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03.07.2009
Toomas Hendrik Ilves

Who are we? Where are we?

National identity and mental geography

Over the last thousand years, Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have had multiple identities and been members of several empires. Now, writes the President of Estonia, "we should be looking to create identities that go beyond those that history has foisted upon us". [ more ]

02.07.2009
Martin M. Simecka

Still not free

01.07.2009
Stefan Jonsson

The first man

29.06.2009
Tatiana Zhurzhenko

The geopolitics of memory

25.06.2009
Timothy Snyder

Holocaust: The ignored reality


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03.07.2009

Gegenworte | 21 (2009)

Die Wissenschaft geht ins Netz [Science goes internet]
03.07.2009

Mute | 12 (2009)

The creative city in ruins
03.07.2009

Varlik | 7/2009

Eurozine Review


24.06.2009
Eurozine Review

So what's our problem?

"Hungarian Quarterly" divines the future of the forint; "Index on Censorship" gives libel law a bad press; "Samtiden" doubts whether Norwegian police women are any freer with the hijab; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Berlin) applies the belt to Europe's cordon sanitaire; "Mittelweg 36" sees solidarity outgrow the nation; "Roots" says yes to Europe, but not at any cost; "Kulturos barai" does not dismiss the idea of a new Lithuanian Grand Duchy; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Oslo) calls the European elections a farce; "Rili" wants to keep the market out of universities; and "Fronesis" explains what 2°C means in an expertocracy.

09.06.2009
Eurozine Review

Happy birthday, Mr Habermas

26.05.2009
Eurozine Review

In monads' land

05.05.2009
Eurozine Review

Advanced profligate capitalism

21.04.2009
Eurozine Review

A kind of Tory communist



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Eurozine Gallery

The wall






Since 2003, graffiti artists worldwide have been leaving their marks on the Palestinian side of the demarcation wall being built between Palestinian and Israeli territory. Swedish artist Cecilia Parsberg's photographs record what she calls "an international multitude, a writing-carpet". "I am primarily interested in the phenomena of people coming from other countries to paint on the wall, and that they paint on one side of it," she says. "The core of this type of network is the connection between the place and activity, the clash of different aesthetic expressions, that there is no typical graffiti-aesthetic." Are Parsberg's photographs evidence of a larger movement of aesthetic resistance to the changing value systems of globalization in art and society?

Cecilia Parsberg

Networking on the wall

Palestinian artists and cultural workers talk about the "art" drawn on the wall demarcating Palestinian and Israeli territory. Their opinions are revealing of the wall's significance in the Palestinian experience and the function of "network as resistance". [ more ]

About the artist

Cecilia Parsberg lives and works in Stockholm, Sweden. She is a visual artist who works with relational concepts, and was educated at Valand Academy of Fine Arts, Gothenburg University, Sweden, with a post-grad Diploma from Dundee University, UK.

Eurozine Gallery


Current exhibition:
Leonhard Lapin
Suprealism
[Summer 2007]

Previous exhibitions:
Cecilia Parsberg
The wall
[Summer 2006]
Josef Schützenhöfer
Art comes from labour
[Spring 2006]
Mircea Stanescu
Airbag
[Autumn 2005-Spring 2006]
In the early 1990s, she contributed to the development of Valand's educational programme in digital media for artists, where she also taught for several years. From 1999 to 2002, she was professor at the Academy of Fine Arts, Umeå University, Sweden. For two periods between 2000 and 2002, she was guest professor in the Fine Arts Department at Witwatersrand University, Johannesburg, South Africa. She has held many workshops at art academies in Sweden, Norway, and the US in art/activism as well as relational art practices.

At the moment, she is showing in Sweden: the installation "A heart from Jenin" at BildMuseet, Umeå; a permanent installation in Rinkeby; the film "The holy land" with Maj Wechselman, which had its premiere at the Gothenburg International Film Festival in January 2006; and photos in the exhibition "Konstfeminism" at Liljevalchs Konsthall, Stockholm, Sweden, June 15 to August 27.

She is also exhibiting "Wrestling" in the show Human Games, organized by Fransesco Bonami at Fondazione Pitti Discovery, Florence, Italy, June 21 to July 23.

An account of her work and earlier exhibitions can be found at http://this.is/Parsberg.

Throughout the 1990s, her work dealt with power and sexuality, how power structures permeate our daily lives. Her gaze changed from the outsider to the participant: the image exists between us, the task of the artist is to "activate the image". The theoretical concept "The Action" was articulated through five artworks in South Africa over a period of three years. For the past five years, she has been articulating her art projects as real political postures. Cecilia argues that this sphere is a possible place for artists' work.

The question of how art participates in social processes is also about the role of the artist; since February, she has been connected to the network DIRECT, with its emphasis on strategies for art and civic entrepreneurship; for three years, she has also worked with the network Bwana Club.

 



Published 2006-05-30


Original in English
© Cecilia Parsberg
© Eurozine
 

Focal points

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Literature

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Post-traumatic stress disorder

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Conferences

Eurozine emerged from an informal network dating back to 1983. Since that time, a variety of European cultural magazines have met once a year in European cities to exchange ideas and experiences. In the meantime, approximately 100 periodicals from almost every European country have become involved in these meetings.
European histories
The 22nd European Meeting of Cultural Journals
Vilnius, 8-11 May 2009

http://www.eurozine.com/comp/focalpoints/vilnius_european_histories.html
The 22nd European Meeting of Cultural Journals took place in Vilnius, Lithuania, 8 to 11 May 2009. Under the heading "European Histories", the Eurozine conference explored the role of history and memory in forming new identities in a Europe in change. [more]

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