Zilberman Gallery will host Zeynep Beler’s project exhibition “Writing Remains” from Saturday 7 January through Saturday 18 February.
From the organizer:
The departure point for Writing Remains is asemic writing, a wordless, open-ended form of writing that is seemingly a vacuum of meaning. One of the first known examples of this form of writing belongs to two calligraphy masters who lived in China during the Tang Dynasty era—“crazy” Zhang Xu known for his slapdash and contentless calligraphy works and “drunk” monk Huai Su. In later historic periods, this tradition could be traced in different works, including the contentless, text-based works by the Dadaists in the 1920s; Kandinsky’s textual abstractions; Roland Barthes’s contentless paragraphs and letters that he referred to as Contre-écritures.
Similarly, Cy Twombly’s blackboard paintings that could be perceived as commentaries on the “legibility” of painting, also serve to underscore the sheer painterliness of text, a curtain of meaning that becomes permeable in relationship to the viewer’s ability to read. In this sense, different examples of asemic writing’s common denominator is not that they contain little information, but rather that they include too much information. Our gaze, accustomed to decoding symbols, enable us to read this as a commentary on the act of writing, calligraphy, or as a mental choreography.
Beler’s deep engagement with literature is manifest in her project exhibition, Writing Remains, in that the artist’s process includes thinking about the multitude of meanings in artistic practice, inspired by asemic writing. It is well established that taking notes by hand on a text while reading improves memory retention. Beler, who always uses this method while working, has been producing asemic writing, discovering the difficulty of writing credible “fake” writing. The work included in the exhibition, “sentence”, is the first result of this effort to push the boundaries of credibility.
The exhibition also offers a different perspective on alphabet and text as we know them, as these are technologies that are on the verge of disappearing in their familiar forms, replaced by newer technologies. Today, modes of expression that relate to the act of writing have become “fleeting” just like many other things have in the Internet era. At the same time, the script-shaped stains that one encounters on Istanbul streets present the most primitive technology as a solution to the problematics of expression. In these examples, the authoritarian structure inadvertently generates asemic abstraction. The stain photographs that the artist has been accumulating since the Gezi period emerge as an ironic appreciation of the persistence in constantly re-forming the asemic writing.
The exhibition, Writing Remains, invites viewers to decode together what is behind all of the abstractions in the exhibition and what asemic writing could propose.
For more information about the exhibition, please contact serhat@zilbermangallery.com.
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For more information, visit the official gallery page.
Tuesday – Friday / 10:00 – 19:30
Saturday / 12:00 – 19:00
zilberman@galerizilberman.com
+90 212 251 1214
Image sourced via press release.
İstiklal Cad. Mısır Apt. No:163 K.3 D.10 – Beyoğlu 34433
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