10/06/2015

About BANKSY ON PALESTINE’S BROKEN WALLS - and why it matters



The Daily Review published this article yesterday about Banksy, the West Bank, politics and art.
Read and think about it please:

http://dailyreview.crikey.com.au/banksy-on-palestines-broken-walls-the-medium-really-is-the-message/25137


BanksyWEB
• JUN 9, 2015

A bank? Why would I want to see a bank? I came here to see the birthplace of Christ!
No, a Banksy. Do you want to go and see a Bansky?

What in God’s name is a Banksy?  - Bethlehem, May 2015.
So it was that two American pilgrims — retirees, sotherners judging by their drawl —  came to learn about the world’s most famous street artist. They were bemused. They didn’t quite understand the connection between Jesus and this Banksy fellow. Here they were in the Holy Land, on a trip they’d probably been planning for years, and they were being confronted by a man — an Arab no less, which, for many white conservative American Christians is a synonym for terrorist — offering to take them to some sight they’d not only not planned to visit, but had never even heard of.
They declined his offer and, thus, passed up a unique touristic pleasure: The sight of the virgin birth in the morning and, in the afternoon, ‘a Bansky’.
The politics and cultural value of street art have long been divisive topics because it pushes back against what has, for centuries, been considered ‘art.’ The idea that street art is at once both valuable — culturally and artistically — and a canvas for others to paint over, challenges long accepted notions of how art should be consumed and preserved. Artists have always re-used canvases, but they never painted over their masterpieces. Street artists, at least in the early days, didn’t discriminate.
Looking at the Banksy stencils in Bethlehem and in other cities in the West Bank, one is struck by the fact that the location adds a further layer of complexity to an art form that is still often misunderstood or, depending on your take, increasingly corrupted by the ‘art world’ (whatever that is).
It’s self-evident to say that Bethlehem isn’t Bristol or Berlin and Ramallah’s not Rio, but it’s not until you stand in front of one of Banksy’s works in the occupied territories that one fully understands what that means. I’ve seen his work in Melbourne, London and Berlin and, while his anti-authoritarian, anti-capitalist and anti-surveillance messages resonate, it’s in Palestine that his work is imbued with a unique sense of injustice that is, quite literally, painted on the very walls that carry it.
The walls that his work is painted on imprison the Palestinians and ‘liberate’ Israelis —  never has Marshall McLuhan’s idea that ‘the medium is the message’ seemed more relevant or more compelling. Of course, street art — an art form that takes its name from its medium — has always been an illustrative example of McLuhan’s thesis, but in Palestine the ‘street’ is an exponentially more political place because it is a contested sight of  war and occupation.
Street art challenges the convention that art is something that hangs in galleries and is consumed by the educated upper-classes. The politicisation of art didn’t start with street art, but it has democraticised art in a radical and new way.
It merged ideas of high art with vandalism and criminality: It turned what was once considered an act of destruction into something not just socially acceptable, but widely lauded. So, born out of illegality, it’s inevitable that street art is inherently political in a way that other art forms are not (though they might have been in the past).
Similarly, it attracts those with a radical bent who see laws as social constructs that, when morally permissible, should be broken.
The fortress through Palestine is covered in street art, graffiti and messages of resistance or struggle and Banksy’s work fits comfortably alongside these. Their financial or cultural value is far less important than their political value. That the Israeli authorities have removed or painted over some of Banksy’s work matters little because it only reaffirms the repression many Palestinians experience on a daily basis.
Above all, his work is an expression of solidarity with a persecuted and occupied people. It’s not insignificant that the world’s best-known street artist has contributed to the Palestinian struggle in a tangible and real way — even if it’s only to force a few pilgrims to see that there’s more to Bethlehem than being the place the Bible says Jesus was born.
And Banksy’s commitment to the Palestinian’s cause has continued. Following the most recent war in Gaza, he travelled to the ‘world’s largest open-air prison’ where he adorned the ruins of Israel’s assault with his work. It should be noted that getting into Gaza is no mean feat: it is blockaded by Israel and, for those without permission, can only be accessed illegally via tunnels, presumably from Egypt’s north Sinai since Israel claims to have destroyed all tunnels into her territory during the last bombardment.
As street art has become more widely recognised as having its own value one of its stranger developments is that people have sought to ‘protect’ works by famous artists like Banksy. It’s strange because it is counter to the very ethos on which street art was founded and represents a shift towards more traditionally accepted notions of what constitutes art.
Nevertheless, it’s a shift easily explained. Our modern Western societies are built on the foundations of capitalism and, since the Reagan-Thatcher era, this has become the raison d’ětre by which every aspect of society relies on in order to function ‘effectively.’ Culture has been subsumed by the market — ‘value’ is not some sort of abstraction anymore, it’s something that can be priced. The idea that culture can operate independently of the market now seems naïve or fantastic —  to suggest such a thing to a ‘serious person’ is to be accused of being divorced from reality.
And so, when a Gazan familiar with Banksy’s work cheated his neighbour into selling him a spray-painted Rodinesque figure painted on a bombed-out iron and brick doorway for 700 shekels (about $A230), one could hardly be surprised.
This has, in one form or another, been going on for as long as people have thought they can make money from street art. How many Banksy’s have been chiselled out of walls around the world?
As a society we’re dismissive of these acts of vandalism and robbery. This is the spirit, after all, that we’re taught to believe in. These are the people —  emboldened by Ayn Rand’s call to act selfishly and take what you want to make your life better — that prosper in our neoliberal age.
But do these same forces of corruption — of unrestrained, immoral capitalism — infect Gaza too? Well of course, if one speaks about capitalism as being all-pervasive, it only makes sense that it reaches the places that suffer the most under the system.
But the Left has a tendency to romanticise resistance struggles in far away lands and to see the people living there not as fellow humans, but as abstract players in a political action – a kind of undefined part that makes up an ideological whole. There is an obvious disconnect with reality here, but it does raise interesting questions about how street art — and, more specifically, Banksy’s work in Palestine — can be co-opted and used in a way that is counter to his original message.
Would, for example, the artist approve of the shop set-up in Bethlehem selling postcards and posters of his work? His work is being used (exploited, if you will) in the pursuit of personal wealth but, on the other hand, if it provides a Palestinian family with a livelihood is that such a bad thing?
Banksy is certainly not the first artist whose work has been misinterpreted for personal gain. (Who could forget Dan Brown’s bestselling novel born out of some crazed esoteric interpretation of Da Vinci’s Last Supper?) Nor should it be reason enough to stop producing art and, in the case of street art, engaging in political struggles.
There is much to be celebrated about Banksy’s work in Palestine. To walk through Israeli settlements and see the homes of Palestinians destroyed, their shops welded shut and the old market places deserted is to get a glimpse of the despair those under occupation have to live with. It can feel, at times, a place devoid of hope.
For Palestinians, largely abandoned by the international community, it must feel as though they are fighting apartheid alone. Walking along and photographing the seemingly endless wall in Bethlehem, a young boy approached me selling some tissues. I handed over one shekel and said shokran (thank you).
And with that simple gesture — one Arabic word — his entire demeanour changed. With a smile across his face he took me by the hand and, pointing into the distance, excitedly repeated, ‘Banksy! Banksy! Banksy!’ as he led me to the stencil I’d just come from. I saw that he understood that there were people on his side –that, as futile as it may seem, his people haven’t been entirely abandoned — and, in that moment, with the innocence only children possess, that’s all that mattered.

09/06/2015

"It's No Great Crime" - Bristol's iconic graffiti by 3D from 1983 reinvented in 2011



"Its No Great Crime" by Paris1974, inspired by 3D's from 1983 in , St Pauls:
http://paris1974.com/profile/its-no-great-crimehttp://paris1974.com/profile/its-no-great-crime
http://paris1974.com/profile/its-no-great-crime


Its No Great Crime

Painted in honour of an original piece by 3D from 1983. St Pauls, Bristol 2011.


Paris, 3D, Bristol, Massive Attack, Its No Great Crime.



Paris is a British visual artist known for his trademark abstract graffiti effects.
Specialising in bespoke art, avant garde logos, large scale decor , customisation & installation.





Thinking of bees and butterflies



 Because my name means "bee" in greek, I cannot help but caring for this part of nature being endangered... Then I, metaphorically, feel I'm on a search for butterflies. All representations of happiness, nature and spontaneous beauty...

Just a few articles and links on the issue on a busy spring Tuesday in Bristol.


BBC World Service on : Saving the bees

President Obama has announced a new plan to help restore bee and butterfly populations by giving pollinators their own protected corridor in the American Midwest. So how will it work?

#US #Obama #Bees

President Obama has announced a new plan to help restore bee and butterfly populations across North America. The plan’s centrepiece is a proposed bee habitat corridor along the I-35 freeway— a major north-south interstate highway in the Central US that runs from Texas to the Minnesota city of Duluth. Catherine Winter, who lives in Duluth and keeps bees herself, tracked down some other bee enthusiasts to talk about the president's plan and their own efforts to protect the pollinators that help feed us all.
Image: A honeybee hovers over a flower. Credit: Getty/Prakash Mathema
Release date: 05 Jun 2015

--
Girls in Hawaii sing:


--
More here:
Beyond Honeybees: Now Wild Bees and Butterflies May Be
 in Trouble

08/06/2015

Insights into The Other Art Fair, Bristol, June 2015


   Local and national artists were gathered this weekend in the Arnolfini Gallery for the affordable art fair baptised The Other Art Fair in Bristol.



The Arnolfini Gallery is right in the heart of Bristol, along the Harbourside.








--

Among my favourite artists was graffiti legend Inkie, see some of his pieces:








Dia de Los Muertos, inspired by Mexican popular arts:





"Love is The Message", funky style:



"Wizard":



Again, Love:

Green or blue:



Red features:



French inspirations in "Sacre Bleu" and Ooh la la", with Tati shops' features in the background, Barbès, my hood (!):




--

Three other art crushes:


Hugh Dunford Wood















Hugh's website:
http://www.dunfordwood.co.uk/




Abigail McDougall


Waterlilies








Abigail's website:
http://www.abigailmcdougall.com/




Emma Davis

Watercolours









More on Emma's Website:
http://www.emmadavisartist.com/


--

Latest news from WOMAD 2015



WOMAD UK Charlton Park 2014

The WOMAD (the World of Music Arts and Dance) Festival is poised to celebrate its 33rd year in July – and its ninth within Lord Suffolk’s spacious backyard at Charlton Park, near Malmesbury.
Already a raft of big hitters from the world music scene have been announced for the four-day event from July 23-26, including De La Soul, Tinariwen, Ghostpoet, Bellowhead and Laura Mvula.
--
Now announced last week: Daddy G of Bristol’s Massive Attack has teamed up with dancehall MC Deemas J for a special collaboration in The Red Tent – one of several stages dotted around the meadows, woods and chill-out zones of Charlton Park.
--
More on the programmation - selection:

Cheikh Lô at WOMAD UK 2015

Cheikh Lô (Senegal)

Cheikh Lô first came to international attention in 1996. He brings something different to the vibrant dance music of Senegal -  acoustic sounds and Sufi lyrics.




Ezza WOMAD UK 2015

Ezza (Niger)

North African guitar rockers Ezza, take blues and rock and deepen it with desert Tuareg sounds. What they create is a rhythmic and relentless groove that is both modern and unique in its power.



Olcay Bayir at WOMAD UK 2015

lcay Bayir

lcay Bayir is an impressive newcomer to the vibrant global music scene. Born in the Kurdish region of southern Turkey, she studied opera and classical singing in the UK before bring her rich textured voice and stories to bear on Asian and Mediterranean musical traditions.

Kasse Mady Diabate WOMAD UK 2015

Kassé Mady Diabaté (Mali)

This venerable, velvet-voiced elder of Mali brings WOMAD more traditional sounds from Africa. He has taken on the mantle of stately ambassador for his country's music for a good 40 years now.


 Nazim Ziryab at WOMAD UK 2015

Nazim Ziryab (Algeria/UK)

He has been compared the legendary Carlos Santana, but his music is a rich fusion of Algerian Chaabi, Sub Saharan rhythms blended with Pop and Reggae

--

And also:
The Mahotella Queens (South Africa)  Daddy G and MC Deemas (UK)  Mbongwana Star (Congo)  Maarja Nuut and Alhousseini Anivolla (Estonia and Niger)  Criolo (Brazil)  Sinkane (USA)  Nightmares on Wax (UK)  Tal National (Niger)  Pascuala Ilabaca (Chile)  The Soil (South Africa)  Violons Barbares (Bulgaria, France and Mongolia)  Winston McAnuff & Fixi (Jamaica/France)  Shy FX and Stamina MC (UK)  Wrongtom Meets Ragga Twins (UK)  Chassol (France) The Cambodian Space Project (Cambodia) Sheelanagig (UK)

03/06/2015

Documentary on 2003 anti-war demos "We Are Many" comes to Bristol


Thanks to the Watershed, I'll see when and where I'll see "We Are Many":




We Are Many 12A




Amir Amirani’s revealing documentary charts the events and discourse that led to the day back in 2003, when over 30 million people in over 800 cities across the world marched in protest against the impending Iraq War, in what became the biggest global demonstration in history.
The image of the Twin Towers cut against a bright blue sky, plumes of smoke billowing from the sides is one that is impressed upon the world collective consciousness. To this day, the reverberations of the terror attacks of 9/11 can still be felt. But when the Bush administration – with Tony Blair’s backing – began usurping the tragedy, creating tenuous connections between Iraq, Al Qaeda and WMDs to justify a planned invasion of Iraq to start its war on terror, activists on both sides of the Atlantic quickly responded by challenging the legitimacy of the war. And what began as separate and dispersed anti-war efforts began to cohere, resulting in the largest mobilisation of people in history when on 15th February 2003, millions of people took to the streets across the world to say no to war.
Including gripping interviews with academics, politicians and activists including Noam Chomsky, Tony Benn, Jesse Jackson, Tariq Ali, and Hans Blix, this is an inspiring story about the power of modern communications to rally huge numbers of people around an old fashioned common cause, and one which provided a template for many of the epoch-defining popular protests of the last decade.

Trailer:



Extended teaser:




--
Ticket prices:Screenings before 16:00: £5.50 full / £4.00 concessions. Screenings after 16:00: £8.00 full / £6.50 concessions.
Book online and collect at our Box Office or call 0117 927 5100

Screenings

DateTimes
Sat 6 June12:10
Sun 7 June12:10
--

Link: http://www.watershed.co.uk/whatson/6623/we-are-many/?utm_source=Watershed+-+Weekly+Listings&utm_campaign=3750c45b64-Watershed+What%27s+on+Fri+5+-+Thu+11+June&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_4445419982-3750c45b64-237888353



Rencontre et débat à la Cité de l'Immigration - Paris : "Les héritiers" (16 juin)



Les héritiers. Rencontre et débat


Mardi 16 Juin 2015, 19:30
Dans le cadre de sa résidence au Musée, Laetitia Tura, photographe-réalisatrice, propose un point d'étape autour de la construction et de la transmission de la mémoire à laquelle participeront Alice Diop, réalisatrice et marraine de la résidence, et Stéphanie Mahieu, ethnologue et conservateur du patrimoine, responsable de la Galerie des dons.


Rendez-vous # 3 - LES HÉRITIERS

Mardi 16 juin 2015 à 19h30 - Entrée libre
Musée de l'histoire de l'immigration
293 avenue Daumesnil, 75012 Paris

Laetitia Tura organise un point d’étape de sa résidence au Musée autour de la construction et de la transmission de la mémoire.

Rencontre avec Alice Diop, réalisatrice et marraine de la résidence, Stéphanie Mahieu, ethnologue et conservateur du patrimoine responsable de la Galerie des dons. Projection d'extraits des vidéos tournées lors de la résidence.

Les passages des frontières s’accompagnent d’une mise à l’écart réelle, du camp d’internement à la ban-lieue, et de l’exclusion de la « mémoire collective ». Quels processus cinématographiques ou muséographiques mettre en œuvre pour donner une forme à ces mémoires minorisées, et partager le récit national ? 

Question ouverte qui sera abordée à partir de la présentation d'extraits de films et d'une démarche ethnologique.

--

Détails :

Si le passage des frontières s’accompagne d’une mise à l’écart réelle, du camp d’internement à la banlieue, cette mise à l’écart se double dans un second temps par l’exclusion de la mémoire collective.
Comment faire pour que ces mémoires minorisées rejoignent pleinement une "mémoire collective", qui de fait, est une mémoire dominante ?
Mais aussi comment se construisent des générations amputées d’une partie de leur histoire ? Comment la place d'héritier conditionne le regard du présent ? Quels processus cinématographiques ou muséographiques mettre en œuvre pour donner une forme à ces histoires et partager le récit national ? Comment recueille-t-on des récits, une expérience vécue ? Dans quelles langues ? Comment leur donner une forme ? Quels lieux communs pour accueillir ces histoires ?
Des questions ouvertes qui seront abordées à partir des démarches filmiques et muséographique des intervenantes et d’extraits de films de la Galerie des Dons du Musée national de l'histoire de l'immigration.

--

Lien : http://www.histoire-immigration.fr/2015/6/residence-frontieres-rendez-vous-3-ils-me-laissent-l-exil



Sandra Fassio au festival Le Court en dit long, jeudi au Centre Wallonie Bruxelles



 Cette semaine, l'une de mes plus anciennes et chères amies vient de Bruxelles à Paris pour présenter son deuxième court métrage :

KANUN

DE SANDRA FASSIO 



Réalisation : Sandra Fassio
Scénario : Sandra Fassio
Une coproduction : Offshore / Helicotronc
Avec le soutien de : CNC – Contribution financière, Région Champagne-Ardennes, Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles

KANUN : code albanais ancestral, impitoyable. L’article 864 dit : Tu vengeras la mort d’un membre de la famille par la mort de l’assassin. Mais l’article 602 impose de respecter et protéger son invité comme son propre enfant. Et ce soir, Adil a accepté d’héberger Johan, un de ses hommes de main, alors que son fils ainé n’est pas encore rentré à la maison.


Lien : http://www.offshore.fr/portfolio/kanun/


--

La projection a lieu dans le cadre du Festival "Le Court en dit long", au centre Wallonie-Bruxelles, rue Quincampoix.


cinéma

23E FESTIVAL LE COURT EN DIT LONG

DU LUNDI 1 AU SAMEDI 6 JUIN 2015

Festival compétitif de courts métrages produits ou coproduits en Belgique francophone.

Pour cette 23e édition, le Centre Wallonie-Bruxelles à Paris a sélectionné 44 courts métrages belges francophones ou franco-belges pour la compétition parmi les 106 films produits dans l’année, répartis en sept programmes thématiques.

Prenez votre pass festival

Chaque soir à 19h45, le public pourra participer au Forum avec les équipes de films et rencontrer les réalisateurs, scénaristes, acteurs, techniciens et producteurs. Cet échange enregistré sera en écoute le lendemain dans le lecteur en haut à droite.
Un espace « Marché du film » est accessible aux professionnels du 2 au 6 juin dès 15h.
Le samedi 6 juin, le festival propose deux programmes hors compétition : une séance spéciale à 16h avec des films d’animation pour enfants (dont certains réalisés par des enfants) et à 17h une séance de courts métrages documentaires d’école(INSAS, IAD et La Cambre).
Enfin, en clôture à 19h30, après la Remise des Prix et des trophées SWING, le Festival propose en avant-première le premier long métrage de Vania Leturcq, L’Année prochaine (sortie nationale le 24 juin 2015 par Chrysalis Films), en sa présence.
Pendant le Festival, du 1er au 6 juin 2015, exposition de photographies du Liégeois Dominique Houcmant / Goldo : une vingtaine de portraits d’artistes belges (actrices, acteurs, réalisatrices, réalisateurs, écrivains mais aussi chanteurs), dans le foyer du théâtre.

PROGRAMME 3

DU MARDI 2 AU JEUDI 4 JUIN 2015DU MARDI 2 AU JEUDI 4 JUIN 2015

Ailleurs en VO

Mardi 2 juin, 18h - Jeudi 4 juin, 20h30. Durée totale : 93 minutes.




Mardi 2 juin, 18h - Jeudi 4 juin, 20h30. Durée totale : 93 minutes.
1. Sœur Oyo de Monique Phoba
(2014 – 23 min.40 – VO lingala stf.)
Avec : Rosie Mayungi, Laura Verlinden, Jénovie Mabiala, Catherine Salée, Laure Demanesse, Sidonie Madoki, Nganji.
Dans le Congo colonial des années 1950, Godelive, une écolière s’occidentalise au pensionnat de Mbanza-Mboma. Mais le souvenir de sa grand-mère s’interpose…
Production : Rumbacom sri, Umedia, RTBF, avec l’aide du CCA, du VAF et le soutien de l’OIF et du CIRTEF.

2. Le guide de François Hien
(2015 – 24 min. – VO arabe stf.)
Avec : Mustapha El Ghazi, François Hien, Mustapha Moussaoui, Si Saïd.
Dans un petit village du sud marocain, un Français s’arrête à l’auberge d’Abdelhadi. Il s’installe en terrasse et écrit dans un carnet. Aldelhadi est persuadé qu’il s’agit d’un guide touristique. Il faut lui donner la meilleure impression possible !
Production : Ciné Silex.

3. Untitled - figuration libre de Damien Collet
(2015 – 10 min. – animation – VO anglais stf.)
Avec : Paul Oakley Stovall, Eric Gijssen, Soleil Escobar.
Portrait d’une révolution artistique. Avec New York en toile de fond, son leader nous dépeint sa mise en œuvre. Suivez le guide.
Production : Lentille Optique.

4. Le mur de Samuel Lampaert
(2015 – 8 min. – VO mandarin stf.)
Scénario : Samuel Lampaert et Hugo Lampaert. Avec : Yves Yan, Steven Eng, Cathy Min Jung.
Hong Kong. Une multitude de hautes tours d’immeubles en béton. A l’intérieur, des studios étroits où vivent des anonymes, repliés sur eux-mêmes. Jusqu’au jour où Chung, célibataire, décide d’accrocher un cadre au mur !
Production : Les Films du Carré, CCA, RTBF.

5. Kanun de Sandra Fassio
(Belgique/France – 2015 – 27 min. – VO albanais stf.)

Avec : Arben Bajraktaraj, Kevin Azaïs, Anila Dervishi, Louise Margouet, Jehon Gorani, Alfons Avdylaj.
Le Kanun est un code albanais ancestral, impitoyable. Ce soir, Adil va être confronté au paradoxe de ces lois qu’il respecte depuis toujours.
Production : Helicotronc, Offshore, CCA, CNC, Région Champagne-Ardenne.

--
Plus d'infos sur le festival: http://www.cwb.fr/programme/23e-festival-le-court-en-dit-long


02/06/2015

"Heartburn" by 3D



One of my favourite paintings from 3D. These days.

Well, it's hard to have favourites when all pieces are beautiful...

But today my heart feels for "Heartburn", it's as simple as that.




"Heartburn" by 3D
(Lazarides Gallery, London)