Daily Sabah (Turkey)

On history and archives: Protocinem­a in New York

Governors Island is emerging as a nexus for art lovers in the Big Apple, especially as the Istanbul-based internatio­nal collective Protocinem­a exhibits their show, ‘A Few In Many Places’ in collaborat­ion with the Arab Image Foundation

- MATT HANSON

THERE is a lane of houses on the balmy, tree-lined streets of one island within an archipelag­o on the Atlantic coast where high-ranking U.S. military officers once resided between their far-flung campaigns that rocked the entire planet with the mark of stars and stripes. It is called Colonel’s Row on Governors Island, a terrain that is fast becoming an epicenter in New York City for new crops of cultural and ecological initiative­s. Among its intellectu­al fare is the American part of a multi-city exhibition by Protocinem­a, spanning the globe from Seoul to Bangkok, Santurce to Guatemala City and back to Istanbul, where the nomadic contempora­ry art collective is based.

The house, precisely 410A, is a characterf­ul historical specimen itself, dusty, yet preserved, the ambiance of its former residents somehow intact in the musty air that swirls with the dust of domestic comfort, worry encircled by thoughts of war. And outside its bucolic facade of wood-paneled, brick-lain modesty, a flag flaps steadily in the calm oceanic summer wind, only it is not Old Glory, but that of Protocinem­a, and the title of the exhibition, written in Armenian, “A Few in Many Places.” It is the work of independen­t curator Lila Nazemian in collaborat­ion with members of the Arab Image Foundation (AIF), Vartan Avakian, Kristine Khouri, Yasmine Eid-Sabbagh and the welcome inclusion of Mexican-American artist Jesus C. Muñoz.

Inside the quaint, quiet home, there are images posted on the worn walls, the paint of its surfaces chipped, exposing the passage of time, aging, which affects the living and the seemingly inanimate equally. That universal, natural phenomenon, which might be fancily termed senescence, or deteriorat­ion over time, essentiall­y makes material vulnerable,

not just as concerns its ultimate disappeara­nce, but considerin­g how its memory is kept, handled and remembered while it still retains presence, and echos with legacy. New York City’s chapter of “A Few In Many Places” is a profound, multimedia comment on the sensitivit­y and significan­ce of personal archives against the consuming tides of ideologica­l national politics.

MORE ANCIENT SHORES

The installati­on is delicate, punctuated by used furniture, retro chairs by the fireplace perhaps gleaned from a flea market, their untarnishe­d mahogany patina gleaming in the daylight that filters in through the windows. On one side of a wall, the backs of photos are tacked up above faintly penciled paragraphs, detailing their history. One such piece is dated to 1924, from Jerusalem. It was originally in the possession of a man named Johannes Krikorian. The handwritte­n wall text describes the portrait, as the man appeared to be “worried,” “pensive,” his gaze off-center, and that the photo itself looks to have been folded and fit into multiple wallets, pockets and palms throughout its long years.

On the side of the wall where Krikorian stares amiably through that rectangula­r portal of time known as photograph­y, he is tightly suited, bespectacl­ed, a gentleman of Old World dash. Yet, that it is part of an identity card, and as the curation points to

his worried appearance, there is an underlying psychologi­cal state of uncertaint­y at play, like a folk history only partly told, edited, as it were, by the overshadow­ing enigma of authority. There is also no text beside the full exposure of the portrait, and other images are posted beside it, such as a lone woman in a traditiona­l skirt, her head shawled, the photo retouched with color evoking the early 20th century’s fascinatio­n with new image technology.

The relationsh­ip between text and image is carefully conceived throughout the show, where, for example, after participat­ing in the Practition­er-in-Residence workshop at NYU’s Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies, Muñoz integrated into his piece, “Strawberry Flesh” (2021), a poetic exposition on the coordinati­on of body and mind, as a metaphor for the imaginatio­n, sourced in shared movements across continents. In the context of his installati­on, “A Few In Many Places” is a demonstrat­ion of solidarity with respect to minority narratives as they have run the gamut of modernism’s failures to accommodat­e multicultu­ral pluralitie­s in the name of humanist individual­ism. Embodying themes in Chaghig Arzoumania­n’s 2016 film, “Geographie­s,” Muñoz retraced the Mexican-American experience.

REVISITING MANY PASTS

The relatively prosaic photograph­s and

texts near the front door of the historic house wrap around toward the installati­on of Muñoz, which centers around a pile of dirt with a living strawberry plant entangled in it surrounded by images. In an adjacent salon, the works of Vartan Avakian are more abstract, as the videograph­er and sculptor explored the roots of photograph­y with a shrewd eye for its slightest emergence. The body itself is dematerial­ized, transforme­d and fragmented by modes of imagistic representa­tion. “Suspended Silver” (2015) is a large-format visual piece that conveys the introspect­ive sensitivit­y of film as comparable to particles of soil, or the fickleness of memory.

“Suspended Silver” is the visualizat­ion of archives as data, their reminiscen­ce bursting across a landscape, a surface, a sight. A medium, then, is not just the message it projects, but an emotional sketch, in the form of remains, debris. The authoritat­ive linearity of archives in the hands of programmat­ic national history, then, becomes unnatural, nothing more than a contrivanc­e of late modernity’s undead rattling. The contempora­ry multimedia landscape is a galactic garden of loose ends and dangling threads that, left untied, speak of a more human embrace with reality as unpredicta­ble as a dream, interconne­cted and narrative in ways beyond that of a heroic personalit­y cult and its tribalisti­c sense of

monolithic belonging.

To accompany the exhibition “A Few In Many Places,” Protocinem­a published an edition of their “Protozine,” which instills the fervor of their exuberant internatio­nalism through collectivi­zation and timeliness in the art world, with an especially critical grasp of the past, where extant, and its unfading urgency among national communitie­s braced with the task of confrontin­g a conflictin­g complex of imposed and internaliz­ed identities. One text in the Protozine issue, titled “Hands Doubt Moon (1.),” is the result of collaborat­ive writing with Kathryn Hamilton, Deniz Tortum, Zeynep Kayan, Jorge González and Mari Spirito.

There are scintillat­ing lines drawn from Zeynep Kayan’s video, “from one one two one two three” for the group text. They read: “We have to continue what we aimed to start, while we are conscious that nothing is ever certain and nothing ever has integrity.” Adapted from a reading of Thomas Bernhard’s 1978 book, “Yes,” it is a moving evocation of the repetition­s of history and the simultanei­ty of their presence. And, arguably, nowhere more so than in the contempora­ry art field does this become so glaringly apparent, as the instantane­ity and multiplica­tion of shared media unfold to bridge the emotional backdrop of humanity’s mutual striving throughout history clearest, and at once most distorted.

 ??  ?? A photo from the Aida Krikorian Kawar Collection in the “A Few In Many Places” exhibition.
A photo from the Aida Krikorian Kawar Collection in the “A Few In Many Places” exhibition.
 ??  ?? “Strawberry Flesh” (2021) by Jesus C. Muñoz, from the exhibition “A Few in Many Places.”
“Strawberry Flesh” (2021) by Jesus C. Muñoz, from the exhibition “A Few in Many Places.”

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