Yto Barrada

Yto Barrada

Deutsche Guggenheim

Yto Barrada, “Raft in Strange Figtree (Radeau dans figuier étrangleur) [Ficus Macrophylla],” 2005/10.
Chromogenic print, 150 × 150 cm.

April 15, 2011

Deutsche Bank presents the
“Artist of the Year” 2011

Yto Barrada: Riffs

15 April–19 June 2011

Unter den Linden 13/15
10117 Berlin
Germany

Deutsche Bank presents the “Artist of the Year” 2011
Yto Barrada: Riffs

Riffs is the first large-scale exhibition in Germany of the work of Yto Barrada, whose photographs, films, publications, installations and sculptures engage with the peculiar situation of her hometown of Tangier, Morocco. With Yto Barrada, Deutsche Bank has elected a woman as “Artist of the Year” 2011 whose work has been closely involved with the political and social realities in North Africa for over a decade.

In her first series A Life Full of Holes: The Strait Project, ten years ago, Barrada evokes a Tangier where postcolonial history has materialized one of its dead-ends. Her recent project Iris Tingitana extends this inquiry to the fast-growing outer edges of the city, where the monocultural vision of planners and developers threaten to homogenize landscape and human lives.

The show, featuring selected works from these past series as well as new photos and films is conceived as a construction in 3-dimensional space and a deliberate juxtaposition of works. It plays on the varying distances between Barrada’s lens as a photographer and her subjects, and displays the full range media in which she works. The show’s title is inspired by music, where “Riff” stands for a rhythmic figure, a musical phrase that some players add to a written score. Riff relates also to the rugged Rif mountains of Morocco, home to insurgencies and a splinter Republic, and to the art deco Rif Cinema, which houses the Tangier Cinémathèque.

The three films, Beau Geste, Playground and Hand-Me- Downs, are also “riffing”—rearticulating spaces, sounds, and meanings. One of the recurring figures of the show is that of the tree—physical trees and family trees. Trees serve as metaphors of resistance and strength, of developing levels of vision, of generational transmission, of changing times, of shelter, regeneration and nutrition, but also of decor and tourism. Memory and obliviousness, history and unreliable narratives, as the details and fragmentation of every day life, are strongly involved in this show, and these themes are refracted between the pieces. The visitor, also, changes perspectives and levels—by mounting a mezzanine; moving from intimate projection spaces to a balcony that overlooks large walls of photos; sitting down in a screening room to watch the cinema program, presented by the Cinémathèque.

Yto Barrada grew up between Tangier and Paris, where she studied history and political science at the Sorbonne, and subsequently attended the International Center of Photography in New York. Her practice, combining the strategies of documentary with a more meditative approach to images, drove her to return home after sixteen years abroad. Now based in Tangier, she continues to engage the complex realities around her, avoiding the rigidity of any ideological discourse, and without recourse to the spectacular or melodramatic. Another of Barrada’s responses to the dynamics of the region was to co-found the Cinémathèque de Tanger, North Africa’s first cinema cultural center, which she now directs. The Cinémathèque‘s film programs, workshops, archive, and traveling presentations are another investment in the unique status of images and representations in the contemporary Arab world and beyond.
Marie Muracciole

Artist of the Year
The artist, who was born in Paris in 1971 and lives in Tangier, was selected on the recommendation of the Deutsche Bank Global Art Advisory Council, comprised of the curators Okwui Enwezor, Hou Hanru, Udo Kittelmann, and Nancy Spector. The selection of Yto Barrada as “Artist of the Year” 2011 reflects equally important focuses of Deutsche Bank’s art activities: internationalism, diversity and a connection between artistic themes and social issues.

Unlike many other prizes, the “Artist of the Year” award does not include prize money, but is firmly embedded in Deutsche Bank’s art program, with which the bank has made contemporary art accessible to the public worldwide for 30 years. When the bank promotes young artists, it is not a matter of one-off financial support, but of conveying new and noteworthy artistic positions to a wide public and providing long-term impetus to the artist’s career.

Therefore, the “Artist of the Year” is presented in a solo exhibition at the Deutsche Guggenheim. In addition, a selection of the artist’s works is purchased for the Deutsche Bank Collection. The focus is on young artists who have already amassed an unmistakable and extraordinary oeuvre, in which works on paper or photography play an important role. Moreover, works by Barrada can be seen on a floor devoted to the artist as part of the new art concept for the modernized towers of Deutsche Bank’s Frankfurt headquarters.

Deutsche Bank presents the “Artist of the Year” 2011
Yto Barrada: Riffs

Curators: Friedhelm Hütte, Global Head of Art Deutsche Bank, and Marie Muracciole, Art Critic and independent Curator/ Paris
April 15–June 19, 2011
Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin

The accompanying catalogue with text contributions by Okwui Enwezor, Friedhelm Hütte, Marie Muracciole, Daniel Soutif, as well as an interview with the artist conducted by Daniel Soutif, is available in English and German.

More information on Deutsche Bank’s global art activities can be found at www.db-artmag.com

*Image above:
© Yto Barrada. Courtesy the artist and Sfeir-Semler Gallery, Hamburg and Beirut.

Yto Barrada
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