Panel Discussion: The Cenotaph Project & The Public Sphere
26 Mar 2015 at 19:30
The Hub, MAC Belfast
Panel: Stuart Brisley, Maya Balcioglu, Dr Sanja Perovic, Dr Colin Darke and Tony White.
The British painter, sculptor and performance artist Stuart Brisley is widely regarded as a key figure in British art. Along with his frequent collaborator, Maya Balcioglu, he has unflinchingly probed the political, cultural and social mores of his time in a career now spanning six decades.
The word ‘cenotaph’ literally means an ‘empty tomb’ (from the Greek ‘kenos’, empty and ‘taphos’, tomb). It both conceals remains that are lost or buried elsewhere and serves as a powerful signifier of military and state power. It thus raises questions about the relation between what is 'above ground', state-sanctioned, revealed and what remains underground, buried and concealed.
For this project Brisley and Balcioglu exhibited models of the Whitehall Cenotaph, scaled down to match the typical height of a council flat ceiling, in six locations across the UK. From a mute signifier of 'official history' the various, smaller cenotaphs opened a space for a critique of history and the possibility of change.
This event will include presentations from the artists Stuart Brisley and Maya Balcioglu, writer and academic Dr Sanja Perovic, and Belfast-based artist and writer Dr Colin Darke, followed by an open discussion amongst the speakers and audience.
The evening will conclude with a reading by London-based author Tony White, of a satirical short story entitled The Holborn Cenotaph, written in response to Brisley’s and Balcioglu project, in the tradition of Jonathan Swift’s A Modest Proposal.
A new bookwork, Stuart Brisley – Performing the Political Body and Eating Shit, commissioned by the MAC on the occasion of the exhibition Stuart Brisley: Headwinds will also be launched on the night. The author of this comprehensive text on Brisley’s performance practice, Michael Newman, will be in attendance.
Tickets: The MAC Belfast