Maria Hlavajova, Jelena Jureša, Aernout Miklectureresearch presentationAgendaArtistic activitiesThinking near the exhibition Run-through, with works by artists Jelena Jureša and Aernout Mik, Maria Hlavajova will reflect on the notion of art that conspires — art that does not just represent but instead commits to the politics of dissent from the hegemonic powers that be.
Before engaging in a dialogue with the artists on the last day of their exhibition, she will speculate about this “conspiracy” as a commitment to truth and to the ideals of justice and equality. Taking inspiration from the exhibition title, she will further elaborate on art as a rehearsal of — a run-through of — various implementable imaginaries of living together, both against and in spite of the rising anti-democratic and authoritarian-populist predicament of our time.
Jelena Jureša is affiliated as an artistic researcher to KASK & Conservatorium, the school of arts of HOGENT and howest. The research project Revolt! On a refusal to sing was financed by the HOGENT Arts Research Fund.
Jelena Jureša, Aernout MikexpoAgendaArtistic activitiesDuo-exhibition Run-through is an encounter between Jelena Jureša and Aernout Mik. Jelena Jureša relates in her films, the last one of which is once again produced by nona, individual stories to collective processes of oblivion and remembrance, while Aernout Mik’s audiovisual installations chart the formation and transformation of group behaviours. With new and recent works, they sketch a critical portrait of our contemporary society. As such, Run-through reflects on historical facts, present)day European matters and political narratives.
The selected works of Dutch artist Aernout Mik are being presented for the first time in Belgium. Through a range of historical events - from the colonial power relations of the Dutch Indies to the aftermath of the terror attack in France - they investigate the relationship that individuals have with their environment. Mik represented the Netherlands in the Dutch Pavilion at the 52nd Venice Biennale, 2007 and had solo exhibitions at Jeu de Paume (Paris), MoMA (New York), Schirn Kunsthalle (Frankfurt) and the Stedelijk Museum (Amsterdam).
Jelena Jureša is an artist and filmmaker born in former Yugoslavia. In her films, she unceasingly questions historical and political narratives, and tries to challenge our ideas of what is true. In Aphasia (2019) for instance, she deals with black chapters in European history, from Belgian colonialism to Austrian anti-semitism and atrocities in Bosnia during the Yugoslavian wars. Her work was internationally presented during Manifesta 14 Pristina and in argos (Brussels), Contour 9 (Mechelen), Maxim Gorki (Berlin) and BAK (Utrecht).
Jelena Jureša is affiliated as an artistic researcher to KASK & Conservatorium, the school of arts of HOGENT and howest. The research project Revolt! On a refusal to sing was financed by the HOGENT Arts Research Fund.
Towards Documentary Choreographyresearch presentationAgendaArtistic activitiesA three-day symposium focusing on the intersection between embodied and documentary practices, reflecting on new choreographic articulations of sociopolitical issues.
In recent decades, there has been an increasing interest in embedding elements from reality into performance. The testimonial plays of Lola Arias, the lecture performances of Rabih Mroué and Hito Steyerl, or the hybrid installations of Walid Raad propose complex dispositives and dramaturgies that question our modes of engagement with factual information.
While the field of contemporary dance is known for its critical experimentations, the inclusion of factual information in its practice remains largely uncharted. Choreographers often use documentary elements such as texts, photographs, or videos as sources of inspiration in their artistic process, but few of these items remain visible in the final stage work. The intersection between embodied and documentary practices, however, opens up possibilities for new choreographic articulations of sociopolitical issues of various sorts and alternative ways of engaging with such matters. It results in what art philosopher Frédéric Pouillaude calls “factual representations” that consequently lead to a “poetics of factuality” (Pouillaude 2020).
For this symposium, which follows from his practice-based PhD research, choreographer Arkadi Zaides invites various practitioners and scholars to reflect collectively on the notion of “documentary choreography”. By looking at concrete case studies and by proposing various theoretical lenses, the participants will explore the strategies used by artists when combining embodied and documentary practices. Through different formats, they will consider the potentiality of such blending not only to challenge the boundaries of contemporary dance and documentary theater, but also to engage critically with social and political issues.
This event is made possible with the generous support of: Antwerp Research Institute for the Arts (ARIA); the Flemish Government; the Faculty of Arts and Philosophy of Ghent University; the Faculty of Arts (Department of Literature) of the University of Antwerp; CoDa | Cultures of Dance – Research Network for Dance Studies (funded by the Research Foundation Flanders - FWO). It is organized as a part of Arkadi Zaides’ practice-based PhD in the Arts at the University of Antwerp, Royal Conservatoire Antwerp, Ghent University, KASK & Conservatorium and his active membership within the CORPoREAL research group at the Royal Conservatoire Antwerp and the research center S:PAM (Studies in Performing Arts & Media) at Ghent University.
Jelena Jureša is a visual artist and filmmaker, born in Novi Sad (in Yugoslavia). She has extensively worked with questions of cultural identity, gender, politics of memory, and oblivion through expanded cinema, photography and text. Over the past several years, her research and focus on practices of oppression—how they operate and implicate us in systems of violence—has resulted in multidisciplinary projects that are, on various levels, as political as they are highly personal.
Her work has been showcased internationally, with solo exhibitions at Argos Centre for Audiovisual Arts in Brussels, Künstlerhaus in Graz, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Belgrade. In 2015, as a Jackman Goldwasser resident artist in collaboration with the Hyde Park Art Center in Chicago, she started her research on the questions and relations of public art – capitalism – patriarchy, as well as the production of male and female histories within this context. As a Q21 artist in residence in Vienna in 2016, she studied the work of anthropologists and racial hygienists during the Austrian imperial period, along with post-WWII politics of oblivion in Austria.
Her film project ‘Aphasia’, which detects a thread of positions of power, racism, injustice, and violence from Belgian colonialism, Austrian anti-Semitism to the atrocities in Bosnia during the Yugoslavian wars, was co-commissioned by Contour Biennale, where it was shown in 2019 and featured in the 2022 Manifesta Biennale. ‘Aphasia’ has been showcased at various international venues, including Kunstverein in Hamburg, BAK – basis voor actuele kunst in Utrecht, Budapest Gallery, Display in Prague, Maxim Gorki in Berlin, Center for Cultural Decontamination in Belgrade, Cinematek in Brussels, Museum of Contemporary Art in Zagreb, Fotomuseum in Antwerpen, De Cinema in Antwerp (MHKA), Doc Lisboa and received the main award at the 23rd Ji.hlava International Documentary Film Festival in Prague. In 2021 ‘Aphasia’ became part of the Flemish Community permanent collection. Continuing the line of meticulous research and her collaboration with the performers from the film she conceptualised and directed eponymous concert-performance, which premiered at the Kunstenfestivaldesarts in Brussels in 2022. The performance emerged out of praxical research geared towards devising new strategies for ensuring the embodied involvement of the spectator, addressing issues related to group dynamics, obedience to authority, and polarization.

