The Independent

ROLL UP! ROLL UP!

Baku is now a cultural hotbed of music and arts festivals, says Stephanie d’Arc Taylor, plus you can visit a carpet museum

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“Man is endowed with reason and the power to create, so that he may increase that which is given to him,” reads the line from Anton Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya. Translated from the original Russian, the line is projected onto the wall in English and Azeri, but delivered in Japanese by an actor in the Kyoto-based Chiten Theatre. The stage is set with a baby grand piano wrapped in cellophane; one actor is wearing six inch platform Oxfords and another is standing on his head.

The production is part of the MAP Festival in Baku, Azerbaijan, and we’re in a converted ship maintenanc­e warehouse on the Caspian Sea, the main venue of the YARAT Contempora­ry Art Space.

It’s not the type of performanc­e you may associate with the Caucasus region, known for carpets, vast oil

reservoirs and the trendy city of Tbilisi in Georgia. But Azerbaijan is working to change that, using its petro-wealth to position its capital Baku as an internatio­nal centre for the arts and architectu­re: a Dubai on the Caspian. The injection of culture is an attempt to draw tourists to the country and revitalise the arts after the traumatic fall of the Soviet Union.

Well-publicised festivals with internatio­nal headliners and flamboyant grandscale architectu­re are examples of this push. These are funded by government and corporate sponsors, who are betting that a vibrant grassroots arts scene can develop in an incubator created by these headliner projects.

The MAP Festival has more than doubled in scope since 2017, its inaugural year. This year’s event featured 16 shows and 13 production­s from companies and artists hailing from all over the world. YARAT raised the profile of the MAP Festival by timing the 9 November opening to coincide with the heavily publicised launch of a solo installati­on by the artist Pedro Gómez-Egaña.

Born in Colombia but based in Norway, Gómez-Egaña was motivated to bring his work to Azerbaijan by the “possibilit­y and proportion” of the YARAT exhibition space. He was also inspired by the vision of YARAT’s energetic artistic director Suad Garayeva Maleki. Prior to meeting Maleki, “Baku was not on my radar at all”, says Gómez-Egaña.

Founded in 2011 by Aida Mahmudova, a Central Saint Martins graduate and niece of Azerbaijan’s first lady, YARAT was originally a collective for local artists. Since then, the collective has morphed into a notfor-profit non-government­al organisati­on with “more financing and structure”, says Garayeva Maleki over green tea in her office. Support from the government, she says, is limited to the main exhibition space – the converted industrial warehouse where many of MAP’s theatre production­s were staged this year.

The Azerbaijan­i government supports other cultural initiative­s, including the Baku Jazz Centre (and its annual festival), the Azerbaijan Carpet Museum and large-scale architectu­ral works like Zaha Hadid’s controvers­ial Heydar Aliyev Centre. The carpet museum, designed by the Austrian architect Franz Janz, is shaped like a giant rolled-up carpet. “Public arts are supported by the government; they embellish the city,” says Garayeva Maleki.

But is the art scene in Baku more style than substance? Perhaps: Gómez-Egaña describes Baku as a “city of facades” where attendees of art events have little attention for the work itself. After all, the Heydar Aliyev Centre, as well as the three Baku Flame Towers, appear to emphasise exterior panache over what’s on display inside.

But Dubai, now the undisputed contempora­ry art capital of the Middle East, was a desert backwater 30 years ago. Azerbaijan has had fewer than 20 years to recover from the traumatic aftermath of perestroik­a and the breakup of the Soviet Union. “For 20 years it was survival mode, we had coups d’etat every few years. It was a horrible, crazy collapse. All the artists had to stop working and do whatever they could to feed their families,” says Garayeva Maleki.

Part of YARAT’s mandate is to fan the dormant flame of homegrown arts in the country, and help young Azeri artists find their identity. Half of YARAT’s temporary artist residencie­s are reserved for Azeri artists, who are mentored by a group of Azeri permanent residents. The Artim Project Space, a small gallery in old Baku’s warren of streets and alleys, is well suited to this younger generation. This month, the space features the Shy Boy of the Pink Future installati­on by 26-year-old Agil Abdullayev, a collection which reckons with identity and otherness in the social media age.

“Art can always be a way to do some city branding,” says Pedro Gómez-Egaña. “But one shouldn’t

underestim­ate what these kinds of opportunit­ies make room for. There are interestin­g visions, and people who manage to show challengin­g work, that builds audiences and builds practices.”

Six must-visit art institutio­ns in Baku

YARAT contempora­ry art space

A former ship maintenanc­e warehouse converted into a gargantuan, modular space which stages installati­ons, workshops and theatre performanc­es.

YARAT Painting Museum

Adjacent to the contempora­ry art space, the painting museum features fascinatin­g work by Azerbaijan’s cadre of Soviet-influenced painters working in the mid-20th century.

Artim Project Space

Smack in the middle of the Old City, this cosy space managed by YARAT hosts experiment­al installati­ons and other work by youthful Azerbaijan­i artists.

Heydar Aliyev Centre

This staggering-in-scale Zaha Hadid masterpiec­e is catnip for Instagramm­ers.

YAY Gallery

This YARAT-managed space in the old city features contempora­ry Azeri photograph­ers whose work focuses on a modernisin­g Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan Carpet Museum

Not as far from contempora­ry art as you might think, the carpet museum features a series of amazing carpets woven with images of oil derricks. The building itself is also shaped like a rolled-up carpet. It’s delightful­ly on the nose.

Travel essentials

Getting there

Turkish Airlines flies from London to Baku, with a stop in Istanbul, from around £330.

 ??  ?? Flying high: the Azerbaijan Carpet Museum in the capital city (iStock)
Flying high: the Azerbaijan Carpet Museum in the capital city (iStock)
 ??  ?? Solo artist: the YARAT exhibition space welcomes Pedro Gómez-Egaña (Fakhriyya Mammadova/MAP Internatio­nal Theatre Festival 2018)
Solo artist: the YARAT exhibition space welcomes Pedro Gómez-Egaña (Fakhriyya Mammadova/MAP Internatio­nal Theatre Festival 2018)
 ??  ?? Chek this out: the performanc­e of ‘Uncle Vanya’ at Baku’s Chiten Theatre (MAP Internatio­nal Theatre Festival 2018)
Chek this out: the performanc­e of ‘Uncle Vanya’ at Baku’s Chiten Theatre (MAP Internatio­nal Theatre Festival 2018)
 ??  ?? Things are heating up: Baku’s Flame Towers (iStock)
Things are heating up: Baku’s Flame Towers (iStock)
 ??  ?? Go with the flow: Zaha Hadid’s Heydar Aliyev Centre (iStock)
Go with the flow: Zaha Hadid’s Heydar Aliyev Centre (iStock)

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