Grgurević, Meta; Ashery, Oreet; O'Reilly, Kira; Bard, Perry; Bonatelli, Stefania; Hesse, Katharina; Day, Lara; Lagunas, Jessica; Miličević, Vesna; Mntambo, Nandipha; Mootich, Katarina; Passedouet, Maflohe; Reimann, Petra; de Rosa, Yvonne; Witteman, Judith; Foddai, Roberto: One step forward, two steps back

Grgurević, Meta; Ashery, Oreet; O'Reilly, Kira; Bard, Perry; Bonatelli, Stefania; Hesse, Katharina; Day, Lara; Lagunas, Jessica; Miličević, Vesna; Mntambo, Nandipha; Mootich, Katarina; Passedouet, Maflohe; Reimann, Petra; de Rosa, Yvonne; Witteman, Judith; Foddai, Roberto: One step forward, two steps back

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Title One step forward, two steps back
Type Exhibition, International exhibition, Group exhibition
Date 12 October 2010 – 29 October 2010
Venue Galerija Škuc
City of production Ljubljana, Slovenia
Production City of Women
Co-production ŠKUC
Format 1080x1920 pxl
Duration 03' 55"
URL Mesto žensk
Registration number CoW-2010--14

Synopsis

 

One Step Forward, Two Steps Back is a group exhibition, borrowing its title from a 1904 revolutionary pamphlet by Vladimir Lenin. The purpose here is not to relate to Lenin’s paper but to use its title in examining a situation where, seemingly for every attempt to make progress in a task, an actual retrograde performance is achieved. The exhibition focuses on “now”, at this very moment, the present in relation to time, future and past. What is our understanding of now? Do we live it, or deplete it by waiting for better days? What is reality and does it have to reflect upon the past in order to survive today? Are we aware and conscious of our history? Do we care about it? Could one exist without a past? What would future be?

 

Through performances, video, photography and installations, a group of international artists examines 'today' by reconstructing, revisiting and reinventing, not always pleasant but certainly significant moments in their lives; instants that for some reason are nothing else but the blemishes from the past, difficult to comprehend and mostly hard to forget. They may be someone else’s reality all together, yet mingled in a group consciousness that cannot escape it.

 

Source: City of Women

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