trabZONE

trabZONE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nilbar Güres’ settings play a pivotal role catalyzing her reenactments. Her selected locations are embedded with different meanings from her past. The open-ended narratives she scripts are shaped by the settings which the former aim to deterritorialize. The artist investigates ways of changing the grammatical constructions of her memory and thus the collective unconscious via her personal reminiscences and their connotations. TrabZONE, one of her recent series, takes us on a childhood journey to Black Sea region, one particular city, Trabzon,  notorious for its fanatic attachment to religious and national values. For Nilbar Güres always looks for the hidden and the uncanny taking place behind the protection of traditional structures, this city where she used to spend some of her summers as a child proves to be a productive setting.

Trabzon is a place with many paradoxes; strongly attached to a Turkish Muslim identity, it is also one of the historic centers of Pontus  (during Hellenic and Roman times) whose inhabitants are known as the very first converts to Christianity. Today, one of the strongest associations of the city is being the hometown of Ogun Samast, the boy who assasinated the Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, an unforgettable symbol for the fraternity among the peoples of Anatolia. Shortly, Trabzon is a tense and intense city. The social visibility of women is very poor, similiar to many Anatolian cities; that is women may not appear in public spaces unless they are accompanied by their fathers, brothers, male cousins, fiancees or husbands. Yet the lives of men and women are quite separate; while men work or gamble with their pals in coffeehouses, women carry the whole load of household and family.

Yet such restrictions under such circumstances fire Nilbar Güres’ imagination for other possible scenarios that may develop in closed socialization process among women. She humourously forces her viewers to pass beyond the patterns they are taught to think in. And through an honest translation of her wittnessings, she may catch them unaware in a process of identification and/or confrontation with their past. In Worship, the artist makes a unique taboo breaching portrait of two women praying in the men section of a central mosque in Trabzon behind each other with latter’s head under another former’s skirt, revealing desire in the most unexpected second to where it actually belongs. Worship was realized in a daytime in the mosque trespassing the controlled gender division of public religious space. Nilbar Gures believes such a ‘radical’ performance of usually restricted gendered body may deterritorialize the space, break the foundations of these restrictions and change how she remembers the restrictions she has experienced herself. The scarf tightened between the heads of two women, one younger one older, going to opposite directions in Junction visualizes the tensions built around the restrictions about how an ‘honorable’ woman should be, the heavy burden of womanhood on the shoulders of women  in small conservative family circles of Anatolia. It is a sort of tension that one may come across anywhere in Turkey, in center or periphery, in east or west, in different shapes.  Gures’s choreography hints at the difficulty of the moment of decision either to break apart from where you are taught to belong here and now or to allow the regular partiarchal system’s take over for the rest of your life.

Övül Durmusoglu

CirCir

Living Room,120cm X 180cm, photography, 2010

 

 

 

A Family Portrait, 120cm X 180cm, photography, 2010

 

 

 

Mirror, 120cm X 180cm, photography, 2010

 

 

 

Playing with a watergun, 120cm X 180cm, photography, 2010

 

 

 

Sefine, 120cm X 180cm, photography, 2010

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CIRCIR (Images for 6th Berlin Biennial)

Nilbar Güres¸ declares war on the prevailing relations between the sexes by playful means, her weapons ranging from sewing needles to boxing gloves. In drawings, collages, performances, videos, and photographs she overstates the norms of the majority society, countering them with hybridized enactments of female identity. In doing so, she challenges the renaissance of traditional role models in Turkey as well as the Western fear of Islamic symbols, which the artist sees as becoming increasingly instrumentalized by xenophobic parties. The name “Güres¸” means “wrestling,” and on the day Mahmud Ahmadinedschad visited Istanbul, Güres¸ appeared in wrestling gear in the Bes¸ iktas¸ business quarter. The reactions of passersby, ranging from amused to puzzled, became part of the work. On another occasion, Güres¸ wore a wedding gown and boxing helmet. With the help of onlookers she stripped off the gown, and walked through the city in boxing shorts. By transgressing regimes of visibility in public space, Güres¸ makes them visible and up for discussion.

Güres¸ ’s collages of drawings and textiles rely on handwork, a domain generally assigned to women. Motifs and symbols from the oriental pictorial tradition are crossed with modern poses and (homo-)erotic scenes—the extension by pencil and needle of spaces of enactment that presents identity as open and freely malleable (Unbekannte Sportarten, 2008–09). Güres¸ enacted the motifs in performances in a gym with women balancing on cooking pots or artistically exaggerating beauty rituals. Sports, as a male-dominated field where social conceptions of success and recognition are played out with the body, served as a template for heroizing female experience in patriarchal structures. The photo triptychs testify to sovereignty that is cynically fractured by the exaggeration of clichés. The series of photographs Çlrçlr (2010) was produced for the Berlin Biennale in a house on the edge of Istanbul that once belonged to Güres¸ ’s relatives. A patriarchally defined site, it represented a microcosm of social structures. It is soon to make way for a tunnel construction. Urbanization is ambivalent here. While dwellings used to be divided up among sons, parity payouts enabled daughters to emancipate themselves from the family. With women of widely differing cultural backgrounds, sexual orientation, and educational standards, Güres¸ conducted a temporary occupation of onetime male domains.

The collaborative play before the camera results in a precise measuring out of the maneuvering space of identity, of ideas of the “own” and the “alien,” as well as of the cultural shaping of images. The photographs testify to respect and trust and set a strong example of solidarity against a backdrop of far-reaching social transformations.

Kolja Reichert