Steve Lambert

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Enacting Populism opens Feb 17th in Paris

Enacting Populism at Kadist

ENACTING POPULISM IN ITS MEDIÆSCAPE
Curated by  Matteo Lucchetti
February 18 – April 22, 2012

Press conference: Thursday February 16 at 11 am at Kadist Art Foundation
Opening reception: Friday, February 17 from 6 to 9  pm.

Alterazioni Video, Heman Chong, Luigi Coppola, Danilo Correale, Foundland,  Nicoline van Harskamp, Steve Lambert, Oliver Ressler, Anna Scalfi Eghenter, Société Réaliste, Jonas  Staal, Superflex.

with a screening program curated by le peuple qui manque
a public conversation with Ernesto Laclau (Thursday February 9, 7-9  pm)

Kadist Art Foundation is pleased to present Enacting Populism in its mediaescape, an exhibition  curated by Matteo Lucchetti, following his residency at the Foundation.

Enacting Populism is an on-going project on the possible relationships between art practices and the  populist mediascape that connotes the current political zeitgeist of Europe. At Kadist Art Foundation  this project will develop into an exhibition that will take place during the last two months of the  presidential elections campaign in France. The space here is interpreted as a sui generis political  bureau, immersing the exhibition in an ambivalent environment where the works can be seen as  elements belonging to a political party office where a campaign is being prepared.

The show is focusing on the European populism that has heavily influenced the public imagery on  politics for the last twenty years. Its leaders and agitators understood at an early stage the shift that  occurred both in portraying the figure of the politician and in the role of the political discourse in the  mediascape. In fact, when political ideologies ceased to give shape to the political agendas, with the  end of the Cold War, the Western parties started to progressively mirror this ending with the flattening  of their positions in the public debate, starting to respond only to a general capitalism discourse about  a global market that needed to find its way. From that point the political action softened the natural  antagonism of democracy, thus creating a lack of opposite and distinct political projects. This situation  left space for a popular frustration to arise and consequently demagogues articulated it. Therefore  those who understood how the space of politics worked slowly moved from being representative to  openly playing with its representation in the media.

Ernesto Laclau was one of the first to acknowledge to populism a dimension inherent to any  democratic regime, looking at it through a historical perspective and not just as a right wing party  phenomenon. As Laclau states,“democratic politics requires the construction of a ‘people’ on the basis  of one or more empty signifiers as well as an antagonism between ‘us’ and ‘them’ “ .

In order to create alternative, cheap and fictional feelings of belonging, or rather in order to ‘construct’  that empty signifier that is ‘the people’, the visual strategies that take place on a daily basis in the  media might not only be seen as completely distorted productions of our times. Instead, they can  also be considered as materials that can be easily deconstructed, so as to offer a clearer vision on  what democracy looks like today. The process of enacting populism, to make the aesthetic strategies  embedded in the creation of a visible consensus, comes together with interferences put at play  with the mediascape. Here, the artistic projects find new potentialities to impact the contemporary  imagery on politics as seen in the works produced for the show. Moreover, developing a historical  perspective on the idea we have on populism, generates tools through which an awareness is created.

Read an extended version of this text here.

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