Rotterdam Dialogues: The Artists

Sympoium

16 Apr 2009
18 Apr 2009

Following The Critics, held in October 2008, and The Curators in early March 2009, the three-part symposium series will now be concluded with Rotterdam Dialogues: The Artists on 16, 17, 18 April 2009.

Over the course of six months, Witte de With has been presenting a program of three symposia, titled Rotterdam Dialogues: Critics, Curators, Artists. These symposia are structured to establish a lively platform for debate and exchange, creating space for a range of voices and opinions, admittedly within a Western framework as this is our area of expertise. The program itself is comprised of a variety of formats: lectures, panel discussions, interviews and dialogues, all designed to encourage lively audience participation.
The symposia explore the practice of three of the central protagonists of the contemporary art world: the critic, the curator and the artist.

What does it mean to work as an artist today? Usually the results of artistic practice are more visible than the processes leading towards the exhibition of artworks or the conditions and conventions underlying production. From market forces, through politics, fashions, histories and other social forces to private or personal urgencies, artists negotiate several stakes. With this symposium program we strive to open up these foundational layers, and to reveal their influences on artistic practice. With our selection of speakers, we aim to put a wide range of faces to the title of the artist. Invited guests hail from different generations, work in various disciplines, often fulfilling hybrid roles - artist /curator /critic /teacher - with varying degrees of visibility in the international art world.

The speakers:

AES+F, Danai Anesiadou, Yael Bartana, Bik van der Pol, Guillaume Bijl, Marc Bijl, Pierre Bismuth, Monica Bonvicini, Petr Bystrov, Jota Castro, Banu Cennetoglu, Spartacus Chetwynd, Jan De Cock, Plamen Dejanoff, Simon Denny, Doug Fishbone, Rainer Ganahl, Kendell Geers, Thierry Geoffroy, Liam Gillick, Piero Golia, Nicoline van Harskamp, Jeanne van Heeswijk, Carsten Höller, Richard Hutten, Runa Islam, Luis Jacob, Henrik Plenge Jacobsen, Gabriel Kuri, Matthieu Laurette, Tim Lee, Gabriel Lester, Erik van Lieshout, Oswaldo Macia, Goshka Macuga, Josephine Meckseper, Sarah Morris, Deimantas Narkevicius, Olaf Nicolai, Wendelien van Oldenborgh, Ulrike Ottinger, Phillipe Parreno, Judy Radul, Lili Reynaud Dewar, Jimmy Robert, Willem de Rooij, Martha Rosler, Santiago Sierra, Nedko Solakov, Frances Stark, Superflex, An Te Liu, Luc Tuymans, Piotr Uklanski, Anton Vidokle, Barbara Visser, Jeff Wall, Klaus Weber, Eyal Weizman, Christopher Williams, Jordan Wolfson. (program is subject to change)

Topics

Each day has an overarching theme, which is then subdivided into more precise topics and questions provoking debate:
Thursday – Expectations looks not only at the personal expectations of individual artists, but also at those of audiences and of other agents involved in the artistic practice.
Friday – Positions focuses on day to day artistic choices, often unintentional, also strategies for entering and maintaining networks and the importance of building a reputation.
Saturday – Contexts explores the general conditions and ideas underlying the profession, the particular influences that shape an individual oeuvre, and the increasingly global framework of art production, discourse and distribution.

Publication

The three-part program of Rotterdam Dialogues will culminate in a three-part book, co-edited by the symposia organizers, together with Monika Szewczyk, head of publications at Witte de With. The book serves as an extra site of recollection and further reflection on the proceedings of the three conferences, taking up the conversational form of the symposia. Also the fruits of the symposium workshops will be presented in three special sections of the book. The publication is expected in the Autumn of 2009.

Masterclass

On Sunday April 19, from 2 – 5 p.m. a masterclass will be given for young artists and postgraduate students by Ulrike Ottinger. Ulrike Ottinger has been a unique and provocative voice in German cinema and art since her debut in the early 70s. Over the past 40 years, she has directed over 20 films, including feature-length fictions and experimental documentaries. She has also worked as a theatre director and ethnographer: her photographs have been exhibited in numerous venues and she has published several books.
If you whish to participate, please email reservations@wdw.nl with 'masterclass Ottinger' as the subject header of your email. Numbers are limited.

Workshop

From Wednesday 15 to Saturday 18 April, Vancouver-based artist Judy Radul will give a hands-on workshop on ' the artist's talk', taking the symposium program as a point of departure for studying this phenomenon in depth. As the belief that artists can fully comprehend and describe the meaning of their own work is thoroughly critiqued, what does it mean for artists to talk about their work? Judy Radul's practice involves the consideration of the forms and conditions of video, language and performance, live actions and audio. Her critical writing has been widely published.
This is a closed workshop, with selected participants. Co-ordinated by Belinda Hak. More information: info@wdw.nl.

Extra events

Friday April 17, 11:00 – 11:15 a.m.
Critical Run
organized by Thierry Geoffroy
Starting location Witte de With front door. (TBC)

Saturday April 18, from 10:00 p.m. to midnight
Final Act
A performative happening, as suitable ending for the symposium, in which the talks and discussions are compensated with live performances, presentations and film screenings by and in the presence of the invited speakers. Location: Witte de With. Final program to be announced.
€ 5 at the door / free with symposium ticket.

Practical information en reservations: www.wdw.nl