Exposition L’ART AU TEMPS DU CORONAVIRUS
Inventez, créer et votre réalisation sera exposée virtuellement dans l’écomusée Voltaire de l’API
Exposition virtuelle
L’Association pour le Patrimoine Industriel (API) met continuellement à l’honneur l’ingéniosité humaine portée dans le domaine de l’industriel et de pratiques artistiques dans son espace muséal et d’atelier.
L’impossibilité d’ouvrir les portes de l’API pour un temps encore incertain a fait naître l’envie d’une exposition virtuelle à laquelle vous êtes invité.e.s à participer.
Réalisation 3D, VR : Olivier Journeau, creative director
Sujet
La période de confinement à laquelle nous sommes contraint fait émerger de nouvelles expressions et pratiques artistiques, de nouveaux langages. Quelle-s forme-s prennent votre créativité votre inventivité dans votre quotidien confiné ?
• Photographie,
• vidéo,
• Dessins
• textes
https://www.patrimoineindustriel.ch/2020/03/29/appel-a-projets/
voir exemple : Une vision panoramique d’une partie de l’exposition actuelle avec des métadonnées : https://seekbeak.com/v/GYbjNRkdjA7
l ‘art au temps du coronavirus
L’ART AU TEMPS DU CORONAVIRUS
Association pour le Patrimoine Industriel
www.patrimoineindustriel.ch] Association pour le Patrimoine Industriel La Maison du patrimoine industriel et des arts graphiques Rue du Vuache 25 1201 Genève ecomuseeapi@gmail.com www.patrimoineindustriel.ch
" 20 ans, c’est tout une histoire !" fable contemporaine.
Une conception et un tournage participatifs.
Premières projections : quartier des Promenades de l’Europe, novembre 2012 . projection : du film "20 ans c’est tout une histoire"
Première fiction participative d’une série de SIX, tournés en cinq ans, dans différents pays ( Afrique, Inde, Europe, camp de réfugiés)
prolongation de l’expo jusqu’au 15 janvier 2020.
extraits du concert de la fanfare techno
API
API Le 7 décembre 2019 Fête de finissage de l’exposition PRESSE (censure)
Quatre videos dont la performance de l’Institut International de Gravatologie
Dans le cadre de l’exposition PRESSE (censure) :
Table ronde du 14 novembre avec m. Nils MELZER, Rapporteur Spécial des Nations Unies sur la torture, des avocats défenseurs de Julian ASSANGE, etc . http://www.darksite.ch/alachaine/spip/spip.php ?article468
API, PRESSE (censure) Table ronde La Guerre contre la vérité http://www.darksite.ch/alachaine/spip/spip.php ?article468
Jeudi 14 novembre 2019, prises de paroles de
Nils MELZER, Rapporteur Spécial des Nations Unies sur la Torture
Maître Philippe STOLKIN, avocat à Zürich, co-initiateur d’un appel à l’Asile en Suisse pour Julian ASSANGE.
Maître Annemie SCHAUS, avocate au barreau de Bruxelles, membre de l’Advisory Board de l’European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights, et co-défendeuse de Julian ASSANGE.
M. Guy METTAN, député genevois, ancien directeur du Club de la Presse de Genève.
Table Ronde : Les mécanismes de la censure : http://www.darksite.ch/alachaine/spip/spip.php ?article469
Manifestation devant l ’ONU qui a précédé l’exposition PRESSE (censure) : http://www.darksite.ch/alachaine/spip/spip.php ?article461 A P I
Association pour le Patrimoine Industriel
La Maison du patrimoine industriel et des arts graphiques
Rue du Vuache 25 - 1201 Genève Tél 022 340 44 10
www.patrimoineindustriel.ch In November 2019, an exhibition on the topic of censorship took place at the Association pour le Patrimoine Industriel (API) in Geneva, Switzerland. An ecomusée, the API is a special museum in charge of industrial heritage conservation. API seized the opportunity to link their exhibit on linotype and printing machine systems with issues related to press censorship – an especially timely showcasing given current sensitive discussions surrounding speech suppression (e.g., Julian Assange).The director of the museum, Franck Vacheron, agreed to sit down with me to discuss the thought process behind the exhibit and answer some questions.Caroline Morel : How do you link industrial heritage with citizenship ?Franck Vacheron : In the API, as a team, we have agreed to take a different approach when exhibiting old machines. Rather than presenting them in immaculate isolation, we link each machine to a thematic exhibition that deals with the rebirth of old techniques. In this way, we assist the visitor in contextualizing the machine in greater history and space. At the moment, our entire exhibition space, a former factory, is devoted to one object.We work with a social commitment in mind. We frequently collaborate with older workers who have experience working with these forgotten machines and ask them to conduct workshops for younger generations. In the case of our current exhibition, we involved a local school class. They created anti-censorship slogans – considering the wording and layout before printing them using our machines. They did a great job composing and printing slogans that defend freedom of expression.CM : Do you think you are writing tomorrow’s history ?FV : We work with unique and revitalized artifacts sans nostalgia. Our aim with this exhibit was to consider the dominant printing technology of today and re-purpose old machines to match contemporaryneeds. Our vision is to bring the past to life by making its artifacts functional once again. It was initially difficult to rehabilitate these machines, but we persisted because we firmly believe they have utility and social value. In our own way, we contribute to a more circular economy and fight “planned” obsolescence. We are fighting against “autodafé” and amnesia, trying to save old works and machines from forgotten places rather than conceding to obsolescence and being complicit in waste creation.It is no coincidence that our partner, a bookshop, is named “Fahrenheit 451” after the dystopian censorship story by Ray Bradbury. With every exhibition, we create a singular work of art to gather different individuals and encourage them to talk to one another. We see ourselves as a social laboratory in a sense. We are not looking at the past, rather we are creating a present that involves the intersection of old, forgotten technology and new. We are working for the common good.CM : Can I ask you your opinion on contemporary press censorship ? How does it differ from censorship of the past ?FV : Today’s suppression of speech more so takes the form of self-censorship. It is more insidious. We denounce collusion between the private (i.e., enterprises, corporations) and the public (i.e., the state). There is something reprehensible about this, most notably, when we see whistleblowers (e.g., lanceurs d’alerte, such as Assange and Snowden) under attack by states when they challenge established power structures and highlight security issues of great importance. In the face of this repression, society often remains indifferent. Our freedom is threatened.CM : Why is it important for you to relay this fight against censorship and support of Julian Assange in Switzerland today ?FV : In Geneva, we have always had a tradition of welcoming refugees and the exiled – e.g., Voltaire, Mikhail Bakunin, Elisée Reclus, and Guiseppe Mazzini. This tradition applies today, even though censorship also exists here. The current Assange event is part of a traveling, global show going to Norway, London, Milan, and New York. We think our press exhibit is a bridge of sorts, as it deals with the clandestine press. We consider our association to be a kind of Noah’s Ark – should freedom of expression deteriorate, clandestine press facilitated by old press technologies will be necessary.CM : Does your association belong to a larger network that organizes initiatives ?FV : Yes we are involved in the AEPM network, “courage foundation” (wsws.org and www.couragefound.org)CM : As museum director, what is your opinion on the roles education, schools, and history teachers can play ?FV : We cannot function without the consultation of history educators who assist us in curating well-documented, serious exhibitions. Additionally, in Switzerland, we have a system of direct democracy, which allows any group of a thousand or more people to oppose a new law. Our museum promotes this system of civic engagement to young attendees of our workshops in an effort to educate them on what it means to be an active, responsible citizen. Our political system values group action. It is important for us to highlight that. In fact, we have received a special title from – “école et culture” (school and culture) – that certifies us as a reliable organization approved by the region to conduct these kinds of workshops.CM : And, more generally, what kind of a role do you see an association like yours playing in history and citizenship education ?FV : Of course we have an invisible role, as do integration measures in general. We have 6 foreign students and protected persons on our team. They work on organizational culture, training, and generally help us expand our horizons and experiences by sharing theirs. We also host artists in residency. Everyone works in tandem to give a soul to the artifacts we present.CM : Thank you very much for taking the time to speak with me today.Caroline Morel is a EuroClio ambassador and history and geography teacher from France currently based in Geneva, Switzerland. She conducted this interview for EuroClio in November of 2019 at the API, a museum committed to active and introspective citizenship.$
A P I
Association pour le Patrimoine Industriel
La Maison du patrimoine industriel et des arts graphiques
Rue du Vuache 25 - 1201 Genève Tél 022 340 44 10
www.patrimoineindustriel.ch