Fiona Banner - (Inter)national Residency 2019/20
Fiona Banner is one of the eighteen participants of the (Inter)national Residency program in 2019-20.
The program is addressed to any artist or curator or other creative and curious practitioner who has a concrete artistic research question they would like to take further.
“When I came into Piraeus harbor by boat recently, I saw a military submarine surface, it was heading out to sea. It slowly emerged from below, and I could not believe what I was seeing. I zoomed in on it using my phone, to get close to it, also to prove its presence. Nobody else on the boat seemed to notice. It was thrilling and frightening, I was struck that it was hidden in plain sight.”
For her final student show at Goldsmiths (London, 1995) Fiona Banner presented a vast, life-size photograph of a section of Trident nuclear submarine. She had rescaled a photograph of a very small Airfix model of Trident, as the submarine was not visible in the public sphere —something that is vast, and yet hidden. The faux heroic image of the submarine was a big wall of grey with some military markings on it, virtually abstract. It was also highly reflective, like a mirror —in looking at it you become part of it, a beast of our own making. How conflict is represented in mainstream culture (war movies, popular imagery, fashion, media channels) has been the jumping off point for Banner’s work since. Her first book was The Nam, a verbal super-movie description of Hollywood Vietnam movies, a recall of imagery she had seen on the TV as a kid, but also an indulgence and investigation at the same time, looking at the contradictions of industrialized cultural forces that she (we?) finds seductive and repulsive in equal measure.
Taking the moment of this submarine appearing, as a tactile thought, Banner will explore the Piraeus port —a major section of which is leased to China for 100 million euros a year— and try to find out more about the submarine. She will visit the Hellenic Military shipyard near Αthens where it was built —if it was indeed Greek.
More in:
Ellpetha Tsivicos: CHAK
Agape Harmani: Rizes/Roots/Hundee
Marc Delalonde: For an astro-ecology of the self
Arshia Fatima Haq: The Archive of the Unsung
Chrysanthi Koumianaki: Score for a future panigiris
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