Documenting
documenta 14
Athens
05.05.2017 | OPINION — iLiana Fokianaki
Issue no2
April - May 2017
Body / Venice
There has been a lot of criticism on documenta 14
(d14) both locally and internationally since the very
moment it was announced under the title Learning
from Athens. The most severe criticism came from
Yanis Varoufakis, former Greek Minister of Finance. At
the sixth Moscow Biennial he compared d14 to ‘rich
Americans taking a tour in a poor African country’.1
But is Varoufakis’ acerbic comment a legitimate
accusation? Many of us, operating as cultural workers
on the ground for the last twelve years, had difficulty
commenting. Sometimes in fear of not being objective,
but mainly because we wanted to avoid the cul-de-sac
of being in a position of self- exoticization and
marginalization.
The director of d14, curator Adam Szymczyk,
explained to have taken the inspiration for an ‘Athenian
learning experience’ from the fourth Athens Biennial of
2013, entitled Agora.2 But in Szymscyk’s public
lectures throughout his two-year presence in Athens, it
remained vague what exactly had inspired him. The
only thing he declared was that documenta would be
‘guest’ rather than host in Athens. Athens: a city with
the symbolic value of being a place and space where
European ideals emerge, whilst simultaneously a
paradigm of any city operating in crisis. Maria
Hlavajova, director of BAK basis voor actuele kunst in
Utrecht, addressed the public during a lecture at the
Athens Biennial in September 2015 with the following
sentence: ‘I can feel your agony with this alien landing
in your city.’3 The alien has arrived with unclear
intentions, behaving very much like the extraterrestrials in the recent film Arrival – silent, shy and
enclosed in their craft. In Denis Villeneuve’s movie, the
aliens have a positive message for humanity; in the
case of d14, we have to wait for the exhibition to shed
some light after the in-so far ambiguous signals.
Prior to d14’s own arrival, there were two elephants in
the room: the antagonistic relationship between
Germany and Greece, fuelled by propagandistic
reporting in German press.4 The ‘greedy, lazy Greeks’,
who are always asking for money from the European
Union, were now to host a huge exhibition from
Germany, which had invited itself declaring its desire to
‘learn from Athens’. The locals were flattered, but also
bewildered in terms of their infrastructural incapability
to host such an endeavour. The wound that the 2004
Olympic Games had caused was still sore. The second
elephant was that of cultural colonization, as
mentioned by Varoufakis. Some local artists reacted by
filling the walls of Athens with the stencil: ‘Dear
Documenta, I refuse to exoticise myself to increase
your cultural capital. Sincerely the indigenous (Oi
i8ageneis).’5 Many of us thought it was a hasty
reaction.
Documenta’s Economies versus Local Economies
Since 1959, documenta is a ‘non-profit organization
supported and funded by the City of Kassel and the
State of Hesse, as well as by the German Federal
Cultural Foundation’.6 Due to the massive increase of
its budget and the cultural and financial capital it
provides, it is also funded by private bodies such as
the ‘international friends of documenta’ – these
contributions are never specified in numbers, as only
the total budget is made public after each edition. The
first negotiations with documenta’s board in Kassel
proved to be much harder than Szymczyk had
anticipated. Kassel seemed unwilling to split financial
means equally between the two cities. Recently, Paul
B. Preciado, curator of d14’s public program, stated
that the relationship with the institution was ‘strained’,
and having the exhibition in Athens ‘was a form of
resistance in itself’.7
D14 has landed in an artistic scene exhausted by
the continuous effort to sustain itself through
alternative economies, volunteer work and DIY
exhibitions. Today, after eight years of economic
recession, 37.1 percent of the Greeks have an
annual income of less than 10,000 euros and
official unemployment rates are at 23 percent.8
That number includes art workers in their
majority. The Athens Biennial is a good example,
as it has always operated in precarity, mostly
through voluntary work and internships. Smaller
scale institutions are similarly volunteer-based.
The state cultural machine operates with minimal
to non-existent funds. In d14’s 2016 public press
conference featuring the mayors of both cities, it
was made clear that Athens had no funds to
offer, but would be providing labour and buildings
to d14. In lack of public Greek funds and the
reluctance of Kassel, the d14 team reached out
to Greek or Greek-born Germans for financial
assistance through the ‘international friends of
documenta’. At the press office of d14 a few
months ago, the organization declared that it has
not received any funds from Greek donors. Greek
donors in private conversations claim the
opposite and informed me that the ‘funding
committees’ of d14 are still reaching out. The
official budget estimation for the exhibition is
roughly 30 million euros, with artists receiving up
to 40,000 euros each for production. Local artists
contest this. If anything, a lack of accuracy in
budget numbers and cash flow is certainly an
‘Athenian learning experience’.
Learning about documenta 14 and its ‘working
title’
Despite Varoufakis’ comments at the Moscow
Biennial, the initial reactions of artists and
institutions have been positive in its majority,
apart from a discontent due to the lack of a Greek
curator in the team.9 But despite the public
declarations on cooperation, inclusivity and the
title Learning from Athens, no formal meeting with
the documenta team and cultural workers of
Athens has taken place in order for curatorial
interests or directions to be shared, or discourse
to be generated. The interest in the artistic
production of the city has been equally minimal,
with very few studio visits or attendance at
openings. That is surprising considering the size
of the team. Apart from three Greek artists
already familiar to Szymczyk, the remaining
rumoured eight artists were invited in October
2016, to propose works for two exhibitions:
leaving only four months for production. Most
international artists have had more time, like
Marta Minujin, who had already finished her
proposal when I met her in Argentina in May
2016. It remains unclear why d14 has chosen to
add Greek artists at such a late stage of the
process.
The first dark clouds over d14’s presence
appeared after their first ‘semi-public’ events.10
The Fine Arts School of Athens offered one of its
‘jewels’; a small building in the Polytechnic
School, formerly part of the Fine Arts department.
The lectures and workshops that took place
between May and June 2016 were by invitation
only, and only for the local art scene. They have
not been publicly announced. In a conversation I
had with Preciado, he claimed that the space was
too small to accommodate a lot of people.
Another international member of d14’s
educational team stated that the events have
mainly been organized for the staff of d14 and
Greek art students. Most students did not
manage to attend however, since the events
clashed with the Fine Arts schedule and the
location was too far from the school.
But the Polytechnic School was close to the
offices and residencies of the d14 team in
Exarxheia, alluring for its ‘anarcho-capitalist’
profile11, and most importantly; it carried a heavy
symbolic capital. Next to its entrance lies a part of
the actual crumbled fence of the university, taken
down by tanks during the military dictatorship in
1973, killing dozens of students, and marking one
of the bleakest moments in modern Greek
history. It was ironic to see the once antidictatorship motto of ‘bread-education-freedom’,
which can be found on that very building, in
relation to events that were limiting the sharing of
knowledge to a selected few.
Then followed the actual public program, curated
by Paul B. Preciado inaugurated in September
2016. Its first part was an ambitious endeavour
titled The Parliament of Bodies that offered 34
Exercises of Freedom. In ten days it managed to
breach almost all of the hot topics of the Western
curatorial context: biopolitics, violence,
indigeneity, LGBTQI+ rights, activist practices
and the concept of the (agora) assembly. The
scathing reaction from the local press was
immediate.12 It was unclear to the Greeks why
there was no talk of the two elephants in the
room: the strenuous relationship of Greece with
the European Union and the austerity policies
that are impoverishing Greek and EU citizens at
large. And of course: cultural colonization.13
Preciado was quick to re-direct the program’s
focus in November to events such as the
Apatride Society dealing with issues of
displacement and nationality, or The Society of
Friends of Ulises Carrión, and the more recent
2017 third part of a trilogy of lectures by Franco
‘Bifo’ Berardi and the newly conceived
Cooperativist Society. In reference to the
Apatrides Society, the theme was a priori
interesting, but the execution was confusing. The
‘meetings’ had a very depressing feel to them.
Representatives from local communities were
treated as token examples of immigration
policies, they were ‘given voice’ to tell their
personal stories, evoking emotion when
presenting their struggles of not being
recognized. It was painful to see the intervention
of a clerk from the municipality, addressing
groups of Filipino residents of Athens and the
Union of African Women of Greece, bluntly
explaining why they and their children will not be
getting the Greek nationality due to legislations
that cannot be changed unless the constitution
itself is changed. In contradiction, as detached
from the political take of d14’s curatorial
framework as it was, The Society of Ulises
Carrión seemed one of the most honest projects,
taking ‘the work and methods of the Mexican
artist as a starting point in order to explore
cultural strategies and practices’.14 The
program’s most recent event, the Cooperativist
Society, aimed at ‘using documenta 14 as a
lever, as a means to strengthen the local fabric of
social pluralism’15, came a little too late to create
any tangible results. It should have been
organised back in September 2016. It was
strange to see it in the program, when initiatives
of this kind have been already taking place in
Athens since early 2016, initiated by colleagues
such as the PAT collective (Temporary Art
Academy). It seems as if the public program of
d14 tries to catch up with what is already
happening in the local scene, without actually
wanting to include it.
The curatorial practice of Szymczyk does not
really have a track record of projects that involve
active political discourse, but he seems to
honestly desire to address his d14 through a
political kaleidoscope. His huge team is mostly
made up of long-term collaborators of his, but not
curators activily engaged with socio-economicalpolitical practices of artists, with the exceptions of
Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung and Hila
Peleg. Therefore the research and formulation of
a program that does not correspond to the
majority of the curators’ framework, brings about
the need to include everything that might seem
relevant. Szymczyk recently said his practice ‘has
turned documenta 14 into a continuous aesthetic,
economic, political and social experimentation’.16
Indeed he has shown a great record of solo
presentations at Kunsthalle Basel. Therefore I am
positive that this will be an aesthetically
impressive exhibition. But the economies at play
in d14’s presence in Athens remain opaque, the
politics addressed feel forced and the social
experimentation seems an empty gesture. D14
will soon welcome thousands of visitors. It will
offer an exhibition, which through its public
program and presence, has made us unsure of
what it wants to say.
Can d14 in Athens be considered as ‘rich
Americans taking a tour in a poor African
country’? Or is it rather Hlavajova’s comment that
stands, of an art organization landing as an
alien? Running an Athens based institution
myself for many years, I would rather say that the
answers lie in learning after documenta. What
does it mean to be a massive art institution that
operates in a Europe of crisis, in terms of
financial and other transparencies?17 Is the idea
of re-locating such an institution a good one,
being a guest in a country that is financially
exhausted? What does it mean for curatorial
practices in general to build ground through
dialogue with those that live this exhaustion both
in the arts and society at large? Is the proposal of
an exhibition split in two possible in all its
capacity, if not fully supported by the institution
itself, limiting curatorial possibilities and artistic
practices? How (as in every journey) can a guest
avoid the terrors of a recommended by another
guest ‘good local’ by doing extensive research by
building bridges with many locals? And finally,
what does it mean to become a visitor, not a
guest but neither a tourist? A visitor that is happy
to experience the enrichment of being in a place
where people have decided and declared that
they wish to work by you, and not for or with you.
For now we hope for some of these questions to
be answered, and the doubts silenced, through
an impressive exhibition.
POSTSCRIPT
Today, two weeks after the opening of
documenta14 in Athens and with several critical
articles already having been published[1], there
are some additional points to be made. First
regarding the labour conditions mentioned in the
article above, and second regarding the curatorial
claims of what the exhibition wishes to convey
versus what it actually presents.
I will depart from Adam Szymczyk’s interview on
German Cultural Radio on the 7th of April 2017
where he was questioned on the allegations that
documenta 14 had not worked very closely with
the Athenian art scene. His reply raised a lot of
eyebrows, I quote:
Of course, we could be accused of having been
too little occupied with the local art scene. We
were, however, not that interested in the artistic
scene of Athens, but rather in the city as a living
organism. And this goes beyond contemporary
art. Athens is not alone; it stands for other places
in the world. Lagos. Guatemala City. They deal
with us here as well. The claim to connect us with
the Athenian art scene would be too small for this
documenta. And if someone should feel
deceived, he should know: our exhibition never
wanted to represent the Athenian art scene.
Others are supposed to do that. If people do not
feel so represented here, then they should think
about why they are not heard.’[2]
It is important to remember that this “disinterest”
that Szymczyk references was not there from the
start. Documenta14 announced its presence in
Athens during a public conference on the third of
December 2014 at the National Foundation for
Research, that took the form of a panel
discussion and presentation.[3] It primarily
celebrated the award of the Athens Biennial by
the European Cultural Foundation, but also
provided the opportunity for Szymczyk to publicly
announce his collaboration with the Biennial for
the upcoming edition of documenta, in which he
introduced the idea of d14 as a “guest.” This
collaboration was concretely put to practice when
the teams of d14 and the Athens Biennial shared
an office space at Exarchia, but halted a year
later due to irreconcilable differences. So it
actually seems that the initial wish of documenta
was to engage with the artistic scene, and
institutions like the Athens Biennial, the DESTE
foundation and the Onassis Foundation, as well
as smaller independent spaces in Athens that
were approached. It is for this reason that
Szymczyk’s statement was received with
bewilderment in Athens last month[4].
The second raise of eyebrows occurred after a
public letter in the Greek press by the invigilators
of documenta14, accusing the organisation for
“horrible working conditions”[5]. The international
outcry was averted when their contracts were
quickly changed[6].
Through that latter dispute with the invigilators,
the statement of Szymczyk and the general
discourse used in the documenta 14 catalogues,
press conference and materials, emerges the
biggest conundrum of this exhibition. Greece is
continuously referenced as the epitome of the
“crisis,” and the battleground through which the
“neo-liberal powers that wish to destroy
Europe”[7] operate. But as it seems,
documenta14 itself has enjoyed the benefits of
cheap labour from the global south. The curators
of documenta14, lamenting against the injustices
of neoliberal “white masculine supremacy” that
deprived the Greeks of their right to practice their
NO referendum, sat hand-in hand with those that
promoted and organised the YES campaigns
against the referendum that summer of 2015, in
particular the Mayor Kaminis of Athens that
provided documenta with most of the free
exhibition spaces for this edition.
The question “why Athens?”, that has been on
everyone’s lips since d14 was announced,
remains unanswered after the exhibition opening.
It seems what is extracted from “Athens” or
“Greece” is the cliché of all clichés, formulating in
the opening lines of documenta’s “daybook”
publication: Kavafy’s poem “Ithaca” from 1911.
One would at least expect something along the
lines of Katerina Gogou, the great anarchist poet
of the 1980s, who lived and worked in the
curatorial team’s beloved anarchist
neighbourhood Exarhia. Her anti-establishment
verse fitted like a glove the curatorial statements
of this exhibition.
The lack of a clear curatorial narration, the lack of
contextualization of works, the lack of wall texts
replaced by the unfortunate choice of papyruslike floor scribbles with marble labels on top of
them, that resembled touristy simulations of
ancient epitaphs, as noted in many reviews the
past weeks, seems to confirm this fetishization of
“Greece” through the eye of the tourist. Was it a
nostalgic revisiting of Greek cultural heritage that
d14 was interested in, more than its
contemporary artistic language? And even, was it
a “mainstream” and historically approved by the
patriarchical white suprematist powers, cultural
heritage?
The current condition of its citizens, this Athens
“as a living organism” as Szymczyk claims in the
prementioned interview, does not manifest
anywhere in the exhibition and the actual
elephant in the room – the real-time crises the
Greeks are experiencing – is never addressed.
Rather, Athens is vaguely grouped with the rest
of the global south, that as it seems, does not
deserve too much contextualization: all the
languages of “the Other” are one and the same;
Lagos, Guatemala City, Athens, Kolkata…
Thankfully this was countered by the act of art
itself; it was the artists that chose to engage in a
dialogue with the city and its idiosyncratic profile.
Not with the city as a metaphor, nor the city as a
representative of other cities, but the city as a
cultural actor and generator of artistic ideas.
Thanks to artists like Naeem Mohaiemen, Regina
Jose Galindo, Hiwa K, Sanja Ivekovic,
Postcommodity and Bouchra Khalili, the question
‘why Athens’ was actually answered: the reason
lays in the city’s articulation of a specific
contemporary cultural language, that might or
might not be linked to other articulations globally,
but as any other place in the world, is unique.
These artists chose to beautifully engage with
this language, and to use it to do what every true
visitor should do: arrive with an interest. An
interest not just for a fetishized past, but for an
intriguing, yet struggling present.
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[email protected]
iLiana Fokianaki is a writer curator, founder of State of Concept Athens
(2013), co-founder of Future Climates (2016 with Antonia Alampi) and curator
at Extra City Antwerp since March 2017.
This article in part is a gathering of anonymous testimonies that wish to
remain as such, due to the precarity of the cultural workers in the d14 team as
well as the general precarity of the Greek cultural scene after ten years of
severe recession in Greece.
NOTES
1 Yanis Varoufakis, ‘Artists should be feared by the Powerful’, keynote at the
sixth Moscow Biennial, October 1 2015, via:
https://www.yanisvaroufakis.eu/2015/10/04/artists-should-be-feared-by-thepowerful-keynote-closing-the-6th-moscow-biennale-1st-october-2015/
2 Szymczyk made these statements during a symposium under the premises
of the European Cultural Foundation’s Princess Margriet Award in Athens,
December 2015. According to Szymczyk, he went back to his hotel and
changed his original proposal, inspired by the bottom-up, horizontal structure
of Agora that involved fifteen curators and initiated dozens of socio-politically
themed projects. D14 was aiming to work closely with the biennial team,
which in the end never happened.
3 Despoina Zefkili, ‘Learning in Past Tense’, Athinorama, 10 October2016,
via:
http://www.athinorama.gr/events/article/documenta14_mathainontas_se_xron
o_aoristo__-2516938.html
4 With covers such as the one ran by Focus in 2011, picturing the Aphrodite
de Milo giving the middle finger. This particular image added insult to injury,
since the sculpture is one of the many antiquities ‘acquired’ under dubious
circumstances by the French during the Ottoman occupation of Greece.
5 It is interesting to note that Paul B. Preciado, during his introduction speech
of the first lecture of the series The Apatride Society of d14’s public program
in November 2016, declared this stencil to be the inspiration of looking into
the notion of the indigenous. Sadly, he did not research the many aspects of
literal indigeneity in Greece in the form of the dozens of indigenous minorities
that have been part of the Greek national identity, but remain unrecognized
such as the Vlachoi, the Sarakatsanoi and the Arvanites.
6 Website documenta, last retrieved 14 February 2017
http://www.documenta14.de/en/
7 Cathy Drake, ‘On the Ground in Athens’, Artforum, 10 February2017, via:
https://www.artforum.com/slant/id=66502
8 Report from AthensLive.gr, 12 February 2017, with data from numbers from
the following Greek state survey: http://www.imegsevee.gr/dtimegsevee/1127dteisodima2016
9 A few months ago, Marina Fokidis, former head of the artistic office of
Athens, and Katerina Tselou, assistant to the director, changed job titles and
are now ‘curatorial advisors’.
10 This term was used by d14’s public program curator, Paul B. Preciado,
during his first press conference on 24 September 2016.
11 A term used by Paul B. Preciado in a local newspaper, see:
http://popaganda.gr/paul-preciado-documenta14/
12 See note 7
13 See: Maria Nicolakopoulou, ‘Exercises of Freedom? A review of
documenta14’s public launch’, Ocula, November 2016, via:
https://ocula.com/magazine/reports/exercises-of-freedom-a-review-ofdocumenta-14’s-pu/
and iLiana Fokianaki, ‘Missing Bodies’, Frieze, 24 October 2016, via:
https://frieze.com/article/missing-bodies
14 Website documenta14
15 Ibid.
16 From Szymczyk’s contribution to the event Insights in Curatorial Practice
vol. 3 in Haus der Kunst, Munich, 10 February 2017
17 The secrecy of documenta is notorious and seems old-fashioned and
unnecessary in 2017.
Notes Postscript
[1] See articles such as JJ Charlesworth’s in ArtReview entitled
“Documenta14 against Democracy”
https://artreview.com/home/may_2017_opinion_jj_charlesworth_docu
menta/
[2] Original quote in German: ‘Natürlich könnte man uns vorwerfen, uns zu
wenig mit der hiesigen Kunstszene beschäftigt zu haben. Wir waren aber gar
nicht so sehr an der Kunstszene von Athen interessiert, sondern mehr an der
Stadt als lebendiger Organismus. Und das geht über zeitgenössische Kunst
hinaus. Athen steht nicht allein, es steht auch für andere Orte dieser Welt.
Lagos. Guatemala City. Die beschäftigen uns hier genauso. Der Anspruch,
uns mit der Athener Kunstszene zu verbinden, wäre zu klein für diese
documenta. Und falls sich jemand betrogen fühlen sollte, der sollte wissen:
Unsere Ausstellung wollte nie die Athener Kunstszene repräsentieren. Das
sollen andere machen. Wenn sich hier Leute nicht genug repräsentiert fühlen,
dann sollten sie selbst darüber nachdenken, wie sich mehr Gehör
verschaffen.’ See: Adam Szymczyk in conversation with Vladimir Balzer,
‘Reaktion auf Kritik aus Athener Kunstszene’, Deutschlandradio Kultur, 7 April
2017, via: http://www.deutschlandradiokultur.de/documenta-chef-adamszymczyk-reaktion-auf-kritik-aus.1895.de.html?dram%3Aarticle_id=383349
[3] At the event, widely publicized in Greek and international media, other
panel participants included Katherine Watson, director of ECF, Denis
Zacharopoulos, former curator of documenta and advisor to the cultural
section of the Municipality of Athens, Afroditi Panagiotakou, director of the
Onassis Foundation, Giorgos Tzirtzilakis, architect and advisor of DESTE
Foundation, and the founders of the Athens Biennial; Xenia Kalpaktsoglou
and Poka-Yio.
[4] In terms of the artistic scene it was certainly represented in this exhibition
through works of many Greek artists, past and present, amongst them great
examples such as Apostolos Georgiou, Mary Zygouri, Costas Hatzinikolaou
and Vlassis Kaniaris.
[5] See newspaper Avgi http://www.avgi.gr/article/10812/8088276/-tholoergasiako-kathestos-katangelloun-oi-ergazomenoi
[6] “Zero hours” contracts of temporary staff are a recurring phenomenon –
and crisis- for today’s art workers that are employed by large scale exhibitions
and museums, one example being the TATE.
[7] Paul Preciado’s curatorial statement on the press conference of
documenta14 in Athens, April 6th 2017.