Translocal, Transnational, and Hybrid Spatial Spaces

We (Francesca Ceola and Simone Rueß) designed a processual multimedia workshop to encounter, reflect upon, and upend questions on translocality, of transnationalism, and of hybrid cultural and space-oriented structures. Working actively with the workshop room using time-based, graphic, and performative languages, we aimed to ground broad, abstract concepts in graspable experiences. We first got into the atmosphere of thinking visually by watching and discussing Camilo Bravo Molano’s audio-visual work “Liquid Homes”: a film portrait mapping a displaced person’s experience in Portugal. The participants were then invited to share ideas and explore possibilities to translate and elaborate on the broad concepts of translocality, transnationalism, and hybrid spatialities. We used graphic prompts, language, and performative explorations to enhance this embodied analysis that we developed both individually, then collectively. The workshop closed with a lecture by Prof. Dr. Magdalena Nowicka through a self-reflection on spatialities of migrants and transnational affect. She put in words aspects and differences of transnational and translocal homes introduced to us through Bravo Molano’s film images in the beginning of the workshop.

More to read about on our blogpost @sfb1265

Facing Pairs and Changing Dialogue Partners: A Drawing-Exchange in Transition

The participants were sitting along tables, in a line, in the room. In the middle of the tables, a line of drawings was laid out: to stimulate sensorial reflections including division, connection, detachment, leaving behind, and new beginnings. The lines drawn on paper represented a visual simplification of complex relationships of translocality, transnationality or hybridity. They could be associated with borders, border crossings, border dissolutions, and separation. The drawing paper and pens handed out to each participant invited personal pictorial reproductions, transformations, or further developments of the graphic proposals. Participants in pairs exchanged about the graphics lying between them in one moment, only to be urged to abandon the conversation at the next, leaving their exchanges behind, and proceeding to the following dialogue partner. Engaging in couple-of-minutes increments  almost overwhelmed us with a threefold intensity: the sound of all engaged voices, the flow of ideas, and the frantic timing of conversation changes.

The series of drawings laid out on the tables to initiate and orient participants’ conversations were inspired by the artist Chiara Carrer’s book Pensar el espacio. Reflejos, superficies, y colores (transl. “Thinking the Space. Reflections, surfaces, and colors”). Some drawings are a direct re-interpretation of Chiara Carrer, while others were developed from the drawing research of Simone Rueß and her conversations on spatial imaginations with more than 30 interviewees from all over the world. (excerpt of the blogpost @sfb1265)

A Room with Borders, Barriers, and Open Forms: An Embodied Non-verbal Interaction

(...)

Participants were confronted with the challenge of having to leave their present position in the room to reach another point in the space, limited by the four structural walls but also some additional cardboard walls. Acting in their own space, participants initially imperceptibly created a common structure of changing distances in the room. Forms and shapes of paper left behind, foreign lines, and cut-outs found at the next position, they gradually triggered more conscious interactions with spatial traces of the others. One sequential letter after the other, local and migrated shapes formed fragile hybrid common figurations. (excerpt of the blogpost @sfb1265)

Islands of Creation and Synthesis: Individual and Collective Reflexion, drawings and ensembles by María Linares (1), anonymous participant (2), Ludovica Tomarchio (3), Workshop part 5, 2024.

Islands of Creation and Synthesis: Individual and Collective Reflections in a Shared Space

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The rapid, time-framed and place-constrained interactions explored during the workshop can be observed and were intentionally initiated as cues for refiguration of spatial, social, psychological, and cognitive (as in how associations of ideas are enhanced) arrangements and constellations that tell us something around concepts of translocality, transnationality, and hybrid cultural space-oriented structures. The setup of a laboratory with sequential tasks and reflection allowed us to grasp the nature of these spatial structures both in an abstract and elementary way. Film, verbal exchange, figurative language, movement, drawing, symbols, performance, objects, language, and lecture. In diverse media and transdisciplinary reflections, we looked at these formats and terms from various sides, as if we deconstructed their characters into multifaceted multiple layers. Thinking towards expanding the edges of the refiguration theory vis-à-vis territorial structures, we engaged with the diffracted meanings of translocalization with a postnationalist critique to explore practices, memories, and meaning-making at multiple levels: socio-material, ecological-economic, and symbolic-transcendent. As a result, the drift of notions, shifts, and hybridization were not just a conceptual exercise but also a figurative and embodied one". (Conclusion in our blogpost @sfb1265)

walk-in, 4.9.2020 (Warszawa – Berlin)

On the constructed 23-metre-long footbridge in the garden of Gallery Le Guern, visitors actively contribute to a connection across physical distance through their participation on 4 September 2021. Built from material from Warsaw and Berlin, the bridge is the starting point of the happening. The Varsavian artist Krzysztof Franaszek is present on site in the gallery garden, while Berlin artist Simone Rueß is present on the bridge digitally on a screen. Visitors can follow how the two artists meet again virtually, and they can also talk live with the Berlin artist. The installation invites visitors to share their current (border) experiences during the pandemic. The happening makes the transnational relationship tangible and evokes memories of territorially specific border cases. The action relates digital and physical proximity to each other. Differences in distances are experienced, spatial approaches are tested and digital and analogue presence are negotiated with each other. 

HALA

In 2011, Simone Rueß and Krzysztof Franaszek jointly created the video installation HALA (two projections 16:9, 6‘54“, on loop). It documented the dismantling of the KDT market hall which spanned a vast expanse at the very heart of Warsaw next to the Palace of Culture and Science from 1999 to 2009, which today marks the site of the contemporary art museum MSN. In their record of gradual destruction, the artists discovered that the demolishment involved the erection of temporary structures which were later taken down, as well. Their collaborative project de-re-konstrukt (2019-2021) that followed, as well addresses the arc of creation and destruction, which is part and parcel of the urban lifecycle.

W roku 2011 Simone Rueß i Krzysztof Franaszek wspólnie stworzyli wideoinstalację pt. HALA (dwie projekcje 16:9, 6'54", pętla). Dokumentowali wówczas etapy rozbiórki hal handlowych KDT, które w latach 1999-2009 zajmowały obszerną przestrzeń w samym centrum Warszawy przy Pałacu Kultury i Nauki. W tym miejscu powstal Muzeum Sztuki Nowoczesnej. W zapisie procesu stopniowego niszczenia artyści zwrócili uwagę, że na rozbiórkę składają się też etapy wznoszenia tymczasowych budowli, które kolejno także ulegają wyburzeniu. de-re-konstrukt również podąża za cyklem tworzenia i niszczenia, który jest nieodłącznym elementem życia miasta..
  Im Jahr 2011 schufen die Künstler*innen Simone Rueß und Krzysztof Franaszek gemeinsam die Videoinstallation HALA (zwei Projektionen 16:9, Dauer: 6'54", loop). Sie dokumentierten den Abriss der Markthalle KDT, welche von 1999 bis 2009 auf dem Plac Defilad vor dem Kulturpalast im Zentrum von Warschau stand. An diesem Ort entstand das Museum für Zeitgenössische Kunst. In den Videoaufnahmen hielten die Künstler*innen fest, wie während des allmählichen Abrisses für kurze Zeit temporäre neue Bauten und Objekte entstanden, die dann genauso sukzessive wieder abgerissen wurden. Auch ihr kollaboratives Folge-Projekt de-re-konstrukt (2019-2021) empfindet den Kreislauf von Konstruktion und Dekonstruktion nach – ein Prozess, der dem Leben einer Stadt innewohnt.

Meeting on the Warsaw–Berlin Express Train

The action Meeting on the Warsaw– Berlin Express Train of 14 December 2019 speaks about both the personal relationship between Simone Rueß and Krzysztof Franaszek and, more broadly, the relationship between Poland and Germany. The artists boarded trains departing respectively from Warsaw and Berlin at 5:36 in the morning and travelled towards each other. Their joint journey started in Poznań. The train car turned into a place of encounter along the line joining two points, always moving towards one of them. Whenever the artists became disorientated, they would record their experience in the two languages.

'Granica' - Meeting on the Warsaw–Berlin Express Train

‘Meeting on the Warsaw–Berlin Express Train, 14.12.2019’, action in the frame of de-re-konstrukt, note card "border"

'Grenze' - Meeting on the Warsaw–Berlin Express Train

‘Meeting on the Warsaw–Berlin Express Train, 14.12.2019’, action in the frame of de-re-konstrukt, note card "border"

Obiekty urbanistyczne ⁄ Urbane Objekte / Urban Objekts

Starting in 2019, Simone Rueß and Krzysztof Franaszek have been emailing each other with photographs which capture the transition of both Berlin and Warsaw. Placed in the context of distance separating the artists’ home cities, their mutual communication and exchange inspires and informs the de- re- konstrukt project. Rueß and Franaszek have classified more than 400 photographs into thematic strands which underlie an ever-expending network of relations, including: line; border; construction; deconstruction; communication; loops; positive; negative.

Simone Rueß i Krzysztof Franaszek od 2019 roku przesyłają sobie pocztą e-mail kadry fotograficzne dokumentujące procesy i dynamikę przemian Berlina i Warszawy. Komunikacja i wymiana w kontekście dystansu pomiędzy miastami, w których artyści żyją i pracują stały się równorzędną inspiracją i składowymi częściami projektu de-re-konstrukt. Rueß i Franaszek sklasyfikowali ponad 400 fotografii w zestaw tematów tworzących stale rozwijającą się sieć powiązań. Należą do nich: linia, granica, konstrukcja, dekonstrukcja, komunikacja, pętle, pozytyw, negatyw.

Seit 2019 schicken sich Simone Rueß und Krzysztof Franaszek via Email Fotos, die dynamische Veränderungsprozesse in Berlin und Warschau dokumentieren. Im Kontext der Entfernung zwischen den Heimatstädten der Künstler*innen inspiriert der fotografische Austausch das Projekt de- re- konstrukt. Rueß und Franaszek gliedern die über 400 Alltagsfotografien in Kategorien wie Linie, Grenze, Konstruktion, Dekonstruktion, Kommunikation, Schlaufen, Positiv und Negativ, welche ein sich ständig erweiterndes Netz aus Verknüpfungen bilden.

Meeting on the Warsaw–Berlin Express Train

‘Meeting on the Warsaw–Berlin Express Train, 14.12.2019’, action in the frame of de-re-konstrukt, installation view at Le Guern Gallery 2021, photo by Adam Gut