12 Mar. 2015
→ 04.04.15

18h00 – 19h00
événement

Territories of Assembly at Artsonje Center, Seoul and LiveInYourHead, Genève

→ LiveInYourHead

Territories of Assembly

Karim Bel Kacem
Denise Bertschi
Ciel Grommen
Carol Lee
Yeji Lee
Tali Serruya
Seyoung Yoon

13.03 – 04.04.2015

Vernissage le 12 mars dès 18h
Exposition du 13 mars au 4 avril

A proposal by Markus Miessen in the framework of  the program Work.Master

En collaboration avec Artsonje Center (Séoul)

Derived from individual and group observations of and around the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), Territories of Assembly investigates and interrogates some of the pressing issues around the marginal yet geopolitical sandwich territory that is known the DMZ. Subjects such as Division, Seclusion and Exception are at stake here and ? in regard to a range of borders that have been brought about due to friction and conflict created through historical, political, economic, and social variables ? are thereby mobilizing the significance of (in)visible borderlines and the subsequent phenomena that they inevitably cause.

The work of the Geneva-based, multi-national research team has been developed across formats in a post-disciplinary manner, speculating on the potential for outside commentary and speculations as a means of critical reflection as well as prospective techniques unearthing the various connections between past, present and future. The exhibition investigates the spatial as well as socio-political realities and frictions of and around both the physical and psychological geography of the DMZ. As a joint effort and collaboration between Artsonje Center (Seoul) and the Haute École d’Art et de Design (Geneva), the project contributes to an ongoing discussion between a group of international artists and intellectuals.

Based on a methodology of agonistic practice of observation that culminates in a series of individual as well as group ?products?, these multiple interventions form the basis of a series of investigations that aim to open up a new terrain that addresses the long-term societal trajectories of the latent North/South conflict.