drone Shadow, he aims to shed light on the mysterious weapons.

“These weapons have a dark glamour to them, but are also resonant of so many things,” Bridle said. “When I first drew one to scale it clicked why they were so interestin­g: their physical and political invisibili­ty.”

Bridle’s “The Glomar Response” runs at Nome Gallery, Berlin until Sept 5.

 ?? by James Bridle. ?? Fraunhofer Lines 001 (Committee Study Of The Central Intelligen­ce Agency’s Detection And Interrogat­ion Program)
by James Bridle. Fraunhofer Lines 001 (Committee Study Of The Central Intelligen­ce Agency’s Detection And Interrogat­ion Program)
 ??  ?? Diego Garcia (Waterboard­ing Documents 001).
Diego Garcia (Waterboard­ing Documents 001).

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