Luleåbiennalen 2020:
Tiden på jorden / Time on Earth
21.11.2020~14.2.2021

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Sista chansen att ta del av Luleåbiennalen 2020: Tiden på jorden

Onsdag 10 februari, kl 16~20 samt lördag 13 februari–söndag 14 februari, kl 12~16
Galleri Syster håller öppet. Grupputställning med Augusta Strömberg, Susanna Jablonski och Ana Vaz.

Torsdag 11 februari– söndag 14 februari, kl 12~16
Havremagasinet länskonsthall i Boden håller öppet. Grupputställning med Beatrice Gibson, Susanna Jablonski, Birgitta Linhart, Fathia Mohidin, Charlotte Posenenske, Tommy Tommie och Danae Valenza.

Lördag 13 februari–söndag 14 februari, kl 14~18
Det gamla fängelset Vita Duvan håller öppet med Maria W Horns hyllade Elektroakustiska komposition "Den vita duvans lament"

Lördag 13 februari, kl 15~19
Konstnären Markus Öhrn och poeten David Väyrynens ljudinstallation "Bikt" ställs ut på isen nedanför Residensgatan i Luleå. Lyssna till ljudsatta vittnesmål av den äldre generationens tornedalskvinnor.

Boka gärna ditt besök via Billetto. Drop in i mån av plats!

För er som inte har möjlighet att ta del av Luleåbiennalen på plats arrangeras också en avslutningshelg online med en fullspäckad radio-show) ledd av biennalens curatorer. Här kommer du kunna ta del av konstnärsamtal, ljudverk och specialskrivna essäer!

Luleåbiennalens utställningar på Norrbottens museum, Luleå konsthall, Välkommaskolan i Malmberget och Silvermuseet i Arjeplog förblir stängda.

“Between Subversion and Hallucination”
Ruth Noack
Room, Room, Room (1963) by Arne Jones at Storgatan 9, Luleå. 

This issue of Lulu Journal is dedicated to composer Olga Neuwirth

This volume gathers some of the materials – texts, art works, music, performance, – as well as the authors attached to these materials, that have guided me in my research into forms of subversion in sleep and forms of dreaming that help us envision life as we would like to live it. I had occasion to collect together some of this material for the first time for the symposium “Between Subversion and Hallucination” at the Dutch Art Institute in March this year and for a series of exhibition sketches called "Sleeping with a Vengeance, Dreaming of a Life", which opened in Athens, then Prague, then Beijing.

The subject has been with me since I stumbled upon a painting by Camille Pissarro from 1882, depicting a seemingly picturesque scene of a woman sleeping in a meadow. The impression is misleading. Read in light of the political upheavals in the French countryside at the time, and with the knowledge that anarchist Pissarro expressed his political sympathies in his art, the painting reveals itself as a depiction of a farm worker asleep, – and on strike.

Much has been written about the clutches of late capitalism on our sleep. In a “24/7 universe” (to use Jonathan Crary's phrase), sleep has been turned into a resource, tied to production, consumption, warfare and biopolitics. Much less has been written about actual struggles to resist this development. Indeed, while many have noted the predicament of being simultaneously enticed to sleep less and to sleep more effectively, the recent sleep-hype delights in either regurgitating the capitalist dystopia or in exploring Morpheus' realm, as if it were uncharted terrain.

But what does it do if we keep on representing a dystopian perspective within the framework of cognitive capitalism? Obviously, it is important that contemporary conditions be analysed. Yet, I cannot help but notice that while some are able to capitalise on their critical activities, the agency of others, who are bearing the brunt of economic inequality, is being obscured by the concentration on capitalism's pervasiveness. Concrete labour struggles and anti-capitalist success stories seldom enter the discourse around sleep.

And what does it do, if we turn our fascination with sleep into cultural production without considering how this might still mimic the ideology of sleep-optimisation? We end up feeding the creative industries with sleep performances, sleep hotels, sleep music, sleep philosophy. Meanwhile subversion is naively considered a given, as if sleep were in and of itself some magical mechanism of freedom. As if sleep were a practice without a context. As if subversion and resistance weren't part of a struggle, an individual and political struggle.

In order to politicise the discourse around sleep, it is necessary to begin to think the social conditions from the sleeper’s point of view. What, for example can dream-life tell us about living under a totalitarian regime? How can we move beyond the contradiction of sleep and wakefulness? What does it mean to fall asleep at a protest site? Is there political subjectivity to be found in dreaming? What can we accomplish when we question the negative connotations of passivity and instead start hallucinating? Or when we start to wake up?

I would like to thank Emily Fahlén and Asrin Haidari for their trust in me and to express my utter indebtedness to all authors for their generous contributions and to Sharon Sliwinski, the editor of The Museum of Dreams, www.museumofdreams.org. The latter has proven to be a particularily inspiring resource. My gratitude belongs to my students at the DAI, who were willing to think about sleep and dreaming alongside me for several months and to Gabriëlle Schleijppen, who supported my research through an invitation to curate one of the Dutch Art Institute's infamous Roaming Assemblies (March 2018).

~
Ruth Noack trained as a visual artist and art historian, she has worked as author, art critic, university lecturer and exhibition maker since the 1990s.

Radio 65.22 är ett tvärsnitt av biennalens tema och innehåll som förstärker och tillgängliggör skrivna texter, gestaltade situationer och konstnärliga röster. Radio 65.22 möjliggör också för dig som inte kan uppleva Luleåbiennalen på plats i Norrbotten att ta del av valda delar av årets aktiviteter. Vi vill skriva in oss i en experimentell och utforskande radiotradition där själva mediet blir en plattform för vår idé om radio och dess förmåga att skildra och avspegla vår omvärld. Radio 65.22 får till uppgift att på ytterligare sätt berätta om verkligheten, som kanske inte är möjligt genom bilden eller texten.

Under Brottstycken: Tiden på jorden presenteras radioprogram och ljudverk i olika genrer och former som på ett eller annat sätt är ett utsnitt ur årets biennal. Platsens ande är ett turnerande litteratursamtal om språk och plats. Under ledning av kulturjournalisten och författaren Kerstin Wixe söker vi upp platser som varit avgörande för en författares berättelser eller bär berättelsens historia. Även DeKonstruktion handlar om plats: en serie program som utspelar sig i Malmberget. Vävda sånger är en fördjupande serie radioprogram som accentuerar sången, röstens och berättandets roll i skapandet av nya världsbilder och -ordningar. Vävda sånger har producerats i samarbete med Statens konstråd.

Lyssna, begrunda, njut!