Category: Departments

19.02.2020 — 29.03.2020

Laura Kuusk. Dear Algorithm,

As our lives are more and more digitally controlled, our bodies’ relationship to the environment has also changed in profound ways. Laura Kuusk’s solo exhibition “Dear Algorithm,” curated by Niekolaas Johannes Lekkerkerk, explores the productive tension between our desire to adapt and survive on the one hand, and our resistance to the logic of codes, on the other. 

The exhibition will be open from February 20 at the Tallinn Art Hall Gallery. 

The exhibition Dear Algorithm, will be staged as a choreography of everyday movements: the window display becomes a shop front for hybrid-organic clothing sculptures, the gallery attendant simultaneously serves as perception manager, a library section will give further instructions on subverting social expectations, conditioning principles and behavioral patterns, a video installation presents three nonhuman actors that aim to grapple with and relate to human working environments, and lastly one may encounter some other-than-human entities that are in no one’s pockets.

The exhibition opening will take place on Wednesday, February 19th, at 18:00 and the show will remain open until March 29th.

On 27. February we invite you to experience the performance Catch Error Throw Exception by Laura Cemin that reflects upon the role of computational thinking and algorithms in our daily life. As a supplement to the exhibition, the artist invites viewers to visit reading sessions and kombucha tastings that will take place in the library section.

Laura Kuusk lives and works in Tallinn. Kuusk mainly uses photography, video and installation in her artistic practice. Most of her works have to do with recycling anthropological visual (found) materials. Kuusk is interested in the decision-making mechanisms within the collective consciousness. Over the last years, she has worked with the experience of the human body in the surrounding environment — in homes, in clothes, in relation to technology. In her work, Kuusk experiments with the visual traces of bodily experiences and their connection to larger socio-political processes. She studied at the Annecy Higher Art School (DSRA, 2014), the Estonian Academy of Arts (MA in Photography, 2008), and Tartu University (BA in Semiotics and Cultural Theory, 2005). Kuusk is a member of the ARS art factory in Tallinn (since 2015) and was a member of the art center OUI in Grenoble (2009-2015).

Niekolaas Johannes Lekkerkerk works as a curator and writer for The Office for Curating and is director of A Tale of a Tub, a not-for-profit art space in Rotterdam. Central to Lekkerkerk’s work are social and political discourses revolving around daily living and working practices, cultural norms, and ideologies. He particularly focuses on debates concerning the Anthropocene, ecology and climate, post-humanism, and the increasing entanglement between nature and culture. Lekkerkerk recently published The Standard Book of Noun-Verb Exhibition Grammar (Onomatopee, 2018) that analyses exhibition as an ecological assemblage. In 2012, he received the inaugural Demergon Curatorial Award, and in 2014 he was the beneficiary winner of the Akbank Sanat International Curator Competition.

Art Hall Gallery (Vabaduse väljak 6) is open Wednesday till Sunday 12–7pm. Entrance is free.

The Art Hall Foundation fund is a contemporary art establishment that presents exhibitions in three galleries on the central square of Tallinn – at Tallinn Art Hall and nearby at Tallinn City Gallery and the Art Hall Gallery. 

Posted by Mart Vainre — Permalink

Laura Kuusk. Dear Algorithm,

Wednesday 19 February, 2020 — Sunday 29 March, 2020

As our lives are more and more digitally controlled, our bodies’ relationship to the environment has also changed in profound ways. Laura Kuusk’s solo exhibition “Dear Algorithm,” curated by Niekolaas Johannes Lekkerkerk, explores the productive tension between our desire to adapt and survive on the one hand, and our resistance to the logic of codes, on the other. 

The exhibition will be open from February 20 at the Tallinn Art Hall Gallery. 

The exhibition Dear Algorithm, will be staged as a choreography of everyday movements: the window display becomes a shop front for hybrid-organic clothing sculptures, the gallery attendant simultaneously serves as perception manager, a library section will give further instructions on subverting social expectations, conditioning principles and behavioral patterns, a video installation presents three nonhuman actors that aim to grapple with and relate to human working environments, and lastly one may encounter some other-than-human entities that are in no one’s pockets.

The exhibition opening will take place on Wednesday, February 19th, at 18:00 and the show will remain open until March 29th.

On 27. February we invite you to experience the performance Catch Error Throw Exception by Laura Cemin that reflects upon the role of computational thinking and algorithms in our daily life. As a supplement to the exhibition, the artist invites viewers to visit reading sessions and kombucha tastings that will take place in the library section.

Laura Kuusk lives and works in Tallinn. Kuusk mainly uses photography, video and installation in her artistic practice. Most of her works have to do with recycling anthropological visual (found) materials. Kuusk is interested in the decision-making mechanisms within the collective consciousness. Over the last years, she has worked with the experience of the human body in the surrounding environment — in homes, in clothes, in relation to technology. In her work, Kuusk experiments with the visual traces of bodily experiences and their connection to larger socio-political processes. She studied at the Annecy Higher Art School (DSRA, 2014), the Estonian Academy of Arts (MA in Photography, 2008), and Tartu University (BA in Semiotics and Cultural Theory, 2005). Kuusk is a member of the ARS art factory in Tallinn (since 2015) and was a member of the art center OUI in Grenoble (2009-2015).

Niekolaas Johannes Lekkerkerk works as a curator and writer for The Office for Curating and is director of A Tale of a Tub, a not-for-profit art space in Rotterdam. Central to Lekkerkerk’s work are social and political discourses revolving around daily living and working practices, cultural norms, and ideologies. He particularly focuses on debates concerning the Anthropocene, ecology and climate, post-humanism, and the increasing entanglement between nature and culture. Lekkerkerk recently published The Standard Book of Noun-Verb Exhibition Grammar (Onomatopee, 2018) that analyses exhibition as an ecological assemblage. In 2012, he received the inaugural Demergon Curatorial Award, and in 2014 he was the beneficiary winner of the Akbank Sanat International Curator Competition.

Art Hall Gallery (Vabaduse väljak 6) is open Wednesday till Sunday 12–7pm. Entrance is free.

The Art Hall Foundation fund is a contemporary art establishment that presents exhibitions in three galleries on the central square of Tallinn – at Tallinn Art Hall and nearby at Tallinn City Gallery and the Art Hall Gallery. 

Posted by Mart Vainre — Permalink

21.02.2020

Atom-Boy of Estonian Animation: Elbert Tuganov 100

The centenary of Elbert Tuganov marks the beginning of a year of celebration for Estonian animation, with a series of screenings in Tallinn and Tartu, and a symposium on the value of our animation heritage today.

Mait Laas recalls his behind the scenes personal and lively contact with the maestro in his presentation “Picturesque Sound Bites of Tuganov as a Creator”. The presentation is illustrated with specially digitized thematic historical footage. The discussion will be led by Jaak Lõhmus. Together with animation filmmakers, he will go over Tuganov’s role as a pioneer in Estonian animation. They will also give context to Tuganov’s work and creative heritage in the world today.

Elbert Tuganov was Estonia’s first professional animator, screenwriter, and director. He introduced a new method to Estonian culture – professional animation. Sounds, visual arts, and technology are blended together into a coherent whole by movement that creates a poetic world. The resulting magic touches the human soul and is sometimes childishly joyous (Krõll, 1972), but if necessary observes the world with an adult-like seriousness (Park, 1966). The main theme of most of Elbert Tuganov’s films is the relationship between man and machine or staying human in our society.

Straightforward and determined Elbert Tuganov’s heartfelt and experimental acumen has evolved into a 60-year tradition of animation. This has been appreciated in high culture and received praise and awards at international film festivals, but is equally welcome among children watching at home.

Due to the art of cinema, Elbert Tuganov’s spirit comes to life again and again – even a hundred years later. Let’s share this miracle!

Elbert Tuganov’s Centenary Week is the first event in a longer animation heritage program. On October 13, 2020, we will celebrate the 95th anniversary of Heino Pars, next year on March 20, 2021, Rein Raamat will celebrate his 90th birthday and on June 14, 2021, Eesti Joonisfilm will celebrate its 50th anniversary.

With the events of the jubilee year, we focus on individual authors and artists, as well as the wider field of animation; which provides an opportunity for debates and showcases the diverse historical aspects of animation.

Posted by Mari Kivi — Permalink

Atom-Boy of Estonian Animation: Elbert Tuganov 100

Friday 21 February, 2020

The centenary of Elbert Tuganov marks the beginning of a year of celebration for Estonian animation, with a series of screenings in Tallinn and Tartu, and a symposium on the value of our animation heritage today.

Mait Laas recalls his behind the scenes personal and lively contact with the maestro in his presentation “Picturesque Sound Bites of Tuganov as a Creator”. The presentation is illustrated with specially digitized thematic historical footage. The discussion will be led by Jaak Lõhmus. Together with animation filmmakers, he will go over Tuganov’s role as a pioneer in Estonian animation. They will also give context to Tuganov’s work and creative heritage in the world today.

Elbert Tuganov was Estonia’s first professional animator, screenwriter, and director. He introduced a new method to Estonian culture – professional animation. Sounds, visual arts, and technology are blended together into a coherent whole by movement that creates a poetic world. The resulting magic touches the human soul and is sometimes childishly joyous (Krõll, 1972), but if necessary observes the world with an adult-like seriousness (Park, 1966). The main theme of most of Elbert Tuganov’s films is the relationship between man and machine or staying human in our society.

Straightforward and determined Elbert Tuganov’s heartfelt and experimental acumen has evolved into a 60-year tradition of animation. This has been appreciated in high culture and received praise and awards at international film festivals, but is equally welcome among children watching at home.

Due to the art of cinema, Elbert Tuganov’s spirit comes to life again and again – even a hundred years later. Let’s share this miracle!

Elbert Tuganov’s Centenary Week is the first event in a longer animation heritage program. On October 13, 2020, we will celebrate the 95th anniversary of Heino Pars, next year on March 20, 2021, Rein Raamat will celebrate his 90th birthday and on June 14, 2021, Eesti Joonisfilm will celebrate its 50th anniversary.

With the events of the jubilee year, we focus on individual authors and artists, as well as the wider field of animation; which provides an opportunity for debates and showcases the diverse historical aspects of animation.

Posted by Mari Kivi — Permalink

11.02.2020 — 10.03.2020

Open call of Showcase Gallery!

Call for applications: Showcase Gallery of the Department of Photography at the Estonian Academy of Arts is looking for projects to showcase from April 2020 until October 2020. Current students of the Estonian Academy of Arts are welcome to apply. The application deadline is March 10th, 2020. The Projects will be chosen by jury and the results will be announced on 13th of March.

The application must contain:

  • A description of the project. Visual materials if possible.
  • The artist’s portfolio or examples of previous works.

The outer dimensions of the Showcase Gallery: W 580 x H 755 x S 160 mm.

The internal dimensions are (approximately): W 560 x H 740 x S 140 mm.

We are accepting projects according to the dimensions of the showcase.

Please send the application to cloe.jancis@artun.ee

Posted by Cloe Jancis — Permalink

Open call of Showcase Gallery!

Tuesday 11 February, 2020 — Tuesday 10 March, 2020

Call for applications: Showcase Gallery of the Department of Photography at the Estonian Academy of Arts is looking for projects to showcase from April 2020 until October 2020. Current students of the Estonian Academy of Arts are welcome to apply. The application deadline is March 10th, 2020. The Projects will be chosen by jury and the results will be announced on 13th of March.

The application must contain:

  • A description of the project. Visual materials if possible.
  • The artist’s portfolio or examples of previous works.

The outer dimensions of the Showcase Gallery: W 580 x H 755 x S 160 mm.

The internal dimensions are (approximately): W 560 x H 740 x S 140 mm.

We are accepting projects according to the dimensions of the showcase.

Please send the application to cloe.jancis@artun.ee

Posted by Cloe Jancis — Permalink

13.02.2020

Open lecture on architecture: Secretary

The War of the Ants: Architectures of the MTV Generation

The EKA Faculty of Architecture Open Lecture Series spring semester will kick off on Thursday 13 February with Stockholm-based architecture practice Secretary which consists of architects Karin Matz and Rutger Sjögrim and theorist/urban planner Helen Runting. In a present where architecture will have to do without stable categories, clear periodizations, and an indisputable sense of purpose, architects have to multi-task, operating across a range of different registers simultaneously. In their lecture in Tallinn, Secretary will use their own work with interior design, video and spatial installation, research and urban design in order to self-critically reflect on the obsessions, compulsions, ambitions, and failures of a generation of architects that came of age in a world on the cusp of digitalization. How could architectural design and theory help us to understand and visualize our data-drenched present? How could we cut through all the white noise?

Architecture practice Secretary is built on a shared interest in the capacity of architecture to facilitate a dignified life at the scale of the population. Secretary aims to produce buildings, exhibitions, research studies, and megastructures that give form to the late welfare state in the 21st century.

The Faculty of Architecture of the Estonian Academy of Arts has curated the Open Lectures on Architecture series since 2012 – each year, a dozen architects, urbanists, both practicing as well as academics, introduce their work and field of research to the audience in Tallinn. All lectures are in English, free and open to everyone.

The series is funded by the Estonian Cultural Endowment.

Curators: Sille Pihlak, Johan Tali

www.avatudloengud.ee
www.facebook.com/EKAarhitektuur/

More info:
E-mail: arhitektuur@artun.ee
Tel. +372 642 0071

Posted by Kadi Karine — Permalink

Open lecture on architecture: Secretary

Thursday 13 February, 2020

The War of the Ants: Architectures of the MTV Generation

The EKA Faculty of Architecture Open Lecture Series spring semester will kick off on Thursday 13 February with Stockholm-based architecture practice Secretary which consists of architects Karin Matz and Rutger Sjögrim and theorist/urban planner Helen Runting. In a present where architecture will have to do without stable categories, clear periodizations, and an indisputable sense of purpose, architects have to multi-task, operating across a range of different registers simultaneously. In their lecture in Tallinn, Secretary will use their own work with interior design, video and spatial installation, research and urban design in order to self-critically reflect on the obsessions, compulsions, ambitions, and failures of a generation of architects that came of age in a world on the cusp of digitalization. How could architectural design and theory help us to understand and visualize our data-drenched present? How could we cut through all the white noise?

Architecture practice Secretary is built on a shared interest in the capacity of architecture to facilitate a dignified life at the scale of the population. Secretary aims to produce buildings, exhibitions, research studies, and megastructures that give form to the late welfare state in the 21st century.

The Faculty of Architecture of the Estonian Academy of Arts has curated the Open Lectures on Architecture series since 2012 – each year, a dozen architects, urbanists, both practicing as well as academics, introduce their work and field of research to the audience in Tallinn. All lectures are in English, free and open to everyone.

The series is funded by the Estonian Cultural Endowment.

Curators: Sille Pihlak, Johan Tali

www.avatudloengud.ee
www.facebook.com/EKAarhitektuur/

More info:
E-mail: arhitektuur@artun.ee
Tel. +372 642 0071

Posted by Kadi Karine — Permalink

11.02.2020 — 07.03.2020

“Pretence” 11.02.–07.03.2020

Join us for the opening of the exhibition “Pretence” by Brenda Purtsak and Eero Alev on Tuesday, February 11 at 6 PM. The exhibition is curated by Holger Loodus.

With this exhibition, two young painters, Brenda Purtsak and Eero Alev portray a person through body and space. Right at the start of the project, the artists reached an agreement that they would not show the face of the person being portrayed. The challenge is to create tension – whether the viewer is able to follow the mystery put together by Purtsak and Alev. We get to know that the person being portrayed is a real human with his or her virtues and flaws. He or she has given artists permission to experiment, allowed them close and opened himself or herself up, as it is generally usual in a portrayal.
The viewers’ task is to be a detective and rebuild the whole from the pieces, so they invited to participate in the Hitchcock-like mystery of painting. The exhibition will remain open until March 7.

Brenda Purtsak (b. 1994) and Eero Alev (b. 1983) are studying painting at the Estonian Academy of Arts. Purtsak has participated in various joint exhibitions – “Let Me Breathe in My Own Way” (2018), “Common Dimension” (2019) and others.
Eero Alev has participated in several group exhibitions, at the Haapsalu City Gallery (“Common Dimension”, 2019) and the Estonian Art Museum (“Open Collections. The Artist Gets the Floor”, 2019). 

Holger Loodus (b. 1970) has graduated from the Department of Cultural Heritage and Conservation (BA, 2008) and the Department of Painting (MA, 2012) at the Estonian Academy of Arts. In 2012 Loodus was awarded the Young Artist Award. In 2018 he received the People’s Choice Award of the Köler Prize and the annual Award of the Estonian Cultural Endowment.

Supported by the Cultural Endowment of Estonia and A. Le Coq.

Posted by Pire Sova — Permalink

“Pretence” 11.02.–07.03.2020

Tuesday 11 February, 2020 — Saturday 07 March, 2020

Join us for the opening of the exhibition “Pretence” by Brenda Purtsak and Eero Alev on Tuesday, February 11 at 6 PM. The exhibition is curated by Holger Loodus.

With this exhibition, two young painters, Brenda Purtsak and Eero Alev portray a person through body and space. Right at the start of the project, the artists reached an agreement that they would not show the face of the person being portrayed. The challenge is to create tension – whether the viewer is able to follow the mystery put together by Purtsak and Alev. We get to know that the person being portrayed is a real human with his or her virtues and flaws. He or she has given artists permission to experiment, allowed them close and opened himself or herself up, as it is generally usual in a portrayal.
The viewers’ task is to be a detective and rebuild the whole from the pieces, so they invited to participate in the Hitchcock-like mystery of painting. The exhibition will remain open until March 7.

Brenda Purtsak (b. 1994) and Eero Alev (b. 1983) are studying painting at the Estonian Academy of Arts. Purtsak has participated in various joint exhibitions – “Let Me Breathe in My Own Way” (2018), “Common Dimension” (2019) and others.
Eero Alev has participated in several group exhibitions, at the Haapsalu City Gallery (“Common Dimension”, 2019) and the Estonian Art Museum (“Open Collections. The Artist Gets the Floor”, 2019). 

Holger Loodus (b. 1970) has graduated from the Department of Cultural Heritage and Conservation (BA, 2008) and the Department of Painting (MA, 2012) at the Estonian Academy of Arts. In 2012 Loodus was awarded the Young Artist Award. In 2018 he received the People’s Choice Award of the Köler Prize and the annual Award of the Estonian Cultural Endowment.

Supported by the Cultural Endowment of Estonia and A. Le Coq.

Posted by Pire Sova — Permalink

31.01.2020

Open Lecture: Designer of New Balance Benjamin Moua on “Thoughtful Design”

Benjamin Moua is a NYC-based designer, maker, and creative who strives to strike a balance between form, function, and the engineering of ideas into products and experiences that people will trust and love.​​ He has worked for major brands such as Reebok, Target, Adidas, Dick’s Sporting Goods, UNIQLO, Terramar Sports, New Balance and collaborated as a designer at the Boston Marathon, and the New York City Marathon.

His commitment to learning as both a professional and as a student, has allowed him the unique opportunity to stretch his interdisciplinary design experiences from Hardlines-to-Softlines goods, Color-to-Construction, Trend-to-Merchandising, and Print&Pattern-to-Production.

His uniquely expansive career, which started in fashion, has taken turns into consumable goods, high-performance protective gear, brand management, color theory/forecasting, and everything in between.

There are no projects too small or too big, and no questions left unturned, as he shares his insights on the key role designers serve as problem-solvers to the world’s unique creative challenges, and outlines why they are essential in addressing concepts such as ‘end-user experience’, ‘sustainability’, and ‘functional design’.

His lecture on the 31st January 2020 he will talk about identifying keys to success and will be a valuable experience for the students giving them insights and new perspectives in the world of design. 

Lecture will be about an hour long with a Q&A session after giving the audience a chance to learn the secrets of global fashion and accessories industry.

Posted by Mart Vainre — Permalink

Open Lecture: Designer of New Balance Benjamin Moua on “Thoughtful Design”

Friday 31 January, 2020

Benjamin Moua is a NYC-based designer, maker, and creative who strives to strike a balance between form, function, and the engineering of ideas into products and experiences that people will trust and love.​​ He has worked for major brands such as Reebok, Target, Adidas, Dick’s Sporting Goods, UNIQLO, Terramar Sports, New Balance and collaborated as a designer at the Boston Marathon, and the New York City Marathon.

His commitment to learning as both a professional and as a student, has allowed him the unique opportunity to stretch his interdisciplinary design experiences from Hardlines-to-Softlines goods, Color-to-Construction, Trend-to-Merchandising, and Print&Pattern-to-Production.

His uniquely expansive career, which started in fashion, has taken turns into consumable goods, high-performance protective gear, brand management, color theory/forecasting, and everything in between.

There are no projects too small or too big, and no questions left unturned, as he shares his insights on the key role designers serve as problem-solvers to the world’s unique creative challenges, and outlines why they are essential in addressing concepts such as ‘end-user experience’, ‘sustainability’, and ‘functional design’.

His lecture on the 31st January 2020 he will talk about identifying keys to success and will be a valuable experience for the students giving them insights and new perspectives in the world of design. 

Lecture will be about an hour long with a Q&A session after giving the audience a chance to learn the secrets of global fashion and accessories industry.

Posted by Mart Vainre — Permalink

28.01.2020 — 08.02.2020

“Maintenance Is a Drag (It Takes All the Fucking Time)” at EKA Gallery 28.01.–08.02.2020

Join us for the opening of the exhibition “Maintenance Is a Drag (It Takes All the Fucking Time)” on Friday, 3 January at 6 pm. The exhibition will remain open until 8 February, Tue-Sat 12-6 pm.
 
“Something was left hanging after establishing Vent Space Project Space and organising the programme of exhibitions for the first season: what are or what should be the values and approaches we take with us from EKA? What sort of institutions are the exhibition spaces that are affiliated to art universities and what questions and contradictions are apparent in our understanding of them? During our two-week period at EKA Gallery, we will present the structural and principal liberties and limitations, the distribution of roles and the lack thereof and the invisible labour inherent in exhibitions.”
 
Vent Space is a student-run project space organised by students of curatorial studies and fine art at the Estonian Academy of Arts. The team for the first year comprised Katrin Enni, Aksel Haagensen, Hanna-Liisa Lavonen, Saskia Lillepuu, Kaisa Maasik, Kati Ots, Olesja Semenkova, Silvia Sosaar and Annika Üprus. Our initial aims when establishing Vent Space were the ability to react fast, openness and a focus on experimentation, which would offer students an alternative public platform to compliment the more official function, stricter form and more rigid structure of EKA Gallery.
 
 
The public programme will include:
 
• “7 Ways to Access EKA Gallery”, guided tour (every day at 1 pm)
• “Vertical Perspectives”, guided tour (Saturdays at 2 pm, whenever upon request)
• “Artists Anonymous” support group facilitated by Xenia Ramm (Wed 29.01 and Thu 6.02 at 6 pm)
• “Thea Cleaner Cleans” performances by Ulvi Haagensen (Wed 5.02 at 4.30 pm and Sat 8.02 at 5.30 pm)
• A discussion between the EKA gallerist Pire Sova and Maarin Ektermann (Wed 5.02 at 5 pm)
 
 
Artist-curators: Katrin Enni, Aksel Haagensen, Kaisa Maasik, Kati Ots
 
Katrin Enni (1976), Aksel Haagensen (1993), Kaisa Maasik (1994) and Kati Ots (1993) are master’s students at the Estonian Academy of Arts: Katrin, Aksel and Kaisa are students in the contemporary art programme while Kati studies curatorial studies at the Institute for Art History and Visual Culture. Katrin recently started her exchange studies at the sculpture department of the Academy of Fine Arts at the University of the Arts Helsinki. Kaisa and Kati attended the Praxis programme at the same school last year. Katrin, Aksel as well as Kati have all previously been bachelor’s students at the installation and sculpture department and Kaisa has a bachelor’s degree from the photography department at EKA.
 
In 2018, they all participated in the establishment of Vent Space project space and were team members for the first season. In summer 2019, they organised an exhibition at Vent Space of works by members from the Vent Space team titled “At the End of the Workday” and in autumn 2019, Aksel and Kati curated the group show “I can’t be fucked” at Vent Space. Katrin, Aksel and Kaisa applied for the Eduard Wiiralt Scholarship last year and Aksel was one of the recipients.
 
Title of the exhibition borrowed from Maintenance Art Manifesto 1969! Proposal for an Exhibition “CARE” (1969) by Mierle Laderman Ukeles.
 
Image: Kaisa Maasik, sketches (2019–2020)
 
Supported by the Cultural Endowment of Estonia, the Student Council of the Estonian Academy of Arts, A. Le Coq
 
Thanks: Maarin Ektermann, Anders Härm, Hilja Koplimets, Karel Koplimets, Marko Nautras, Anna-Kaisa Rastenberger, Pire Sova, Airi Triisberg
Posted by Pire Sova — Permalink

“Maintenance Is a Drag (It Takes All the Fucking Time)” at EKA Gallery 28.01.–08.02.2020

Tuesday 28 January, 2020 — Saturday 08 February, 2020

Join us for the opening of the exhibition “Maintenance Is a Drag (It Takes All the Fucking Time)” on Friday, 3 January at 6 pm. The exhibition will remain open until 8 February, Tue-Sat 12-6 pm.
 
“Something was left hanging after establishing Vent Space Project Space and organising the programme of exhibitions for the first season: what are or what should be the values and approaches we take with us from EKA? What sort of institutions are the exhibition spaces that are affiliated to art universities and what questions and contradictions are apparent in our understanding of them? During our two-week period at EKA Gallery, we will present the structural and principal liberties and limitations, the distribution of roles and the lack thereof and the invisible labour inherent in exhibitions.”
 
Vent Space is a student-run project space organised by students of curatorial studies and fine art at the Estonian Academy of Arts. The team for the first year comprised Katrin Enni, Aksel Haagensen, Hanna-Liisa Lavonen, Saskia Lillepuu, Kaisa Maasik, Kati Ots, Olesja Semenkova, Silvia Sosaar and Annika Üprus. Our initial aims when establishing Vent Space were the ability to react fast, openness and a focus on experimentation, which would offer students an alternative public platform to compliment the more official function, stricter form and more rigid structure of EKA Gallery.
 
 
The public programme will include:
 
• “7 Ways to Access EKA Gallery”, guided tour (every day at 1 pm)
• “Vertical Perspectives”, guided tour (Saturdays at 2 pm, whenever upon request)
• “Artists Anonymous” support group facilitated by Xenia Ramm (Wed 29.01 and Thu 6.02 at 6 pm)
• “Thea Cleaner Cleans” performances by Ulvi Haagensen (Wed 5.02 at 4.30 pm and Sat 8.02 at 5.30 pm)
• A discussion between the EKA gallerist Pire Sova and Maarin Ektermann (Wed 5.02 at 5 pm)
 
 
Artist-curators: Katrin Enni, Aksel Haagensen, Kaisa Maasik, Kati Ots
 
Katrin Enni (1976), Aksel Haagensen (1993), Kaisa Maasik (1994) and Kati Ots (1993) are master’s students at the Estonian Academy of Arts: Katrin, Aksel and Kaisa are students in the contemporary art programme while Kati studies curatorial studies at the Institute for Art History and Visual Culture. Katrin recently started her exchange studies at the sculpture department of the Academy of Fine Arts at the University of the Arts Helsinki. Kaisa and Kati attended the Praxis programme at the same school last year. Katrin, Aksel as well as Kati have all previously been bachelor’s students at the installation and sculpture department and Kaisa has a bachelor’s degree from the photography department at EKA.
 
In 2018, they all participated in the establishment of Vent Space project space and were team members for the first season. In summer 2019, they organised an exhibition at Vent Space of works by members from the Vent Space team titled “At the End of the Workday” and in autumn 2019, Aksel and Kati curated the group show “I can’t be fucked” at Vent Space. Katrin, Aksel and Kaisa applied for the Eduard Wiiralt Scholarship last year and Aksel was one of the recipients.
 
Title of the exhibition borrowed from Maintenance Art Manifesto 1969! Proposal for an Exhibition “CARE” (1969) by Mierle Laderman Ukeles.
 
Image: Kaisa Maasik, sketches (2019–2020)
 
Supported by the Cultural Endowment of Estonia, the Student Council of the Estonian Academy of Arts, A. Le Coq
 
Thanks: Maarin Ektermann, Anders Härm, Hilja Koplimets, Karel Koplimets, Marko Nautras, Anna-Kaisa Rastenberger, Pire Sova, Airi Triisberg
Posted by Pire Sova — Permalink

15.01.2020 — 17.01.2020

Paul Bush: screenings and open lectures

The experimental stop frame animation filmmaker Paul Bush will give three open lectures and will show his works next week from Wednesday to Friday in EKA.

Falling in Love with the Frame
On Wednesday, January 15th at 19:00-21:00 in EKA auditorium A101

“This talk will look at my passage from artist to experimental filmmaker and finally to animation director, and the pains and special pleasures of working frame by frame.”

The Art of Stupidity
On Thursday, January 16th at 17:30-18:30 in EKA room A302

“Pushkin wrote that poetry has to be a little bit stupid. On the eve of the UK leaving Europe this is the perfect moment to examine the British nation’s love of stupidity – for good or ill.”

In the Hinterland of Narrative
On Friday, January 17th at at 17:30-18:30 in EKA room A302

“An attempt to undermine all the rules for storytelling you may ever have heard and an exhortation to move into the unexplored territory of narrative.”

Paul Bush
Paul Bush is a filmmaker most well-known for experimental stop frame animation. He has made numerous short and medium length films including The Cows Drama (1984), His Comedy (1994), Rumour of True Things (1996), Furniture Poetry (1999), Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (2001) and While Darwin Sleeps (2004). He has won many awards and his films have been shown in festivals, cinemas, galleries and on television all round the world. Last year he had retrospective programmes in Taiwan, Brussels, Madrid, Bucharest and Lisbon. He has directed commercials and his clients include Philips and National Panasonic. He has written four feature length screenplays one of which he directed and was released in UK cinemas to critical acclaim in 2013.

He began teaching film in 1981 and established a film workshop in South London. He taught on the visual arts course at Goldsmiths between 1995 and 2001 and at the National Film and Television School since 2003. Bush has lectured, run workshops and tutored at numerous art and film courses around the world including Harvard, Luzern University, Centro Sperimentali di Cinematografia in Italy and The Animation Workshop in Denmark.

“Bush is part scavenger, part inventor. Nothing is out of bounds and everything is worth trying. This is what makes Bush’s work so welcoming; you never know what you’re in for but you know it will be smart, funny, provocative and unique.” (Chris Robinson – Director, Ottawa International Animation Festival)

The lectures will be in English.

Posted by Mari Kivi — Permalink

Paul Bush: screenings and open lectures

Wednesday 15 January, 2020 — Friday 17 January, 2020

The experimental stop frame animation filmmaker Paul Bush will give three open lectures and will show his works next week from Wednesday to Friday in EKA.

Falling in Love with the Frame
On Wednesday, January 15th at 19:00-21:00 in EKA auditorium A101

“This talk will look at my passage from artist to experimental filmmaker and finally to animation director, and the pains and special pleasures of working frame by frame.”

The Art of Stupidity
On Thursday, January 16th at 17:30-18:30 in EKA room A302

“Pushkin wrote that poetry has to be a little bit stupid. On the eve of the UK leaving Europe this is the perfect moment to examine the British nation’s love of stupidity – for good or ill.”

In the Hinterland of Narrative
On Friday, January 17th at at 17:30-18:30 in EKA room A302

“An attempt to undermine all the rules for storytelling you may ever have heard and an exhortation to move into the unexplored territory of narrative.”

Paul Bush
Paul Bush is a filmmaker most well-known for experimental stop frame animation. He has made numerous short and medium length films including The Cows Drama (1984), His Comedy (1994), Rumour of True Things (1996), Furniture Poetry (1999), Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (2001) and While Darwin Sleeps (2004). He has won many awards and his films have been shown in festivals, cinemas, galleries and on television all round the world. Last year he had retrospective programmes in Taiwan, Brussels, Madrid, Bucharest and Lisbon. He has directed commercials and his clients include Philips and National Panasonic. He has written four feature length screenplays one of which he directed and was released in UK cinemas to critical acclaim in 2013.

He began teaching film in 1981 and established a film workshop in South London. He taught on the visual arts course at Goldsmiths between 1995 and 2001 and at the National Film and Television School since 2003. Bush has lectured, run workshops and tutored at numerous art and film courses around the world including Harvard, Luzern University, Centro Sperimentali di Cinematografia in Italy and The Animation Workshop in Denmark.

“Bush is part scavenger, part inventor. Nothing is out of bounds and everything is worth trying. This is what makes Bush’s work so welcoming; you never know what you’re in for but you know it will be smart, funny, provocative and unique.” (Chris Robinson – Director, Ottawa International Animation Festival)

The lectures will be in English.

Posted by Mari Kivi — Permalink

14.01.2020

EKA Design Showcase 2020

showcase-2020

On 14th January 2020 at 15:00 you are welcome to the Estonian Academy of Arts’ assembly hall to join EKA Design Showcase – a public presentation of the freshest design projects made in collaboration with various enterprises.

Registrer here: forms.gle/f57Np17xGetoVTAP6
Event on Facebook: facebook.com/events/2613872371981428/

Concepts, prototypes and final results for innovative products and services will be presented, featuring new developments in the field of design. All enterprises, EKA’s present and future cooperation partners, and enthusiasts of innovative design are kindly invited to attend the event! The presentations will be given in English and the event will be in English.

Timeline:
15.00 Opening remarks by Kristjan Mändmaa (Dean of EKA Design) and Martin Pärn (Professor of Design at TalTech, Design & Technology Futures Head of Curriculum).

15.10 Linnar Viik – “Innovation – verb, not noun”

15.30 – 16.30 First block of presentations
– Smart Clothing for Moon Habitat. Swiss Space Center, Igluna 2020, D&TF
– Modular Clothing System for Lunar Habitat. Swiss Space Center, Igluna 2020, D&TF
– Mindful Listening in Spotify. Spotify + IxD
– TalTech Library: Advisory. TalTech Library + D&TF
– Re-thinking TalTech library. TalTech Library + D&TF
– Terve ruum /Healthy room. PERH + Product design
– Banners for Reidi tee promenade. Port of Tallinn + Graphic design
– Tallinn Pattern Buildings. Faculty of Architecture

16.30 – 16.50 Coffee break

16.50 – 18.15 Second block of presentations and closing remarks
_ Vessels for Transition, Exploring Circular Economy for Bolt. Bolt + IxD
– Aruna Clothing (India) + Fashion design
– Tvilum + D&TF
– More than a piece of furniture. Tvilum + D&TF
– Ruum. Tvilum + D&TF
– NOOK. Tvilum + D&TF
– “Nest of Emotions”. Porkuni school + glass/textile design
– Viimsi bus stops and gates. Viimsi county + Product design

The event will be funded by European Union Regional Fund.

Posted by Mart Vainre — Permalink

EKA Design Showcase 2020

Tuesday 14 January, 2020

showcase-2020

On 14th January 2020 at 15:00 you are welcome to the Estonian Academy of Arts’ assembly hall to join EKA Design Showcase – a public presentation of the freshest design projects made in collaboration with various enterprises.

Registrer here: forms.gle/f57Np17xGetoVTAP6
Event on Facebook: facebook.com/events/2613872371981428/

Concepts, prototypes and final results for innovative products and services will be presented, featuring new developments in the field of design. All enterprises, EKA’s present and future cooperation partners, and enthusiasts of innovative design are kindly invited to attend the event! The presentations will be given in English and the event will be in English.

Timeline:
15.00 Opening remarks by Kristjan Mändmaa (Dean of EKA Design) and Martin Pärn (Professor of Design at TalTech, Design & Technology Futures Head of Curriculum).

15.10 Linnar Viik – “Innovation – verb, not noun”

15.30 – 16.30 First block of presentations
– Smart Clothing for Moon Habitat. Swiss Space Center, Igluna 2020, D&TF
– Modular Clothing System for Lunar Habitat. Swiss Space Center, Igluna 2020, D&TF
– Mindful Listening in Spotify. Spotify + IxD
– TalTech Library: Advisory. TalTech Library + D&TF
– Re-thinking TalTech library. TalTech Library + D&TF
– Terve ruum /Healthy room. PERH + Product design
– Banners for Reidi tee promenade. Port of Tallinn + Graphic design
– Tallinn Pattern Buildings. Faculty of Architecture

16.30 – 16.50 Coffee break

16.50 – 18.15 Second block of presentations and closing remarks
_ Vessels for Transition, Exploring Circular Economy for Bolt. Bolt + IxD
– Aruna Clothing (India) + Fashion design
– Tvilum + D&TF
– More than a piece of furniture. Tvilum + D&TF
– Ruum. Tvilum + D&TF
– NOOK. Tvilum + D&TF
– “Nest of Emotions”. Porkuni school + glass/textile design
– Viimsi bus stops and gates. Viimsi county + Product design

The event will be funded by European Union Regional Fund.

Posted by Mart Vainre — Permalink

15.01.2020

International Inspiration #3: Anna Novikov

The series of open lectures titled “International Inspiration”, co-organized by the Center for Contemporary Arts Estonia and the Institute of Art History and Visual Culture at the Estonian Academy of Arts, is proud to host our next guest, dr Anna Novikov.  On January 15th, she will give a lecture titled “Nation is the New Black: Patriotic Fashion and Performance in the Post-Communist States” at EKA, starting at 18:00 in the room A501. The lecture will focus on  the transnational revival of patriotic attire linked to patriotic performance that became fashionable in the Post-Communist states of Eastern-Central Europe and Central Asia in the last decade. Dr Novikov will examine visual and ideological links between media, dress, performance and the current development of patriotic fashion and performance in these areas.

The open lecture is followed by a seminar “”My Body is My Runestick and My Tattoos Tell My Story”: Performing Self-Barbarization in the Digital Age” held on January 16 in room A301, starting at 18:00. The seminar will focus on the broader trend in current popular culture of celebrating what the “civilized” Western cultural narrative has previously regarded as “barbarian”, and seeking to return to authenticity, albeit in reconstructed or borrowed forms.

Dr Anna Novikov, originally from Israel, lives and works in Greifswald in Germany, studying the broader sociopolitical context of fashion, including the recent rise in nationalism in Central and Eastern Europe, and its impact on the issues of fashion and identity.

The lecture series is supported by the Cultural Endowment of Estonia.

Posted by Mari Laaniste — Permalink

International Inspiration #3: Anna Novikov

Wednesday 15 January, 2020

The series of open lectures titled “International Inspiration”, co-organized by the Center for Contemporary Arts Estonia and the Institute of Art History and Visual Culture at the Estonian Academy of Arts, is proud to host our next guest, dr Anna Novikov.  On January 15th, she will give a lecture titled “Nation is the New Black: Patriotic Fashion and Performance in the Post-Communist States” at EKA, starting at 18:00 in the room A501. The lecture will focus on  the transnational revival of patriotic attire linked to patriotic performance that became fashionable in the Post-Communist states of Eastern-Central Europe and Central Asia in the last decade. Dr Novikov will examine visual and ideological links between media, dress, performance and the current development of patriotic fashion and performance in these areas.

The open lecture is followed by a seminar “”My Body is My Runestick and My Tattoos Tell My Story”: Performing Self-Barbarization in the Digital Age” held on January 16 in room A301, starting at 18:00. The seminar will focus on the broader trend in current popular culture of celebrating what the “civilized” Western cultural narrative has previously regarded as “barbarian”, and seeking to return to authenticity, albeit in reconstructed or borrowed forms.

Dr Anna Novikov, originally from Israel, lives and works in Greifswald in Germany, studying the broader sociopolitical context of fashion, including the recent rise in nationalism in Central and Eastern Europe, and its impact on the issues of fashion and identity.

The lecture series is supported by the Cultural Endowment of Estonia.

Posted by Mari Laaniste — Permalink