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The 7th Sinop Biennial: Here and Where / A Politics of Location

7th Sinop Biennial

The 7th Sinop Biennial
Here and Where / A Politics of Location

August 15–September 20, 2019

Processes, growing exhibition in Sinop: August 15–September 6
Sinop Hal, Kaleyazısı Mahallesi, Azaklıoğlu Sk. 2-13, 57000 Sinop, Turkey
Processes, archival exhibition in Istanbul: September 12–20
Tophane-i Amire Istanbul, Kılıçali Paşa Mh., 34433 Beyoğlu/Istanbul, Turkey

The Sinop Biennial announces the conceptual framework for the 7th edition Here and Where, curated by Asli Serbest and Mona Mahall, looking at the potentials of a politics of location.

Contributors: Mobile Albania, The Dynamic Archive, Mehtap Baydu, Banu Cennetoğlu, Fulya Erdemci, Annika Eriksson, Ana Filipovic, Marina Fokidis, Kevser Güler, Pauline Curnier Jardin, Angela Melitopoulos, Şener Özmen, theater.prekariat, Hito Steyerl, Johannes Vogel, Sheri Wills, Brian Kuan Wood, and others to be announced soon.

The 7th Sinop Biennial is based on situated practices and collaborative processes. It finds a starting point at the former market place Hal in the center of Sinop, the northernmost coastal city of Turkey, to explore various localities in the Anatolian Black Sea region. Moving on collective routes, the aim is to gather diverse histories, experiences, and artistic inquiries in situ: in the local geo- and socio-political realities of the Black Sea’s archival and colonized landforms and body of water. They pass over nation states and contain fragments from the past and future; the memory of a Russian spy whale from Cold War times, as well as perfectly intact ancient ships deep down in the dark sea together with tons of plastics. They are the site of particular relations and rites, of acts of political resistance and historical persistence; of changing infrastructures and movements from those who left and those who arrived—deliberately or not.

Modifying the idiom “here and there,” the title Here and Where refers to a place at the border of our perception, excluded from our dominant narratives. Yet, a place, where political and social realities together with a history of material, linguistic, and mythological exchange shape a lived present. It implies a politics of location. Formulated by the feminist poet Adrienne Rich (1929–2012), a politics of location aims to reconnect thinking and speaking with a situated experience, a particularity, a geography, a body. The politics of location does not however take locality as the site of foundational knowledge; rather, it understands location as the place of experienced connections and intersections—through routes rather than roots. In that, the local begins, not with a bounded site but with historical contact, in relations and translations, and by displacements. The local takes place as an itinerary, a series of encounters, contacts, and conflicts, on routes that enable and discipline the movement of beings and things.

Routes to follow are: the Danube downstream into the Black Sea, Diogenes’ mythical travel from his hometown Sinop to Athens, the beltway connecting the six neighbors around the coast, the flows of oil, trash, data, swarms and pheromones from the Bosporus; to follow some of these routes might help us understand location as the relationship between things and beings.

While the biennial establishes contact zones on routes that are traversed by things and beings, it is concerned with the potentials of discrepant movement, with tactics of translation and transgression, with encounters as political and aesthetic impulse. It aims to initiate active contacts and processes, establish collective practices between residents, guests, and (sub)urban region; it aims at art being produced rather than placed there. Through transversal processes of conversation, translation and improvisation the biennial engages in questions of possible other and emancipated ways of connecting to things and beings, of recognizing and collectively producing alternative forms of knowledge with guests, the local environment and its inhabitants (animals, humans, plants, technology).

To move these forms of knowledge from the Black Sea Coast to Istanbul and other places, we will produce an open and nomadic archive. There, the situated practices and collaborative processes will be continued and shared.

The Biennial
Building on its long-term micro-political and emancipatory efforts the Sinop Biennial, founded and directed by Melih Görgün, in co-operation with international curators, takes a contextual and collective approach to their events, thematic and discursive direction. It fosters investigations into various forms of engagement through local movements, initiatives from the civic society and non-governmental politics.

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