Skip to main content

The Politics of the Balcony in Contemporary Art

Doctoral candidate:
Eylem Ertürk

Supervisor:
Elke Krasny

Project start:
20.09.2020

Doctoral studies:
Doctor of Philosophy/Ph.D.

Web link:
https://eylemduygu.net/

Dissertation project
led by Eylem Ertürk, Institute for Education in the Arts and Institute for Art Theory and Cultural Studies
Project start: 20.09.2020

Abstract

The Ph.D. research on “The Politics of the Balcony in Contemporary Art” explores artistic practices that deal with political histories in public space. It focuses on the balcony as a site of public address and representational space of power, a liminal space in between the private and the public realm, in between the “above” and “below”. It investigates the political meaning of the balcony through visual and performative analysis of two recurring acts: balcony speeches by political figures in the last century and contemporary art practices on or related to the balcony. The political action in balcony speeches, its performativity and spatial dimensions, have been captured visually in photographs and films and shared in various media. Using these materials as resources, the thesis investigates the representational elements of political speeches. It deconstructs the images of balcony speeches to investigate different aspects of political representation through elements of architecture, the performance of bodies, and assembly in public space. It aims to reveal the symbols and dynamics of creating a representational space of power and propose ways of using this knowledge in artistic strategies. The balcony has been a contested subject, a critical place, an image, and a statement in contemporary art through photographs, video works, paintings, performances, installations, interventions, exhibitions, etc. By analysing a wide range of contemporary artworks in relation to their political and social context, the thesis will have a critical look at the artistic strategies in dealing with a space of political power. How can art respond to social issues in public space without reproducing the performance and image of hegemonic power? How can it re-appropriate a critical space to create solidarity and resistance to power? Researching the relations between balcony speeches, the public sphere, and artistic practices offers new perspectives on the public function and political philosophy of the balcony, and I hope will contribute to debates on artistic strategies dealing with power and representation in public space.

Short biography

Eylem Ertürk (Vienna/Istanbul) is a practitioner-researcher working at the intersection of art, politics, memory and public space. She received her master’s degrees in Social Design at the University of Applied Arts Vienna (2019) and in Fine Arts Photography at Marmara University in Istanbul (2007). Since 2005, she has initiated and led several art projects and worked as a researcher, editor, curator, and manager. Dealing with cultural dialogue through arts at Anadolu Kültür (2010-2017), she has co-curated the project, publications, and exhibitions of BAK: Revealing the City through Memory. She has edited the volumes Local Cultural Policies Handbook: Steps, Tools and Case Studies (Istanbul Bilgi University Press, 2011) and Talks on Memory and Arts 2020 (Truth Justice Memory Center, 2021). She is the co-founder of Shared Walks, which creates social encounters and critical spaces by walking in cities. She is currently a Ph.D. candidate at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna as an ÖAW Doc-Fellow (2023-2024) working on the Politics of the Balcony in Contemporary Art.