Restoring from a Void. Excavation Sites and Magic Cities | The final exhibition of the 19th generation of the World of Art School for Curatorial Practices and Critical Writing 2022/24
10. 5. 2024 - 6. 6. 2024


Artist: Beatrice Moumdjian
Curators: Blažka Kirm, Lara Zupan, Lin Gerkman, Neža Vengust, Svitlana Ryabishchuk, Vida Šturm

Mentors: Alenka Gregorič, Vadim Fiškin
School Heads: Lara Plavčak, Tia Čiček, Urška Aplinc

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Exhibition events
25. 5. at 18.30: Artist talk with the artist Beatrice Moumdjian
30. 5. at 17.00: Public lecture by Dr Natalija Majsova
31. 5. at 18.00: Viewing of the exhibition with the curator – in Slovenian, accompanied by a Slovenian sign language interpreter
6. 6. at 18.00: Final viewing of the exhibition with the curators – in English

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“Forgetting is a process we should all be allowed to do.” (Beatrice Moumdjian)

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The solo exhibition by Beatrice Moumdjian, Restoring from a Void. Excavation Sites and Magic Cities, in three conceptually linked projects, questions the process of creating and experiencing one’s own memory. The one that consists of photo albums full of missing photographs, narratives brimming with voids and subjective perceptions of historical turning points.

The artist considers her own history as the material of her practice through narratives of past events and present influences. In her interdisciplinary work, she emulates archaeological, forensic and museum approaches. She makes the imitation of the archaeological excavation the metaphorical foundation of her research, as she sets out to unravel the mysteries of her own history through the precise uncovering of tiny fragments hidden in the narratives and photographs that have been handed down to her.

She also reconstructs in her projects the landscapes and spaces that marked the movements and stories of her ancestors. She arranges, studies and labels them like artefacts in a museum collection. Her creative process is at times stylistically similar to a forensic approach, where objects are endlessly numbered and documented.

Moumdjian’s narrative sometimes fills empty spaces with a poetic fictional story, which she constructs by rearranging her own archival material. The basic impulse of her research is the recovery of concealed or lost data. The complete deconstruction of the image of the family, both on the level of discarded photographs and unanswered questions about family history, reflects the fragmentation through which the artist imitates the process of disintegration and reassembly of one’s own identity.

The entry point into the artist’s exploration of her own identity is the photo series Magic City (2017/2021), in which images of a utopian city made of everyday objects and culturally specific food products form elements that are reminiscent of various sacred architectures. Moumdjian mixes elements of her Armenian-Bulgarian-German history and the present to create a magic city. The starting point for the work is the children’s novel The Magic City by the English author Edith Nesbit, taken from the artist’s childhood bookshelf, which she filled together with her mother. The story revolves around a miniature city built with the imagination of a child from tiny objects that the main character finds in his home. In the constructed city, the young protagonist becomes part of magic adventures. Moumdjian sees the magic city as a recipe by which the individual creates a self-portrait of themselves out of their favourite sweets and knick-knacks at a certain time, in a certain place. The author just has to make sure that their favourite cake does not expire, and that the utopia of the dream city does not collapse.

With her series of analogue photographs Family Constellations / Diasporaportraits as Symbolic Bread (2022), the artist materialises the narrative of her family. She represents her close relatives in bread and defines her relationship to each of them with ornaments. She prepares the bread by combining and intertwining Bulgarian, German and Armenian recipes. The ornaments originate from various cultural and political contexts and places associated with the history of the artist and her family. Even though they originate from the Eastern and Central European and Asian communities, they have a related meaning, for example, symbols tied to fertility. The combinations of recipes and ornaments/symbols form new wholes, and with them, the bread figures take on new meanings. They can be understood as reflections on family members and an attempt to get closer to them. The bread, saturated with meaning, reconstructs the gaps in memory that are part of heritage. The newly created images and their juxtapositions form a narrative not only about the history of the artist’s family but also about her own identity.

The Forensic Excavations Inventory or The Total Deconstruction of an Armenian Family (2017–2024) is the connective element of the exhibition and the most telling testimony to the artist’s personal story. Moumdjian deconstructs and (selectively) retells her own story and identity, which are conditioned and layered given the constantly changing circumstances. She is working with a collection of 150 family photographs taken between 1930 and 1990. By cutting out individual Objects from the archive of photographs, she exposes thousands of diverse objects, sometimes barely recognisable details taken from their original environment in the photograph. She then enlarges them and transfers them as objects from the cold grey surface of the computer screen into the physical space of the gallery as carriers of memories. They are simultaneously independent units and pieces of a puzzle and serve the artist primarily as visual aids in making sense of her story and identity.

Object 032 is the thick, black hair of the artist’s mother, cut out from a photograph taken in 1990, shortly after the reunification of East and West Germany, in which the artist and her mother observe an arriving train. The mother’s abundant hair is thus no longer just an inconspicuous detail of the image but symbolises a conscious reflection and intervention in the interpretation of her own memories and other people’s narratives. The Objects archive and the Objects themselves form layers of generational memories between Armenian Ararat, Bulgarian Sofia and East Berlin after the fall of the Iron Curtain, as Moumdjian re-historicises them herself.

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This work tells an autobiographical story that begins before my birth. My own longing and search for recognition, meaning and justice hold together this autobiography in fragments. (Beatrice Moumdjian)

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Beatrice Moumdjian (1986, Sofia) lives and works in Berlin, to where she moved in 1990. Her interdisciplinary art practice is based on methods drawn from various scientific disciplines, which she uses to explore her Armenian and Bulgarian heritage. Working with the photographic medium, she employs methods similar to those of archaeology, forensics and museums. She was trained at art academies in The Hague (NL), Weimar and Leipzig (DE), where she is currently pursuing her studies in photography as part of the post honours degree for artists, Meisterschülerin. She has exhibited at Kunstraum Potsdam (2023), Museum Brot und Kunst (2022), Copenhagen Photo Festival (2021), Goethe Institut Montreal (2021), Galerie Bernau (2021), nGbK Berlin (2019), Les Rencontres d’Arles, MdbK Leipzig (2019), Kassel Documentary and Video Festival (2018) and other international venues. She is a founding member of Resonanzraum Erzgebirge e.V., a non-profit cultural association that reflects on confidence and solidarity building measures and other social challenges, as well as ost in space, an artistic research programme that addresses cultural phenomena in the Ore Mountains and allows the region to be seen from new and different perspectives.

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Slovenian proofreading: Inge Pangos
English translation: Arven Šakti Kralj
Cover image: Beatrice Moumdjian
Design: Lea Jelenko

Photos from the opening: Simao Bessa
Exhibition view: Matic Pandel
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Co-production: Škuc Gallery, World of Art/SCCA-Ljubljana
Supported by: Municipality of Ljubljana – Department for Culture
Exhibition partners: Zavod Risa, Druga violina
Sponsor: DIOPTA, d. o. o., Ljubljana

The World of Art School programme is developed in partnership with Cukrana/MGML and supported by the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Slovenia.

The exhibition is part of the mobility programme funded by the European Union.
This work was produced with the financial assistance of the European Union. The views expressed herein can in no way be taken to reflect the official opinion of the European Union.

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Sponsors: DIOPTA, d. o. o., Ljubljana, TEKTONIK Craft Beer Brewery

Acknowledgements: Hana Kreševič, Maja Debeljak (MARLENKA SLOVENIA), Marko Durdubakov, Špela Šubic

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The Škuc Gallery programme is supported by the Ministry of Culture and the Municipality of Ljubljana.