mer 17.03.2010 19u00

jeu 18.03.2010 13u00

ven 19.03.2010 13u00

sam 20.03.2010 19u30

dim 21.03.2010 19u30

mar 23.03.2010 13u00

mer 24.03.2010 13u00

jeu 25.03.2010 13u00

ven 26.03.2010 13u00

sam 27.03.2010 19u30

jeu 01.04.2010 13u00

ven 02.04.2010 13u00

mer 07.04.2010 13u00

jeu 08.04.2010 13u00

ven 09.04.2010 13u00

mer 14.04.2010 13u00

jeu 15.04.2010 13u00

ven 16.04.2010 13u00

mer 21.04.2010 13u00

jeu 22.04.2010 13u00

ven 23.04.2010 13u00

mer 28.04.2010 13u00

jeu 29.04.2010 13u00

ven 30.04.2010 13u00

mer 05.05.2010 13u00

jeu 06.05.2010 13u00

ven 07.05.2010 13u00

mer 12.05.2010 13u00

jeu 13.05.2010 13u00

ven 14.05.2010 13u00

mer 19.05.2010 13u00

jeu 20.05.2010 13u00

ven 21.05.2010 13u00

mar 25.05.2010 13u00

mer 26.05.2010 13u00

jeu 27.05.2010 13u00

gratuit


















 

KATRIN LOCK & TIM BROTHERTON

ECHOES OF UNCERTAINTY

me > ve, 13:00 > 18:00  une heure avant le début des représentations.


La participation du duo d’artistes Katrin Lock et Tim Brotherton se fera certainement remarquer lors de ce festival. Non seulement exposent-ils plusieurs séries d’oeuvres graphiques et photographiques, ils montrent également, en première internationale, leur nouveau film. Pour cette trilogie, ils se sont inspirés de ‘Faust ou la fête électrique’ de Gertrude Stein, une oeuvre emblématique et énigmatique de la littérature d’avant-garde. Les trois parties du film ont été réalisées à Berlin, Johannesburg et... au Beursschouwburg.

 

Tout comme le Faust de Gertrude Stein est ancré dans le radicalisme des années trente, celles-ci résonnent également dans l’esthétisme de leur époustouflante série de gravures ‘Hope and Realities’. Des éléments visuels rappelant l’art déco ou l’esthétisme totalitariste servent à imprégner leurs slogans politico-activistes d’une mélancolie majestueuse. Un activisme politique et social qui se fait aussi sentir dans leur série photographique sur l’impact de la presse des tabloids sur la société sud-africaine. Là, les tabloids confirment et nourrissent les préjugés réciproques à travers des campagnes massives de posters et affichages tous les jours.

 

 

 

 

INTERVIEW AVEC KATRIN LOCK

 

 

Political and social activism seems to be one of the driving forces behind your work.

 

If you are fighting for something, you might as well fight for something that in the end might be worth fighting for.

 

This activism even stretches further than your artistic practice. Hence your publications about violence and arms in hip hop and other popular culture. And it's export to street culture in Africa. What is it in this theme that prompted you to write a few articles about it?

 

Cultural shifts and misunderstanding prompted by a global proliferation of cultural products, such as films and music are interesting developments and create curious adaptations on local levels. In the case of gun cultures it often becomes a deadly reality.

 

Political and social activism also seems to play a role in the photographic series you made in South Africa. Could you comment on the stance your work makes/doesn't make on the role of the press, on the power of the tabloid press. Or is that a too straightforward lecture of your work?

 

Posters of tabloid papers are an everyday sight / visual references in Johannesburg. Roads are plastered with endless rows of messages and news. They are particulary violent and illustrate the racial and social lines within South African society in dramatic slogans. In the image which shows resamblance to Casper David Friedrich’s ‘Wanderer above the sea of fog’ our wanderer overlooks innercity bleached remains of the gold mining industry.

 

Your movie is inspired by/on Dr Faustus Lights The Lights. What made you choose this work ?

 

We felt inspired by  this piece of writing. It touches upon very human and essential, but complicated questions such as betrayel, moral and integrity, the dadaist writing presents itself as openess and forecloses conclusive reading and interpretation. The fragmented nature, mutiple characters and non-linear narrative nurture individual adaptations. 

 

Many of the prints from 'Hope and Realities' have this thirties art deco retro feel about them. Dr Faustus and Stein are also part of the cultural heritage of the avant-garde from the twenties and thirties. Is there something in (the art of) this period that fascinates you?

 

It does. We are also using Bertold Brecht’s / Kurt Weils ‘Mack the knife’ as a musical leitmotif in the film we made in Brussels. This particular period seems full of artists attempts to tackle and articulate social realities. The idea of being able to change things through art work seems present and powerful at the time. Does that mean that our framework of references is tinted by romanticism? Maybe we use it for our own encouragement? 

 

When writing about Dr Faustus, many critics single out as most striking or remarkable features as the multiplicity of the characters or the switching but constant juxtaposition in pairs. Was it any of these or what other angle attracted you to work with this still somewhat enigmatic text?

 

We are interested in the constant change of multiple identities as presented in the play.We adapt Gertrude Stein’s non-linearity, work with repitition, reappearing characters and so on. The play is a clear and exemplatory starting point. In our projects we work with a group of approximately 10 people for a short and intense period of time (2 weeks). In discussions we establish what the film should be about but then give over to the actors to shape and embellish it.

The idea that something can be fragmented and constantly change, give/challenge is perfectly introduced in Gertrude Stein, the content is beautifully universal and pertinent, also in today’s society. The fragmented structure in the narrative allows individual actors to take stance and express their views.

 

Did you see any of the legendary stagings of Dr Faustus (Bob Wilson, Wooster Group) ?

 

We only know about them.

 

The movie was shot in Johannesburg, Berlin and Brussels. Any particular reasons for one or more of these localities?

 

Based on the hypothesis that our lives are dominated by the partly inhuman effects of globalisation, we are interested in capturing local sensibilities and responses to these processes. The question whether differences or similarities exist, the impossibility to express them, let alone compare them, is as a potential and always present failure part of the project.

 

Will the screening in Brussels be a premiere?

 

It will indeed. The film made in Johannesburg has been shown before, not the others, as a complete trilogy; yes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

© Katrin Lock & Tim Brotherton

EXPO

dans le cadre de
ON Y DANSE TOUT EN ROND 2010 - Festival de la confusion



mer 17.03 - jeu 27.05.2010

KATRIN LOCK & TIM BROTHERTON

ECHOES OF UNCERTAINTY

mer 17 - sam 27.03.2010

PAWEL ALTHAMER & ARTHUR ZMIJEWSKI

SOGENANNTE WELLEN UND ANDERE PHÄNOMENE DES GEISTES

mer 17 - jeu 18.03.2010

LAURENT CHETOUANE

TANZSTUCK #3 DOPPEL/SOLO/EIN ABEND

jeu 18 - sam 20.03.2010

GABRIEL LESTER

THE LAST SMOKING FLIGHT

ven 19 - dim 21.03.2010

NICOLAS PEREDA

ENTREVISTA CON LA TIERRA

ven 19 - sam 20.03.2010

SANJA MITROVIC

WILL YOU EVER BE HAPPY AGAIN

mar 23 - mer 24.03.2010

LILIA MESTRE

MOVING YOU

mer 24 - jeu 25.03.2010

AMANDA PIÑA & DANIEL ZIMMERMANN

ATTENTION: le spectacle du 24 mars de 19h est annulé.

mer 24.03.2010

S.H.O.W. welcomes WANG LI

mar 23 - sam 27.03.2010

BERNARD VAN EEGHEM

TALLER DE POLARIS

jeu 25.03.2010

INA GEERTS

DE ZIEKTE VAN DE DOOD

ven 26 - sam 27.03.2010

IVO DIMCHEV

SOM FAVES

ven 26 - sam 27.03.2010

SARAH VANHEE

ME AND MY STRANGER