Despite all the kilometres of ground untrodden by human foot, mountains unnamed and creatures unknown, Antarctica is a cultural space. The projects featured in the Antarctic Pavilion propose an expanded southern polar imaginary – testaments to the Antarctic community that would yet know itself, and the continent, in ways transcending national-scientific missions.
The Antarctic Pavilion is a long-term project, whose uncertain status vis a vis the Venice Biennale’s nationally over-determined structure is a provocation: a quasi-institutional claim to represent a transnational sphere, out of line with the festival’s politics of territorial representation. It points to Antarctica as a Giardini of sorts, in which the sovereignty-obsessed cultural ambitions relevant two centuries ago still seem to hold sway – and proposes alternative futures.
The Antarctic Pavilion is initiated by the artist Alexander Ponomarev. Drawing upon his background in nautical engineering and early career as a submariner, Ponomarev’s work chiefly invokes journeys at sea and remote terrain – contexts in which to explore the relationship between illusion and reality, the utility of art, and the shifting tides of personal and cultural history. Ponomarev is a regular visitor to Antarctica, and has realized numerous projects on the continent. The Antarctic Pavilion draws upon his longstanding interest in Antarctica’s potential as a cultural field.
The Antarctic Pavilion wishes to acknowledge the its General Partner, AVC Charity Foundation / Andrey Cheglakov.
Nadim Samman
Curator
Antarctica – no ring for it on the Olympic flag and no pavilion in the Giardini: The only continent without a biennale.
According to treaty, Antarctica is not owned. Yet a particular regime reigns supreme: After the heroic narratives of imperial exploration it has been colonized by competing national interests sublimated as cooperative scientific endeavour. After the age of glory hunters, making claims god, king and country, it has been annexed in the name of a research elite.
Whatever official agendas Antarctica’s inhabitants pursue, it is not beyond the pale to infer that they entertain additional definitions of placehood and their role in relation to it. Given the fact that the continent is an international zone with suspended sovereign claims, don’t these potential modes of identification hold some promise?—Perhaps the spirit of a transnational project even more ambitious, and worthwhile, than the one currently in effect? Let us hypothesize the existence of Antarctic cultures and whole new worldviews emanating from this region that have nothing to do with the ‘mission’.
The Antarctic Biennale is conceived by the artist Alexander Ponomarev as a cultural exchange with the continent’s scientists and support staff. This independently funded project – bringing artists, architects and other thinkers down South – will confront the resident elect with visions of Antarctic enterprise that they may not recognize, and attempt to draw out the implications of the Antarctic experience that go undocumented. Through exhibitions, performance and dialogue, the project will pursue an expanded Antarctic imaginary.
The Antarctic Biennale will be held in Antarctica in 2016 aboard international research vessels. To keep up to date with news please sign up for our newsletter.
ALEXANDER PONOMAREV
Commissioner - The Antarctic Pavilion & The Antarctic Biennale
Alexander Ponomarev graduated from the USSR Nautical Engineering College in 1979, following a period at the Orel Art School. He is an Officier d’Arts et de Lettres (France) and a member of the Russian Academy of Arts. In 2007 he represented Russia at the 52nd Biennale di Venezia and in 2009 docked his handmade submarine, SubTiziano, on the Grand Canal as an Official Collateral Project of the 53rd Biennale. In 2012 he represented Ukraine at the 13th Venice Biennale of Architecture. His works are in major public collections worldwide including the Centre Georges Pompidou, FNAC (Fonds National d’ Art Contemporain), France, the State Russian Museum, St Petersburg, the Collection of the Great Duchess of Luxembourg, the National Museum of Singapore, and the University Jaumel, Castellon de la Plasa (Spain).
NADIM SAMMAN
Curator
Nadim Samman is an independent curator and art historian based in London and Berlin. He read Philosophy at University College London before completing a doctorate at the Courtauld Institute of Art. He has written for publications including Third Text, The Art Newspaper, Art Review, Contemporary, Asian Affairs, Art India, Artchronika, Erotic Review, Naked Punch, Under/current and WestEast. He has also been an invited speaker at MoMA Warsaw, Università Ca' Foscari, the 798 Beijing Biennale, Christies and SoAs. His curatorial projects in London, Moscow, Berlin, Venice, Zurich and Marrakech have included presentations of leading modern and contemporary artists. In 2012 he curated the 4th Marrakech Biennale with Carson Chan. Projects in 2014 include Antarctopia: The Antarctic Pavilion and Treasure of Lima: A Buried Exhibition - a unique site-specific exhibition on the remote Pacific island of Isla del Coco Nadim is Co-Director of Import Projects (Berlin).
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