Reports

Warsaw Under Construction Festival 6th edition: The city of artists

In the past, WARSAW UNDER CONSTRUCTION festival dealt with architecture and its designers, advertising in the public space, and participation processes. And now, the time came for artists.
Warsaw of the year 2014 is a centre of the Polish artistic life, being the seat for the most important Polish cultural institutions, commercial galleries and cultural periodicals. Every month, Warsaw witnesses dozens of new exhibitions, book presentations, performances, discussions and film shows. As a result of symbolic  installations in the city public space (such as Greetings from Aleje Jerozolimskie by Joanna Rajkowska or The Rainbow by Julita Wójcik), Warsaw art is commented on the front-pages of the biggest papers, and is well-known to the city inhabitants. Through their lifestyles, also artists themselves set trends that, after a while, become popular in the society as a whole or in some of its sections. Thus, artists and their art play an important role in emancipatory processes.
WUC has always been a festival depicting the city. This year, we will look at the city from the perspective of visual artists whose role in shaping Warsaw is still underrated, though it is them who often have been the initiators of the new city lifestyles that make the capital so attractive today.

Today, artists discuss the problem of their inclusion in the general social security system. People who have for many years been creative in the field of culture cannot retire for economic reasons, and have to look for other employments to secure for themselves/ health and retirement insurance. In the era of common economic uncertainty, artists again open a discussion that can soon become pertinent also for other social groups if they find themselves in a similar situation.

http://wwb6.artmuseum.pl/en/festiwal/miasto-artystow

place_Neurčené místo
tags
castTomasz Fudala, Klara Czerniewska
cameraAgata Wrońska
soundAgata Wrońska
editingAgata Wrońska
interviewBęc Zmiana
translationBęc Zmiana
categoryReports
published3. 3. 2015
languageČesky / English
embedlink icon
arrow down
related
Warsaw Under Construction Festival 6th edition: The city of artists
The project Bellevue di Monaco takes place in several buildings in the centre of Munich. The buildings were supposed to be demolished in order to build new luxury apartments there. However, the plan was thwarted by a group of activists and their guerilla reconstruction of one of the flats. Consequently, the migration crisis in 2015 incited the foundation of an official cooperative involving several hundred local residents who rented the houses and turned them into a multifunctional centre.
Considering the changing nature of work under global capitalism and the role of female labour, the film ‘Some Women, Other Women and all the Bittermen’ (2014, dir. Rehana Zaman) is a contentious and highly engaging adoption of the conventions of British soap opera place alongside footage documenting meetings of migrant women in the UK at the self-led organisation Justice for Domestic Workers in Leeds.
It's obvious that the issue of the environment and ecology in art is increasingly becoming a consciously political decision that affects what art we create, how we teach it, how we talk about it, or how we present it. Artwork is intertwined with cultural activity, which is linked to activism and vice versa. The context, material used and financial resources are increasingly accentuated.
Diana Lelonek explores relationships between humans and other species. Her projects are critical responses to the processes of over-production, unlimited growth, and our approach to the environment.