1. Research Congresses
          Congress

          2nd FORMER WEST Research Congress

          4–6 November 2010

          Istanbul Technical University (TR)

          1. About
          2. Program
          3. Video
      1. Thursday 4 November 2010

        Positing the Horizon in Art, Philosophy, and Politics

        On its first day, the Congress explores the notion of the horizon in contemporary art and critical theory. Taking as our starting point the idea that the horizon is what frames our sense of direction of possibility and impossibility, the contributors speculate along two lines of orientation. On the one hand, the question of how and where the horizon must be situated in order to be effectual is considered. On the other, the issue of the horizon as an image is explored, in order to connect political imaginaries and artistic production. In this sense, the horizon is produced in the intersection between aesthetics and politics.

        Moderator: Boris Buden (cultural critic and writer, Berlin)

        13.00–13.15
        Welcome
        Maria Hlavajova and Fulya Erdemci

        13.15–13.45
        Opening Remarks
        Maria Hlavajova

        13.45–14.00
        Introduction 
        Boris Buden

        14.00–14.40
        Lecture
        Expecting the Unexpected: Once more on the “Horizon of Expectations”

        15.15–15.55
        Lecture
        Projects in the Absence of Signposts
        16.05–16.45
        Lecture
        Rear view Vision: History Enthusiasm and History Anxiety 
        17.15–17.55
        Lecture
        Vectors of the Possible: Art between Spaces of Experience and Horizons of Expectation 

        18.05–19.30
        Discussion
        Julie Ault, Çağlar Keyder, Peter Osborne, and Simon Sheikh

        Reviewer: Erden Kosova
      2. Friday 5 November 2010

        Horizontality Enacted

        Whereas the metaphor of a horizon suggests an expansive outlook and a field of possibilities, the notion of horizontality is associated with being on a single plane with little sense of orientation. Is horizontality a form of spatial production driven by the principle of radical equality? How might this shift our understanding of the public and the commons? Contributors examine how various geographies of horizontality, both conceptually and in practice, are played out in urban forms, exhibition making, institutions and social organization. The enactment of horizontality is seen as the link between the “space of experience” and the “horizon of expectation.”

        Moderator: Vivian Rehberg (art historian and critic, FORMER WEST research curator, Paris/Utrecht)

        10.00–10.15
        Introduction
        Fulya Erdemci 

        10.15–10.55
        Lecture
        The Exhibition as an Archive

        11.05–11.45
        Lecture 
        Practicing Art. Imagining Politics 
        12.15–12.55
        Lecture
        The Communist Horizon 
        13.05–14.30
        Discussion
        Beatriz Colomina, Jodi Dean, and Shuddhabrata Sengupta

        16.00–17.30
        Conversation
        Bülent Diken and Wouter Vanstiphout 

        17.30–19.00
        Conversation
        Vasif Kortun and Lisette Lagnado

      3. Saturday 6 November 2010

        Reclaiming a Horizon—Art as Political Imagination

        How are new horizons imagined, speculated upon, visualized, and materialized through contemporary art? This question concerns not just the historical and conceptual connections (and divisions) that have long existed between aesthetics and politics, but also the political tendencies that can be found in artistic production after 1989. How is a particular kind of politics of representation and representation of politics articulated in contemporary artistic production, art theory, curatorial work, and through the production and dissemination of cultural discourses more generally? And how does this connect to the aesthetic dimension of contemporary politics? The task is not only to look at the relationship between art and politics, but to see art as political imagination.

        Moderator: TJ Demos (art historian and critic, London)

        10.00–10.15
        Introduction
        TJ Demos

        10.15–10.55
        Lecture
        In Free Fall: A Thought Experiment

        11.05–11.45
        Lecture
        Aesthetic Horizons

        12.15–12.55
        Lecture
        On Horizons and Discourse
        Ernesto Laclau

        13.05–14.30
        Discussion
        Ernesto Laclau, Gerald Raunig, and Hito Steyerl

        16.00–17.30
        Conversation
        Robert Sember and Dmitry Vilensky 

        17.30–18.00
        Wrap up and Conclusions
        Maria Hlavajova and Simon Sheikh

        Reviewer: Pelin Tan (sociologist and art historian, Istanbul)
      4. The Registration Desk for the 2nd FORMER WEST Research Congress opens on Thursday 4 November at 12.00 (an hour before the program starts.)

        Venue: İstanbul Technical University, Architecture Faculty, Taşkışla CAMPus,(Taksim) Room 109
        Transport: it is a 10 minute walk from Metro station TAKSIM to the Taşkışla CAMPus.
        Language: English (simultaneous translation into Turkish is provided).
        Admission: free (registration is required).