In recent years the concept of resilience has grown out of the global trend of developing sustainability in the societies of the global North. In natural sciences or physics, a resilient body is described as flexible, durable, and capable of springing back to its original form and transforming the energy received into its own reconstruction (a good example of this is the sponge). In psychology, resilience refers to the subject’s ability to recover their original state relatively quickly after some significant stress or shock and continuing with the processes of self-realization without a major setback. Resilience is more than just the ability to adapt, promoted by the concept of the flexible subject over the past two decades, which was adopted by corporate capitalism and triggered the precarious mass movement of laborers. Resilience encompasses exploring reciprocal codependence and finding one’s political and socio-ecological place in a world that is out of balance and creates increasingly disadvantageous living conditions. Rather than trying to find global solutions for some indefinite future or projecting a possible perfect balance, resilient thinking focuses on the diversity of practical solutions for the here and now, and on the cooperation and creativity of everyone involved in a community or society.
The 7th Triennial of Contemporary Art in Slovenia gives prominence to practices that can be seen as analogous to the concept of resilience, i.e. community-oriented, site-specific, participatory, performative, architectural, social, civic and other discursive practices exploring new (or revived) community principles, such as the “do-it-together,” urban gardening, and co-working, as well as the fundamental social question of how we coexist. Blending work and everyday life forms the basis of new economic, ethical, and production principles that the younger generation of artists uses to transform the role of the creative subject in contemporary Slovenian society. On the one hand this opens dialogues with biotechnology, critical theory, and political activism, underscoring, on the other hand, the cyclic nature of time by reviving traditional knowledge and techniques. Occurring across many platforms—the exhibition, performative projects, discussions—the triennial also gives the young generations an opportunity to express their potential through addressing urgent local and global socio-political problems and contributing to the debate in and over existing Slovenian cultural policy.
Participants: Artists Club (Thibaut Espiau, Ištvan Išt Huzjan, Grégoire Motte) / Art of CoLiving (Nomad Dance Academy, The Public Office, CoFestival) / Nika Autor, Lidija Radojević, Ciril Oberstar, Jelena Petrović / BioTehna, Platform of Artistic Research of Life Systems and Technologies / Mare Bulc & Matej Recer / Bunker & Mladi levi Festival / Jasmina Cibic / Miha Ciglar / Cluster / Ana Čigon / Maja Delak & Luka Prinčič and collaborators Loup Abramovici, Claudia Fancello, Matija Ferlin, Janez Janša, Maja Smrekar, Maja Šorli, Urška Vohar / Alain Della Negra & Kaori Kinoshita / Aleksandra Domanović / Eat-art Collective (Loup Abramovici, Bara Kolenc, Rado Jaušovec, Teja Reba) / Tomaž Furlan / G-FART / Meta Grgurević & Urša Vidic / Elvis Halilović/ONDU / Maja Hodošček / Ištvan Išt Huzjan / Leja Jurišić & Teja Reba / KUD C3 (Boštjan Bugarič, Tina Cotič, Nina Mršnik, Domen Grögl) / KUD Mreža/Galerija Alkatraz / KUD Obrat (Stefan Doepner, Urška Jurman, Polonca Lovšin, Apolonija Šušteršič) / Sebastjan Leban & Staš Kleindienst / Luiza Margan / Maska / Matija Plevnik, Kaja Avberšek & Srečko / Tjaša Pogačar Podgornik, Andrej Škufca / Marta Popivoda / Mark Požlep & JAŠA / prostoRož / RÁTNEEK (Maja Prelog, Blaž Murn, Tomaž Lešnjak) / The Resilients (some people on a journey through spacetimeness) / resilients.net (Abrahamsberg, Bazo, Biederman, Bizjak, Borrisova, Boykett, Černigoj, Colapinto, Cortese, Gaffney, Jashari, Karelse, Kim, Kuzmanovic, Marovt, Peljhan, Stopar, Veber, Yerkes, Wan Rosli and others) / RogLab – pilot project for the future Center Rog / Simona Semenič & Mare Bulc / Nina Slejko Blom / Tina Smrekar / Dejan Srhoj / STEGNAR, HORVAT & FAMILY (Marko Batista, Nataša Berk, Primož Bezjak, Mojca Lešnik, Luka Prinčič, Veli Silver, Toni Soprano, Nataša Živković & PERFORMA Festival) / Studio 6 with OFFTIR / Matej Stupica / Theremidi Orchestra / Irena Tomažin / Noemi Veberič Levovnik / VIA NEGATIVA / Workers-Punks’ University
Curator: Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez
20 June–29 September 2013
Opening: Thursday, 20 June 2013, 8pm
Organised by the Moderna galerija (MG) with Museum of Contemporary Art Metelkova (MSUM)
Tomšičeva 14
Ljubljana, Slovenia
Hours: Daily 10am–6pm; closed Mondays
www.u3trienale.mg-lj.si
www.mg-lj.si
Venues
Museum of Contemporary Art Metelkova (+MSUM)
Maistrova 3, 1000 Ljubljana
Museum square
Center for Contemporary Arts SCCA-Ljubljana: Project Room
Metelkova 6, 1000 Ljubljana
Škuc Gallery
Stari trg 21, 1000 Ljubljana
Slovenian Cinematheque
Miklošičeva cesta 28, Ljubljana
Beyond a Construction Site – urban community garden
Across from the entrance to Nos. 32–34 Resljeva Street
Mladinsko Theater
Vilharjeva 11, Ljubljana
ČAMAC Zalog
KSEVT Vitanje
Na vasi 18, Vitanje