Andreas Broeckmann on Tue, 2 Jun 1998 14:42:41 +0100 |
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Syndicate: A short Piramedia report |
Dear friends, this is just a short notice to report the success of the first Pyramedia event in Tirana, Albania, which took place from 28 - 31 May, 1998. Pyramedia was organised by Edi Muka of the Art Academy in Tirana in cooperation with the V2_East/Syndicate, and with support from the Ministry of Culture, the Soros Foundation, the National Gallery, the Art Academy, and the Open Internet Center, and with help from Edi Muka's students at the academy. Pyramedia was the first self-organised Syndicate field trip. The Pyramedia event included a series of lectures, presentations and screenings by the following participants: Stephen Kovats [D/CDN] ("Situation Normal, All Fucked Up" - a brief Ostranenie Reflection), Edi Muka [AL] (A brief history of media and video art in Albania), Diana McCarty [HU/USA] (Independent media and Interet in Hungary), Adele Eisenstein [HU/USA] (C3, 'Collection', 'Prohibited Art' - presentation and screenings from the media art scene in Hungary), Eric Kluitenberg [NL] (Cultural memory and electronic media), Melentie Pandilovski [MK] (Samples from the Macedonian electronic art scene), Yukiko Shikata [JP] (Interactive art projects of the Canon Art Lab, Tokyo), Igor Markovic [HR] (Independent media culture in Croatia, or not?), Geert Lovink [NL] (A toolbox of critical media), Andreas Broeckmann [NL/D] (Interactive and internet art projects). Additional screenings included 'Predictions of Fire' (Michael Benson, Ljubljana 1995), 'The Old and the New' (Ljubljana 1997), 'Bulgariavangarde', 'Crossing Over', and others. We were well looked after by Edi and his students, moving around between the really nice Hotel California (where even checking out wasn't a problem), the National Gallery where the presentations took place, the Artiste Cafe's garden next to the Art Academy, Fidel's famous bar, ending most evenings in Edi's favourite La Voglia restaurant which serves great home-made Raki. On one occasion we took a trip to the harbour city of Durres where we visited the old Roman amphi-theatre, and then drove a bit further south for a swim in the Adriatic and a dinner on the beach. The visit to the National Museum, the Pyramedia party on Saturday night, and the lazy chill-out on the bank of the lake in Tirna's south were other memorable moments of this Syndicate excursion. For me maybe the most important thing to see was that Tirana has its own normality, a lively cafe culture, lots of street vendors, too many noisy and stinking cars, drivers with a great passion for honking, and a public infrastructure that will need a lot of attention in the coming years. There are many obstacles, still a high level of tension after last year's internal war and a feeling of insecurity, especially when leaving the police-protected area of Tirana. But there are also signs of hope. We saw, for instance, the very promising videos of some of Edi's students (who haven't decided yet whether they will adopt the suggested name, VHS = Video Heroi Sqiptari), and an exhibition of textile art in the Academy Gallery. At the Pyramedia presentations there was an average of 10 to 20 people listening to the talks, asking questions in private conversations afterwards, and looking through the piles of printed material that the Pyramedia participants had brought from different European centres and that remained in Tirana as study material. Interviews were arranged, texts and addresses were exchanged, friendships forged, and I have no doubt that we will soon hear a lot more from the emerging media cultural scene in Tirana. Greetings from 'back home' in Berlin, -a