ULU contemporary art imagined a new contemporary art institution in
Iasi, Romania, where the traditional centres of art have been increasingly
brought into question by the proliferation of large-scale exhibitions
worldwide. The cultural life of Iasi has become symptomatic of this
expansion: home to one of Romania’s three current art biennials and a
major art college, Iasi developed its own systems, which nevertheless
remained dependent on the support of civil society and international
public funding. The time had come for peripheral sites like these to
operate independently from the international financial support that is
typical of NGO-led art centres. ULU contemporary art aimed to act
as an independent art space, while supporting itself with commercial
gallery activity, in order to offer an alternative way of considering how an
art platform could function in the region.
The project explored the different structures of desire enabled by
particular peripheral spaces. This projection for a new form of institution
in Iasi could have set up a new set of priorities, in the ongoing discourse
between centre and periphery. In her book Art & Its Institutions, curator
Nina Montman posed questions such as: “What do we actually expect
from an art institution? What do we want an institution to stand for?
What desires does an institution in the art field produce?” Historically,
these questions have been explored within the art world from a very
restrictive angle, and have thus remained very specific to a certain
space of contemporary art production. Our idea, located in London, but
imagined for Iasi, was to create a general criticality towards the ongoing
phenomena of network institutions, where the desires of a specific place
become a common and shared aspiration, enacted by individuals.
The exhibition was a preliminary step towards considering the impact
of such an imagined reality, but also acted as a case study in which to
consider how peripheral localities can attempt to stabilise themselves.
The new institution was built for the first time inside The Friends of
the Divided Mind. The gallery’s staff operated during normal working
hours, and hosted an exhibit by emerging artist Vincent Faciu. ULU also
commissioned a series of limited-edition multiples from four international
artists. These multiples were exhibited within the gallery’s office space
and were available for sale during the run of the exhibition.
Artists include:
Dan Acostioaei
Vincent Faciu
Lee Kit
Cezar Lazarescu
Antonia Hirsch
Curated by Preeti Kathuria, Jesse McKee and Livia Pancu