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Contemporary art biennials and development
the Istanbul experience
pp. 189-206
Abstract
This chapter addresses the subject of biennials of contemporary art in emerging and developing countries with a major focus on the Istanbul biennial, created in 1987. With a hybrid structure—between the event and the art institution—biennials are largely perceived as motors for social progress and cultural development, as illustrated by their phenomenal growth over the last 30 years in places such as Gwangju (Korea), Havana (Cuba), Tirana (Albania), Sharjah (UAE) and Istanbul (Turkey). An in-depth examination of the Istanbul experience will provide a crucial evaluation of the biennial's impact on the Turkish cultural landscape; is this "Biennial Miracle" real? By analyzing the relationship between the art event, the city, its infrastructures and economy, as well as the dynamics between international and local concern, this essay will also investigate the position of biennials in the globalized art world in order to discuss the influence and limits of such a model.
Publication details
Published in:
Clammer John, Giri Ananta Kumar (2017) The aesthetics of development: art, culture and social transformation. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Pages: 189-206
DOI: 10.1057/978-1-349-95248-9_9
Full citation:
van Eersel Marie (2017) „Contemporary art biennials and development: the Istanbul experience“, In: J. Clammer & A. Giri (eds.), The aesthetics of development, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 189–206.