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  • Bétonsalon - Center for Art and Research

    9 esplanade Pierre Vidal-Naquet

    75013 Paris
    +33.(0)1.45.84.17.56
    Postal address
    Bétonsalon - Center for Art and Research
    Université de Paris
    5 rue Thomas Mann
    Campus des Grands Moulins
    75205 Paris Cédex 13
  • Make an effort to remember. Or, failing that, invent.
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  • BS n°14
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  • Events

    SATURDAY 16 MARCH 2013

    :: 2.30 PM
    AFTERNOON ABOUT MONIQUE WITTIG
    Temporalities, mythology and fic­tion­nal­iza­tion of History within the work of Monique Wittig

    With Benoît Auclerc, Yannick Chevalier, Catherine Ecarnot, Dominique Samson, Suzanne Robichon

    Benoît Auclerc - "Ce qui "n’a pas de nom pour l’heure" : nom­i­na­tion et réal­ités invis­i­bles".
    Benoît Auclercis a lit­er­a­ture teacher at Université Lyon 3 and studies the rela­tions between lit­er­a­ture and pol­i­tics. He will talk about the nom­i­na­tion issues in the work of Monique Wittig

    Yannick Chevalier is a teacher of French stylistic at Université Lumière Lyon 2. He works on the links between lan­guage and gender. Benoît Auclerc & Yannick Chevalier edited the book Lire Monique Wittig aujourd’hui (Editions PUL, 2012).

    Catherine Ecarnot – Going in cir­cles to go where? The cyclic fig­ures in Wittig’s work
    Catherine Ecarnot is the author of the first thesis in France about Monique Wittig and she pub­lished L’Écriture de Monique Wittig. A la couleur de Sappho, at L’Harmattan, in 2002.
    She will talk about the cyclic dimen­sion of time in Monique Wittig’s work

    Dominique Samson, niece of Monique Wittig, PHD in edu­ca­tion sciences enti­tled L’ombre de l’auteur : des rap­ports de force dans l’acte d’écrire.
    Dominique Sanson’s com­mu­ni­ca­tion will focus on the bib­li­og­raphy which closes Brouillon pour un dic­tion­naire des amantes, as a place for a double stage: staging another his­tory and reals and col­lec­tives imag­i­naries.


    Suzanne Robichon, founder of the journal Vlasta, journal of Amazonian fic­tions and utopias, co-editor with Marie Hélène Bourcier of the sem­inar and the pub­li­ca­tion Parce que les Lesbiennes ne sont pas des femmes - Autour de l’oeuvre poli­tique, théorique et lit­téraire de Monique Wittig (éditions gaies et les­bi­ennes, 2002).

    Monique Wittig (1935-2003), the author of a sig­nif­i­cant body of work influ­enced by the Nouveau Roman, played, from 1970 onwards, an impor­tant role in the appear­ance of the women’s lib­er­a­tion move­ment: pub­lishing both man­i­festo texts (co-author of the first man­i­festo Pour un mou­ve­ment de lib­er­a­tion des femmes in 1970), lit­erary works (L’Opoponax (1964), Les Guérillères (1969), Le Corps les­bien (1973), Brouillon pour un dic­tion­naire des amantes (1976), etc.) as well as the­o­ret­ical texts such as La Pensée straight (1980), in which she defines hetero­sex­u­ality as a polit­ical regime, and that had a pro­found influ­ence on the whole devel­op­ment of queer studies. Wittig was equally the co-founder of the MLF and a member of numerous mil­i­tant groups. In Wittig’s work, the fem­i­nist writing of History uses the methods of the myth or the fable to con­sti­tute a his­tory that does not yet exist, entirely ori­ented towards the future, and on the basis of a gram­mat­i­cally fem­i­nised nar­ra­tion. The “fable car­riers” (“por­teuses de fables”) in Brouillon pour un dic­tion­naire des amantes, co-written with Sande Zeig, are the incar­na­tion of a cyclical History, organ­ised around" “his­to­ries as History” and the imag­i­nary at the ser­vice of a new world”1 . The Brouillon is both a parody of patri­ar­chal studies and the cre­ation of a History of women, which fol­lows the maxim of the Guérillères, another of Monique Wittig’s splendid books: “Make an effort to remember. Or, failing that, invent.” 2013 is the tenth anniver­sary of her dis­ap­pear­ance.

    1) Kate Robin, From nowhere to every­where: Wittig’s Utopia to trans­form the pre­sent and the future, revue Temporalités n°12-2010 « Utopies / Uchronies »

    TUESDAY 26 MARCH 2013

    :: 7 PM
    THINKING THERESA HAK KYUNG CHA

    On the occa­sion of the pub­li­ca­tion of the first mono­graphic book on the Korean-American artist Theresa Hak Kyung Cha (1951-1982), its author, Elvan Zabunyan, will talk about this unique work, at the cross­roads of per­for­mance, of con­cep­tual art, of video and of poetry.

    One of the most impor­tant motifs in the work of the American con­cep­tual artist Theresa Hak Kyung Cha who is of Korean origin, is related to her rep­re­sen­ta­tion of History, marked by the expe­ri­ence of exile and migra­tion, of tem­poral, cul­tural, geo­graph­ical and social dis­lo­ca­tion. Cha’s best-known work, her last book Dictée (1982) was pub­lished sev­eral days before her tragic assas­si­na­tion and can be con­sid­ered to be an auto­bi­og­raphy. Dictée is the his­tory of women, cor­re­sponding to the nine Muses of Greek antiq­uity, and com­bines voices and nar­ra­tive reg­is­ters (news­pa­pers, alle­gor­ical sto­ries, dreams) as metaphors for dis­lo­ca­tion, loss and the frag­men­ta­tion of memory.

    Elvan Zabunyan, con­tem­po­rary art his­to­rian, is a teacher at University Rennes 2 and art critic. Her research is about North-American art from the 1960s and par­tic­u­larly the turning point of the year 1970 around racial and fem­i­nist ques­tions. She has been working since the begin­ning of the 1990s on the issues shown by cul­tural studies, post­colo­nialist the­o­ries and gender studies, trying to build, thanks to crit­ical thoughts, a method­ology of his­tory of con­tem­po­rary art artic­u­lated around a cul­tural, social and polit­ical his­tory. She pub­lished Black is a color, une his­toire de l’art africain améri­cain (Dis Voir, 2004 et 2005 for the English ver­sion), she co-edited sev­eral books and wrote many arti­cles in col­lec­tive works, exhi­bi­tion cat­a­logues and peri­od­i­cals.

    SATURDAY 30 MARCH 2013

    :: 2.30 PM
    REWRITING ART HISTORY : (POST)FEMINIST FICTION AND NARRATION

    In Differencing the Canon (1999), art his­to­rian Griselda Pollock shows that writing a fem­i­nist art his­tory was not only about rein­te­grating women artists to the canon 2. We can think that pro­ducing this fem­i­nism, and so to say this queeri­sa­tion of History, came down first and fore­most to an epis­te­mo­log­ical mod­i­fi­ca­tion of the dis­ci­pline of ‘art his­tory’, and more pre­cisely the way it is recounted and its nar­ra­tive forms. It is thus through inven­tion or the deploy­ment of new means of writing (such as fic­tion­al­ising archives or his­to­ri­o­graph­ical metafic­tions (Carola Dertnig, Cheryl Dunye or Roee Rosen), non-linear nar­ra­tive editing (Renée Green, Carla Lonzi), reen­act­ment (Faith Wilding)) that (post)fem­i­nist artists, writers, art his­to­rians , scru­ti­nize nor­mal­ized forms of knowl­edge and linear his­tor­ical nar­ra­tives.
    2) Griselda Pollock, Differencing the Canon: Feminist Desire and the Writing of Art’s Histories, Londres / New York, Routledge, 1999

    With Carola Dertnig, Fabienne Dumont, Jules Falquet, Hélène Fleckinger, Laura Iamurri, Giovanna Zapperi

    2.30 pm
    Fabienne Dumont, art his­to­rian, Ecole Supérieure d’Art de Quimper
    Reenactment of fem­i­nist per­for­mances: the example of Faith Wilding, from Waiting (1972) to Wait-With (2007)
    In addi­tion to the screening of extracts of the orig­inal per­for­mance and its renewal in the 2000s, Fabienne Dumont will explore the his­tor­ical con­texts of the Californian fem­i­nist move­ment in the 1970s, the eth­ical values that came out of these years, and the rel­e­vance of their reac­ti­va­tion 40 years later.
    Fabienne Dumont is con­tem­po­rary art teacher at EESAB, author of a thesis, Arts et fémin­ismes dans les années 1970 en France (PUR, to be pub­lished), director of the anthology La rébel­lion du Deuxième Sexe (Presses du réel, 2011). She is cur­rently preparing a mono­graph­ical essay about Nil Yalter and has just pub­lished an article in the exhi­bi­tion cat­a­logue Linder Femme/Objet du MAMVP.

    3.30 pm
    "Lora Sana", PERFORMANCE by Carola Dertnig, artist, Vienna
    In-depth research on the his­tory of per­for­mance – an account of which is given in the book Let’s twist again (2001) – was what lead the Austrian artist Carola Dertnig (born in 1963) to ques­tion the place of women at the heart of Viennese Actionism. The pro­ject Lora Sana is based on this research into its his­to­ri­og­raphy and its doc­u­men­ta­tion. Dertnig was sur­prised by the absence of their names in books on the his­tory of art, and set out to meet these phantom women, visual evi­dence of whom is nonethe­less pre­served in the archives of this tran­si­tional period. The fic­tive figure of the artist Lora Sana was born, there­fore, from the syn­thesis of dis­cus­sions with Hanel Koeck and Annie Brus, who were both Actionists in the 1950s – or rather, “models”, as such was their status at the time. Carola Dertnig’s pro­ject is thus anchored in a re-writing of the his­tory of art, com­bining real tes­ti­monies with his­to­ri­o­graph­ical metafic­tions, thus allowing us to ques­tion the value of an archive, when it is sub­jected to a gaze that is no longer mas­cu­line, but rather fem­i­nist or queer.

    4.30 pm
    Laura Iamurri, art his­to­rian, University of Rome 3
    Giovanna Zapperi, art his­to­rian, Ecole Nationale Supérieure d’Art de Bourges

    A rad­ical dis­con­ti­nuity: Carla Lonzi, 1970
    In 1969, Carla Lonzi, art his­to­rian and critic, pub­lishes her con­ver­sa­tion with 14 artists under the title Autoritratto (Self-Portrait).
    The recorded inter­views are edited to make times are super­im­posed and inter­twined: the result is a long con­ver­sa­tion without apparent pause, in which time has no lin­earity, and the tran­si­tion from oral lan­guage to its tran­scrip­tion is often the­ma­tized. After the pub­li­ca­tion of the book, Lonzi gives up art crit­i­cism in order to focus on fem­i­nism. The pub­li­ca­tion of the Manifesto di Rivolta fem­minile in July 1970 marks the begin­ning of the most rad­ical thought on Italian fem­i­nism.

    5.30 pm
    REWRITING HISTORY: (POST)FEMINIST FICTION AND NARRATION
    Jules Falquet, soci­ol­o­gist, Université Paris 7
    "Theorical con­tri­bu­tions of the Chicanas fem­i­nists from artistic and activist work"

    Jules Falquet is working on fem­i­nist the­o­ries – mate­ri­alist, inter­weavist and decolo­nial the­o­ries in par­tic­ular. She recently co-edited with Paola Bacchetta and Norma Alarcón a Cahier du CEDREF about fem­i­nist and queer decolo­nial the­o­ries, Chicanas and Latin American inter­ven­tions

    6.30 pm
    Hélène Fleckinger, cinema his­to­rian, teacher, Université Paris VIII
    "Political self-rep­re­sen­ta­tion and per­for­ma­tive fic­tion. The example of the fem­i­nist and homo­sexual cin­emas in France in the 1970s".

    A pro­gram pro­posed by Aliocha Imhoff and Kantuta Quiros

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