Serkan Özkaya
Serkan Ozkaya | |
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Born | Turkey |
Nationality | Turkish |
Education | Bard College, Istanbul University |
Known for | Contemporary art, Conceptual art |
Awards | MacDowell Colony |
Serkan Ozkaya (born 1973, Istanbul, Turkey) is a conceptual artist whose work deals with topics of appropriation and reproduction, and typically operates outside of traditional art spaces.[1] Ozkaya lives in New York City, USA. He holds an M.F.A. from Bard College, New York, and a Ph.D in German Language and Literature from Istanbul University, where he also earned his B.A. and M.A.
Ozkaya has been an artist-in-residence at the École Régionale des Beaux Arts de Nantes (2000–2001), Rooseum in Malmö with the IASPIS grant (2002), Platform Recent Art Center in Istanbul (2003–2004), and at Kuenstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin (2006). He is also a fellow of the MacDowell Colony in New Hampshire.
Selected Works and Projects
MyMoon, 2015
MyMoon is an artwork by Serkan Ozkaya. It is a large round rock floating in the sky, that is visible through the smart phone via MyMoon app. Using the smart phone's GPS and compass, MyMoon app detects the object in the sky and makes it visible. MyMoon rotates in close proximity to the moon in the sky. Yet unlike the earth's satellite, it is visible outdoors and indoors.
Mirage, 2013
Mirage was installed at the Postmasters Gallery in New York and consisted of a shadow of a passenger airplane that crossed the room for 45 seconds every four minutes. The shadow here was considered not as the mere absence of light but rather as a material in and of itself which could then be sculpted.
One and Three Pasta (with George L. Legendre), 2012
Serkan Ozkaya collaborated with the architect George L. Legendre to create replicas after computer models of 92 types of pasta (based on Legendreʼs mathematical equations). The actual pieces of pasta were displayed next to their generative equations. One and Three Pasta references to canonical works like Joseph Kosuthʼs One and Three Chairs and Donald Juddʼs untitled stacks.
Atlas, 2011
Atlas is a contribution to a walking museum wherein Ozkaya constructed a rock to be strapped to the curator's back and promenaded daily throughout the streets of New York. Ozkaya came up with the idea of making ‘the museum’ wander around the streets of New York with his new piece: a giant rock.
What A Museum Should Really Look Like (Large Glass), 2000
Ozkaya collected roughly 30,000 slides from artists, galleries, and institutions and showed them on one of the largest galleries in the main pedestrian street of Istanbul, the Kazim Taskent Art Gallery. What A Museum Should Really Look Like represented a giant mosaic of individual images. During the day the slides were readable from the inside of the gallery and at night, with the lights on, they became a scene for the street. This piece was later initiated in Utrecht, Holland in a much larger scale with 100,000 slides.
A Sudden Gust of Wind, 2007
In A Sudden Gust of Wind, Ozkaya depicted the journey of one sheet of paper swept by the wind in a room. The work was made with basic materials, i.e. legal size Xerox paper, thread, and glue. Analogous to the almost littoral quality of the installation itself, the piece of paper is a structure between the abstract and the concrete.
Bring Me The Head of..., 2007-2015
Bring Me The Head of… is in the form of a teddy bear’s head on a plate. Instead of working with museums or galleries, in this case, Ozkaya collaborated with restaurants and chefs and they decided the ingredients—i.e. the material—of the sculpture. This work was made in collaboration with M on the Bund in Shanghai and was offered at Freemans in New York in 2007 as a part of the Performa Biennial, as street food in Izmir in 2009, at Changa in Istanbul in 2008, Capital M in Beijing in 2012, and in 2014 at the Hive in Bentonville, AR.
David (inspired by Michelangelo), 2005-2012
David (inspired by Michelangelo) is a double size, golden replica of Michelangeloʼs David based on the accurate 3D computer model by Dr. Marc Levoy of Stanford University. This piece was acquired by 21c Museum in Kentucky, USA.
Today Could Be a Day of Historical Importance, 2003-2009
Ozkaya turned the front and back covers of Radikal newspaper into drawings. The text and pictures were hand-renered and the paper appeared as a print of the drawing for one day. This act enabled the reader to acquire a limited edition for a very reasonable price (the price of the newspaper). The overall piece, entitled Today Could Be A Day Of Historical Importance was executed in Sweden with Aftonbladet, in Germany with Freitag, in the U.S. with the New York Times and Courier Journal.
Proletarier Aller Laender, 2000
“Proletarier aller Laender... is an installation with hundreds of minuscule red plastic foam figures affixed to the floor. Depending upon your point of view, Ozkaya's installation either cited the trampling of the working classes or their resilience and ultimate power, always springing back, indestructible.”
Dear Sir or Madam, 1996-2009
Dear Sir or Madam is a collection of letter correspondences between Ozkaya and cultural institutions, dignitaries and curators. This is his own paper trail of bureaucracy in (in)action. He has requested that he be allowed to hang the Mona Lisa upside down and re-wrap the Reichstag, among others. Often, the letters do not deserve a response but curiously, they have usually been treated with official but unthinking courtesy, read perhaps but not comprehended—answered and then often passed along the bureaucratic chain.
Public Appearances and Workshops
Over the course of the past two decades, Ozkaya has given talks, taken part in panel discussions, and conducted workshops at numerous academic and artistic institutions, including: The Malmö Art Academy, Malmö, Sweden; Rooseum Center for Contemporary Art Malmö, Sweden; Goldsmiths College, London, United Kingdom; Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey; Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Center, Istanbul, Turkey; BeganeGrond / BAK, Utrecht The Netherlands; Charlottenburg Museum, Copenhagen, Denmark; University of Gothenburg's Valand School of Fine Arts, Gothenburg, Sweden; The Drawing Center, New York City, NY, USA; Helsinki Art Academy, Helsinki, Finland; Brown University, Providence, RI, USA; Columbia University, New York City, NY, USA; etc.
Exhibitions
Selected Solo Shows
- One and Three Pasta (with George L. Legendre), Postmasters Gallery, New York City, NY, USA, (2014)
- Sudden Gusts of the World (curated by Marta Smolinska), Galeria Miejska Arsenal, Poznan, Poland, (2014)
- Today Was Really Yesterday, Galerist, Istanbul, Turkey, (2014)
- Mirage, Postmasters Gallery, New York City, NY, USA, (2013)
- One and Three Pasta (with George L. Legendre), Galerist, Istanbul, Turkey, (2012)
- David (inspired by Michelangelo), 21c Museum, Louisville, KY, USA, (2012)
- ATLAS, IMOCC, New York City, NY, USA, (2011)
- Today Could Be a Day of Historical Importance, Slag Gallery New York City, NY, USA, (2010)
- Dear Sir or Madam, Slag Gallery New York City, NY, USA, (2009)
- A Sudden Gust of Wind, Boots Contemporary Art Space, St. Louis, USA, (2008)
- Bring Me the Head Of…, M on the Bund, Shanghai, China, (2007)
- When He Came Back to His Senses, The Monster Was Still Waiting in Front of the Cave, Galerist, Istanbul, Turkey, (2006)
- Monet: A Retrospective, Kuenstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, Germany, (2006)
- Minerva Street, Galerist, Istanbul, Turkey, (2003)
- Lives and Works in Utrecht, BeganeGrond, Utrecht, The Netherlands, (2002)
Selected Group Shows
- Certainty and Vision (curated by Peter Lang and Moritz Gotze), Frankesche Stiftungen zu Halle, Saale, Germany, (2013)
- Carnal Knowledge: Sex + Philosophy (curated by Christopher Eamon and Beth Stryker), Leslie Tonkonow Gallery, New York City, NY, USA, (2012)
- Drawn From Photography (curated by Claire Gilman), The Drawing Center, New York City, NY, USA, (2011)
- Ohne Hintersinn (curated by Benjamin Fellmann), Istanbul, Turkey, (2009)
- A Series of Coincidences (curated by Regine Basha) Cabinet, New York City, NY, USA, (2009)
- PERFORMA07 (curated by Roselee Goldberg with Defne Ayas), New York City, NY, USA, (2007)
- Modern and Beyond (curated by Fulya Erdemci), Santral Istanbul, Istanbul, Turkey, (2007)
- Pre Emptive (curated by Philippe Pirotte), Kunsthalle Bern, Switzerland, (2006)
- SHIFTscale – Extended Field of Contemporary Sculpture (curated by Mika Hannula, Hanno Soans and Villu Jaanisoo ), Kumu Art Museum, Tallin, Estonia, (2006)
- 7th Biennial of Video and New Media, Santiago de Chile, Chile, (2005)
- 9th International Istanbul Biennial (curated by Vasif Kortun, Charles Esche), Istanbul, Turkey, (2005)
- Situated Self City (curated by Mika Hannula, Branco Dimitrijevic), Museum Helsinki, Finland, (2005)
- public.exe (curated by Anne Ellegood, Michele Thurz), Exit Art, New York City, NY, USA, (2004)
- Side-Effects (curated by WHW group; Natasha Ilic, Sabina Sabolovic and Ana Devic), WHW Gallery, Zagreb Croatia, (2004)
Selected Publications
- Double (ed.), Lars Muller Publishers, (2013)
- The Rise and Fall and Rise of David (inspired by Michelangelo), Yapi Kredi Publishing & 21C Museum, (2011)
- Today Could Be a Day of Historical Importance, artwithoutwalls, Louisville, KY, USA, (2010)
- Have You Done Anything Right? (with Willoughby Sharp), Kuenstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, (2006)
- It’s Not What it Looks Like! I can Explain, Baglam Publications, Istanbul, Turkey, (2004)
- Genius and Creativity in the Art: Arts: Schoenberg, Adorno, Thomas Mann, Pan Publishers, Istanbul, Turkey, (2000)
He is also the editor of Charles Esche’s Modest Proposals (Baglam Publications, Istanbul, Turkey, 2005).
Selected Images
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Bring Me The Head of..., 2007
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David (inspired by Michelangelo), 2005, photo by Baris Ozcetin
References
External links
- www.serkanozkaya.com
- Authoriality, Copies, and Image-Makers in the Age of 3D Reproduction
- A Shadowy Plane in the Cave
- Akira Lippit on Mirage
- Spyros Papapetros on Mirage
- You are an iconoclast’ author Lynne Tillman and artist Serkan Özkaya talk post-conceptualists, Pierre Menard and ‘massive stuff
- Double or Nothing: An Interview with Serkan Ozkaya
- Giant Golden 'David' Statue By Serkan Ozkaya Rolls Through The Streets Of NYC
- David Rolls Into Town, the Streets His Gallery
- Inside the Artist's Studio | Serkan Özkaya
- Not Even You Can Do What You Want: A conversation with Serkan Özkaya
- Serkan Ozkaya, Dave Muller and the hand-drawn newspaper
- Dear Sir or Madam, Serkan Özkaya
- Review: Serkan Ozkaya works magic
- Bring Me the Head of Serkan Özkaya
- Black, White and Read All Over
- Representing gallery
- The Making of Serkan Ozkaya's A Sudden Gust of Wind
- The Making of Today Could Be a Day of Historical Importance
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