Courtesy of BüroSarıgedik and the artist’s heirs, Photo: Sena Nur Taştekne

Arter Hosts Cengil Çekil’s Retrospective

Arter hosts Cengiz Çekil’s most comprehensive exhibition to date

Arter presents Cengiz Çekil’s retrospective exhibition titled I Am Still Alive. Cengiz Çekil’s most comprehensive exhibition to date.

Curated by Eda Berkmen, the exhibition titled I Am Still Alive showcases an in-depth look at Çekil’s artistic practice from the early 1970s to his death in 2015. The exhibition explores the concepts of time, repetition, energy, resistance and ritual through a selection of works produced in various mediums such as painting, print, and installation.

One of the pioneering figures of conceptual art in Turkey, Cengiz Çekil (1945–2015) used everyday materials in his works starting in the 1970s. The artist recontextualized, serialized, and transformed daily objects, familiar phrases and forms into multi-layered works that provoke the collective imagination and transcend the established definitions and classifications of art.

Çekil’s practice reflects on the socio-political circumstances of the period in which he created his body of work, focusing on the effects of modernization, urbanization, globalization, political violence, and consumer culture. Bringing together local and current affairs with universal and abstract forms, the artist’s works contemplate existential questions about death, energy, time and faith. His recurrent use of clocks, newspapers, and calendars divulge contemporary issues, current tendencies and dominant mindsets of the period while also pondering the very definition and representation of time. The forms that relate to mausoleums, altars, sacrificial offerings, and amulets, which dominate Çekil’s oeuvre, especially after the 1980s, denote not only a perilous social environment that aims to oppress the individual through violence and fear but also the human need to leave a mark and give meaning to life despite its fragility and ephemerality.

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Arter, 2023
Photo: flufoto (Barış Aras and Elif Çakırlar)

Çekil’s artistic practice on the radar

I Am Still Alive derives its title from Çekil’s work titled Diary (1976). In order to create this work, the artist stamped each day’s date, followed by the sentence “I am still alive”, on every page of a notebook for a period of approximately two months, except the last one bearing the stamp “I am going for my military service”. Spread over the 4th and 3rd-floor gallery spaces of Arter, the retrospective exhibition I Am Still Alive aims to highlight Çekil’s artistic practice as a daily ritual celebrating life despite all its difficulties and to emphasize its relevance today.

The exhibition continues in Arter’s 4th and 3rd-floor galleries until 24 September 2023.

 

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