Anton Vidokle

Anton Vidokle is an artist and founder of e-flux. Born 1965, Vidokle lives in New York and Berlin.

Anton Vidokle
Born
Антон Видокле

1965
Vidokle, Russia
Websitehttp://www.e-flux.com/

Work

In 2004 Vidokle co-organized e-flux video rental with Julieta Aranda, which traveled to Berlin, Frankfurt; Extra City, Antwerp; Carpenter Center, Harvard University and others. As founder of e-flux, he has produced projects such as Next Documenta Should Be Curated by an Artist (curated by Jens Hoffmann), Do it (curated by Hans-Ulrich Obrist), Utopia Station poster project, and organized An Image Bank for Everyday Revolutionary Life (based on the image archive of David Alfaro Siqueiros) and Martha Rosler Library.

e-flux Video Rental in Berlin, 2008.

In 2005, Vidokle initiated research into education as site for artistic practice as co-curator for Manifesta 6, which was canceled. In response to the cancellation, Vidokle set up an independent project in Berlin called Unitednationsplaza (2006–2007) a twelve-month project involving more than a hundred artists, writers, philosophers, and diverse audiences. Located behind a supermarket in East Berlin, Unitednationsplaza's program featured public seminars, lectures, screenings, performances and various projects. In 2008 Unitednationsplaza traveled to Mexico City and was hosted by PAC, and opened in New York's New Museum for Contemporary Art under the name Nightschool (2008–2009).

In 2008, with Brian Kuan Wood and Julieta Aranda, Vidokle founded the e-flux journal, a monthly online publication on art and critical theory with contributions from writers such as Hito Steyerl, Martha Rosler, Liam Gillick, Boris Groys, Franco Berardi (Bifo), Jalal Toufic, Slavoj Žižek, Raqs Media Collective and others. The journal's international readership has led to the translation and republishing of many of the journal's essays.

Jointly with the Sternberg Press, Berlin, e-flux journal started a new imprint which has put out a series of paperback readers consisting of monographic publications and thematic compilations of essays, including: What is Contemporary Art? (2010); Boris Groys: Going Public (2010), Are You Working Too Much? Post Fordism, Precarity, and the Labor of Art (2011), Moscow Symposium: Conceptualism Revisited (2012), Hito Steyerl: The Wretched of the Screen (2012), Martha Rosler: Culture Class (2013), Jalal Toufic: Forthcoming (2014), The Internet Does Not Exist (2015), Benjamin H. Bratton: Dispute Plan to Prevent Future Luxury Constitution (2015), What’s Love (or Care, Intimacy, Warmth, Affection) Got to Do with It? (2017), and Art Without Death: Conversations on Russian Cosmism (2017). In 2015, e-flux journal initiated a new book series entitled e-flux Classics, distributed by University of Minnesota Press. The first book in the series is Avant Garde Museology (2015), edited by Arseny Zhilyaev.

In 2008, Vidokle and Aranda created a time bank for artistic community. The Time/Bank is a platform where artists, curators, writers and others in the arts can help each other get things done without use of money, but exchanging their time and skills. Time/Bank has nearly 4,000 members from many cities around the world and operates several branches in Den Haag, Moscow, Berlin, Frankfurt and other cities.

At e-flux space in New York, Vidokle directs a program of exhibitions that has included solo shows by Martha Rosler, Gustav Metzger, Adam Curtis, Raqs Media Collective, Mladen Stilinovic, Alan Sekula, Andrei Monastirsky & Collective Actions, Walter Benjamin and Laure Prouvost; as well as group exhibitions such as the Agency of Unrealized Projects, curated jointly with Hans Ulrich Obrist; Animism, curated by Anselm Franke; Out Now, with Paul Chan, Trevor Paglen, Martha Rosler, Natascha Sadr Haghighian, Rirkrit Tiravanija and Jalal Toufic; We, The Outsiders, curated by Chus Martinez; Spectres of Communism: Contemporary Russian Art, curated by Boris Groys; So You Want To See, curated by What, How & for Whom; and Corruption: Everybody Knows…, curated by Natasha Ginwala.

From 2013-2014, Vidokle was a Resident Professor with Jalal Toufic at Ashkal Alwan’s Home Workspace Program in Beirut, Lebanon, under the title "Creating and Dispersing Universes that Work without Working," during which Vidokle organized the exhibition, A Museum of Immortality, curated by Boris Groys.[1][2]

For the 56th Venice Biennale in 2015, e-flux journal was commissioned to produce SUPERCOMMUNITY, an editorial project that addresses e-flux journal and its readership as the supercommunity and presented a daily piece of writing that often adopted the form of poetry, short fiction or screenplay. It has featured contributions from nearly one hundred authors, anthropologists, artists, philosophers, poets, theorists and writers.

Vidokle frequently lectures and participates in international conferences and symposia and has contributed essays and texts to various publications including October, Frieze and Aprior, as well as numerous books and catalogues. He has also published a number of key texts as part of e-flux journal, including Art Without Artists (2010), Art Without Work (2011), and Breaking the Contract (2012).

Selected films

Anton Vidokle has directed a number of films including A Guiding Light with Liam Gillick (2010), which considered the curatorial premise of the 8th Shanghai Biennale; and New York Conversations (2010), a film based on the collaborative project that took place in 2008 with Nico Dockx and Rirkrit Tiravanija for A Prior magazine. In 2012, Vidokle directed Two Suns with Hu Fang, which was included in the Taipei Biennial (2012). The trilogy 2084: a science fiction show (2012-2014), directed with Pelin Tan, has been included in a number of exhibitions and screenings including Or Gallery, Vancouver (2012); Bergen Assembly (2013); La Biennale de Montréal (2014); Istanbul Biennial (2015); Home Works Forum 7, Beirut (2015); and Museum of Modern Art Warsaw (2016).

Vidokle’s most recent project, Immortality For All: a film trilogy on Russian Cosmism (2014-2017) is a three-part film, in which Vidokle probes Russian Cosmism’s influence on the twentieth century and suggests its relevance to the present day. In Part One he returns to the foundations of Cosmist thought (This Is Cosmos, 2014). Part Two explores the links between cosmology and politics (The Communist Revolution Was Caused By The Sun, 2015) and Part Three restages the museum as a site of resurrection, a central Cosmist idea (Immortality and Resurrection for All!, 2017).

This Is Cosmos has been exhibited and screened internationally at the Shanghai Biennale (2014); Specters of Communism: Contemporary Russian Art, curated by Boris Groys at the James Gallery, CUNY Center for Graduate Studies, New York (2015); Art In The Age Of...Energy and Raw Material, Witte de With, Rotterdam (2015); 65th Berlinale International Film Festival, Forum Expanded, Berlin (2015); ASTRONOMY. Incursions into the cosmos, La Casa Encendida, Madrid (2015); IndieLisboa Film Festival (2015); LABoral Centro de Arte y Creación Industrial, Spain (2016); Bucharest International Experimental Film Festival 2016 BIEFF (2016); Visual Culture Research Center, Kiev (2016); and the Stanislavsky Theatre, Moscow (2016).

The Communist Revolution Was Caused By The Sun has been shown internationally at the 6th Moscow Biennale, Moscow (2015); 66th Berlinale International Film Festival, Forum Expanded, Berlin (2016); Beyond the Globe | 8th Triennial of Contemporary Art – U3, Ljubljana (2016); Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (2016); 7th Gwangju Biennale, where it was the recipient of the Noon Award (2016); Visual Culture Research Center, Kiev, (2016); Berlinale Spotlight, India (2016); Far From Moscow Film Festival, Los Angeles (2016); Tate St Ives (2016); Okayama Art Summit (2016); 33rd Kassel Documentary Film and Video Festival (2016); the Centre Pompidou, Paris (2016); and the Stanislavsky Theatre, Moscow (2016).

Immortality For All: a film trilogy on Russian Cosmism (2014-2017) was premiered at Locarno Film Festival in 2017. The trilogy will also be the central work in the exhibition Art Without Death: Russian Cosmism at Haus der Kulteren der Welt, Berlin in 2017.

Films include:

  • A Crime Against Art (2008), directed by Hila Peleg
  • A Guiding Light (2010), with Liam Gillick
  • New York Conversations (2011)
  • Two Suns (2012) with Hu Fang
  • 2084: A science fiction show, Episodes 1, 2 & 3 (2012–2014), directed by Anton Vidokle and Pelin Tan
  • This is Cosmos (2014)[3]
  • The Communist Revolution Was Caused By The Sun (2015)[4]
  • Immortality and Resurrection For All! (2017)[5]

See also

References

  1. "HWP 2013-14 | ashkal alwan". ashkalalwan.org. Archived from the original on September 9, 2017. Retrieved 2017-08-28.
  2. "A Museum of Immortality | ashkal alwan". ashkalalwan.org. Archived from the original on August 29, 2017. Retrieved 2017-08-28.
  3. "This is Cosmos".
  4. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-08-22. Retrieved 2016-08-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. Welt, Haus der Kulturen der (25 July 2017). "Immortality for All: a film trilogy on Russian Cosmism". HKW. Retrieved 2017-08-28.
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