Prague Quadrennial 2023

Prague Quadrennial 2023

The 15th edition of the Prague Quadrennial, presenting two Polish projects: “Look Around” as part of the Exhibition of Countries and Regions and “Asylum” as part of the Student Exhibition.
opublikowano 18 maja 2023
The 15th edition of the Prague Quadrennial, presenting two Polish projects: Look Around” as part of the Exhibition of Countries and Regions and “Asylum” as part of the Student Exhibition, will begin on 7 June 2023. They are both produced by the Zbigniew Raszewski Theatre Institute.

The Prague Quadrennial (PQ) is the world’s largest event dedicated to theatre scenography and set design for the performing arts. The 15th edition of the PQ will be held on 7-18 June on the premises of the historic Prague market (in the Holešovice district), which once served as the city’s slaughterhouse.

The PQ 2023 programme, which was developed by an international team of curators headed by artistic director Markéta Fantova, features more than three hundred works by artists from more than 100 countries. Two main exhibitions, namely the Exhibition of Countries and Regions and the Student Exhibition, are held as competitions. In addition, the PQ consists of eight other programme sections. Each section presents scenography and set design from a different perspective.

The motto of this year’s Exhibition of Countries and Regions is “RARE Visions”. The formula of the Polish pavilion created for the international exhibition by a collective of creators: Zuzanna Berendt, Ludomir Franczak, Magdalena Franczak, Michał Fronk, Anna Majewska, Sára Märc, and Ida Ślęzak is reflected in the term “crossroads”. It represents a meeting point for various research and artistic paths that lead to the creation of installations and audio walks and is a site serving as the starting point for the audience to begin to experience the space that extends beyond the exhibition halls.

This is how the pavilion creators inspired by the space of the market describe their project: “’Look around’ is the phrase that started the process of getting to know this place, and was then developed through collective work. We wanted not only to look around the site of the former slaughterhouse, but also to feel its smell, the texture of the walls of its buildings, and its audiosphere. All these ways of experiencing the space and thinking with it have influenced the main directions of research and artistic activities we are pursuing in creating the exhibition. They concern animal-human relationships and histories, food production, multi-sensory, embodied and attentive being in a space, and the skin as a zone of contact, a surface of feeling and communication.”

On 8 June at 16:00, a meeting in the form of a collective lecture with the creators of the Polish Exhibition of Countries and Regions will be held in Room 1.12 in Hall 13 at the Holešovice Market. The talk (held in English) will focus on collective artistic practices.

As part of the numerous events held as part of the PQ 2023, the organisers are handing over one of the exhibition spaces to young artists. In 2023, the theme of this programme section of the event is “RARE Stories of Unique Places”. The author of the Polish exhibition is Ksenia Makala who will present her project entitled “Asylum”.

This is how the author describes her work:” After the outbreak of full-scale aggression against Ukraine, new awareness of threats and lack of control became dominant aspects in Poles’ lives. Daily reports of the war caused intense anxiety. The “Asylum” project is an attempt to create a safe space. The roof functions as a shelter that spreads over pedestrians. It provides shade, protects against rain, and interacts with external weather conditions – it can change with the wind, and gain transparency by catching the sun’s rays. It also forms a contrasting and unexpected shape within the existing architectural environment. The multidimensionality of the interpretation of ASYLUM forms creates a space which allows for diverse responses from the participants. “Asylum” can appear to be an alien, disturbing element which undermines laws of gravity and stability.”

Poland will also showcase a project at the Fragments II section of the PQ 2023, which will be presented on the fifth floor of the Trade Fair Palace of the National Gallery in Prague. A model from the play “Life and Death of Janina Węgrzynowska” by Ludomir Franczak will be presented there.

Two publications published by the Zbigniew Raszewski Theatre Institute i.e. “Zmiana Ustawienia: Historia polskiej scenografii teatralnej i społecznej XX i XXI wieku” [Changing the Setting. History of Set Design in Polish Theatre and Society in the 20th and 21st Centuries] edited by Dorota Buchwald and Dariusz Kosiński and “Reclaimed Avant-garde: Spaces and Stages of Avant-garde Theatre in Central-Eastern Europe”, edited by Zoltán Imre and Dariusz Kosinski, were shortlisted for the Best Publication Award for the best publication in the field of scenography and set design for the performing arts.

For more information about the Prague Quadrennial and the presence of Polish artists at the event, visit the website dedicated to the Polish presence at the PQ.


PERFORMATIVE EVENTS during the Polish Exhibition of Countries and Regions:

8.06, Thursday, 4 p.m.
Look Around — Meeting with the Creators of the Polish Exhibition of Countries and Regions

9.06, Friday, 11 a.m.
Exercises for collective practice with Michał Sałwiński

9.06, Friday, 5 p.m.
Look Around: Curatorial Walk

10.06, Saturday, 5 p.m.
Agata Siniarska’s performance

11.06, Sunday, 11 a.m.
Exercises for collective practice with Zuzana Šklíbová

11.06, Sunday, 5 p.m.
Look Around: Curatorial Walk

12.06, Monday, 11 a.m.
Exercises for collective practice with Petr Dlouhý

12.06, Monday, 5 p.m.
Look Around: Curatorial Walk

14.06, Wednesday, 11 a.m.
Exercises for collective practice with Katharina Joy Book

14.06, Wednesday, 5 p.m.
Look Around: Curatorial Walk

15.06, Thursday, 5 p.m.
Talk by Marco Stella,
We Have Never Been Humans, They Have Never Been Animals:
Some Thoughts on Animal Domestication and Coevolution

16.06, Friday, 5 p.m.
Visit to Pastvina with Sára Märc
Let’s Meet, Work and Care for Animals

Opening hours of the exhibitions:

Exhibition of Countries and Regions 9:00-18:00*

Student Exhibition 9:00-20:00*

(*on Friday 16.06, exhibition opening hours are extended until 24:00)

Venue of the Student Exhibition and the Exhibition of Countries and Regions:

Holešovice Market (Holešovická tržnice): holesovickatrznice.cz/kontakty

Venue description on the PQ website: pq.cz/pq-2023-info/location-of-pq-2023/

Link to the website showcasing Poland’s presence at the Prague Quadrennial: praskiequadriennale.pl


The Minister of Culture and National Heritage co-finance the events in the frame of the project entitled “15th Edition of the Prague Quadrennial 2023.”

The producer of the Polish main exhibitions during the Prague Quadrennial 2023 is the Zbigniew Raszewski Theatre Institute.

PERFORMATIVE EVENTS

during the Polish Exhibition of Countries and Regions:

8.06 Thursday
1 p.m. Look Around — Meeting with the Creators of the Polish Exhibition of Countries and Regions
The Polish Institute in Prague is a partner of the meeting

9.06 Friday
11 a.m. Exercises for collective practice with Michał Sałwiński
1. p.m. Look Around: Curatorial Walk

10.06 Saturday
5 p.m. Agata Siniarska’s performance

11.06 Sunday
11 a.m. Exercises for collective practice with Zuzana Šklíbová
1. p.m. Look Around: Curatorial Walk

12.06 Monday
11 a.m. Exercises for collective practice with Petr Dlouhý
1. p.m. Look Around: Curatorial Walk

14.06 Wednesday
11 a.m. Exercises for collective practice with Katharina Joy Book
1. p.m. Look Around: Curatorial Walk

15.06 Thursday
1. p.m. Talk by Marco Stella, We Have Never Been Humans, They Have Never Been Animals: Some Thoughts on Animal Domestication and Coevolution

16.06 Friday
5 p.m. Visit to Pastvina with Sára Märc,
Let’s Meet, Work and Care for Animals

Opening hours of the exhibitions:

Exhibition of Countries and Regions 9 a.m.—6 p.m.* Student Exhibition 9 a.m.—8 p.m.*

(*on Friday 16.06, exhibition opening hours are extended until 12 a.m.) 

Venue of the Student Exhibition and the Exhibition of Countries and Regions: Holešovice Market (Holešovická tržnice): https://www.holesovickatrznice.cz/kontakty 

Venue description on the PQ website: https://pq.cz/pq-2023-info/location-of-pq-2023/

Link to the website showcasing Poland’s presence at the Prague Quadrennial: http://praskiequadriennale.pl


June 8, 4 p.m.

Look Around — Meeting with the Creators of the Polish Exhibition of Countries and Regions

The meeting will be focused around collective artistic practices. Ideas will be presented in the form of a collective lecture by: Zuzanna Berendt, Ludomir Franczak, Magdalena Franczak, Michał Fronk, Anna Majewska, Sára Märc, and Ida Ślęzak.

Language: English
Place: Room 1.12 in Hall no. 13, Holesovice Market
The Polish Institute in Prague is a partner of the meeting.

June 10, 5 p.m.

Agata Siniarska, performance
Agata Siniarska works in the field of extended choreography. She places her practice between how we think about the world and how we move in it. It is a place where somatics and politics intersect—a place where body perception meets social engagement— between somatic and environmental landscapes, between human and nonhuman bodies. Agata’s present research explores the idea of an Anthropocene museum, multispecies archives in the time of extinction, and various human and nonhuman alliances. For the program of the Polish pavilion at the Prague Quadrennial 2023, she will propose performative action based on her practice and inspired by artistic research conducted by the collective creating the Polish exhibition.

Duration: Approx. 30 minutes
Language: No language barrier
Place: Polish pavilion

June 9, 11, 12, 14, 11 a.m.

Exercises for collective practice with Peter Dlouhý, Katharina Joy Book, Michał Sałwiński and Zuzana Šklíbová

We are a group of Prague-based artists, curators, practitioners who decided to Look through & beyond the set of exercises designed by the Polish pavilion team and expand their proposal. Our practices derive from collective organizing, interfering with the official infrastructures and searching for ways how to cross-pollinate our artistic approaches with the knowledge of the Polish pavilion’s publication Look Around.

Together we invite you to experience four facilitated sessions, distributed over the period of PQ, and share the observations resulting from the collective practicing of some of the exercises. We will accompany these with the possibility of direct interactions, short interviews with the Polish pavilion team and exchanges.

Duration: Up to 45 minutes
Language: English
Place: Polish pavilion & its proximate surroundings

June 9, 11, 12, 14, 5 p.m.

Look Around: Curatorial Walks

The Polish exhibition Look Around is co-created by a collective of seven people: Zuzanna Berendt, Ludomir Franczak, Magdalena Franczak, Michał Fronk, Anna Majewska, Sára Märc, Ida Ślęzak. These tours offer insight into the work that is presented in the space of the exhibition, but also outside of it in thematic walks.

At the beginning of our work, there was encouragement to “look around,” which was supposed to enable us to establish an initial relationship with the place we were in. It quickly became clear that we were interested not only in “looking around” but also in “smelling around,” “feeling around,” “moving around” and “thinking around.” The movement of our bodies in the former slaughterhouse gave rise to the first directions of the project, which were developed and differentiated further in the artistic and research process. The effect of this process is the exhibition, four thematic walks and a publication.

Duration: Up to 45 minutes
Language: English (June 11 meeting additionally translated into Czech)
Place: Polish pavilion & its proximate surroundings

June 15, 5 p.m.

Marco Stella, We Have Never Been Humans, They Have Never Been Animals: Some Thoughts on Animal Domestication and Coevolution

Past decades of intellectual development in disciplines from philosophy to biology have shown, in various ways, how problematic our cultural dichotomies are, especially “nature” and “culture.” Equally, subordinated dichotomies such as “animal” and “human” show up as being highly contextual cultural categories rather than reflections of “the world out there.” They obscure our understanding of some key aspects of one of the driving forces of our history and evolution: domestication. Although traditionally conceived as the act of human dominion over nature, recent developments in the study of domestication show a more complicated image. We focus on the coevolutionary and semiotic features of domestication, understanding it as a coevolutionary process similar to others observed in nature. However, it acquired the unfortunate and sinister facets of brutal animal exploitation in European modernity, especially in the 20th century. In domestication, while not being good or bad per se, the setup of relations is what really matters.

Marco Stella, PhD, is a coordinator and worker of the Pastvina community garden and rescue farm; he studied anthropology as well as evolutionary and theoretical biology.

Duration: 45 minutes + 15 minutes of discussion
Language: English
Place: Polish pavilion & its proximate surroundings

June 16, 5 p.m.

Sára Märc, Let’s Meet, Work and Care for Animals

Out of the box and theater. We will visit a rescue farm in Prague called Pastvina. We will meet its residents, make contact with them, get to know them, and take care of them. We will become a group of farm worker volunteers and companions to both human and nonhuman animals. On our way and after work we will read texts about animal creativity, especially about those animals we meet on the farm.

Sára Märc is a research-based artist, actress and curator; part of the collective preparing the Polish pavilion.

Duration: 2 hours + travel
Language: English (+ possibility of Czech)
Meeting point: Vltavská metro station
Place: Zahrada Pastvina

Further comments:

Allergy warning: Many animals live on the farm and many plants grow there. Wear comfortable clothes and shoes that you don’t mind getting dirty. Take snacks with you.

Accessibility: The metro and bus are accessible to wheelchairs and strollers. The place is located near the bus station, but a small part of the path is an uphill forest trail.


Media contacts: pr@instytut-teatralny.pl
KAMILA PAPROCKA-JASIŃSKA
Head of Communications and Promotion | Press Officer
Phone: +48 575 120 126

IGA BOGUSKA
Communications and Promotion Specialist
Phone: +48 730 162 850

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