On December 17, 2011 at 8:00am

“yüzünüz gözükmeyecek…” // “your face won’t be visible…”

Commissioned by a group of young filmmakers in Istanbul to make a film on “our conservatisms”, Ali Taptik, a photographer, interviews three people that took different positions on his question “Would you pose for me naked, your face won’t be visible?”. A collage of sound with floating shots of Ali Taptik’s nude portraits, three people articulate on what it means to pose naked for a photographer? The film was first shown as a part of a compilation called “For your own good!” in the 10 th edition of Istanbul Independent Film Festival…

(Source: alitaptik.com)

On March 22, 2011 at 9:21am

“Wounds” at Cuadro Gallery, Dubai, UAE.

today I walked 6km… then a guy stopped with his car and told me its not a good idea to take pictures there and that I might get seriously hurt, so I explained him what I am doing (shooting plants, white things and refletions) and he explained me why they are so tense: A redevelopment project in Kagithane… And he took me uphill with his car… then I walked 3 km more…

On November 11, 2010 at 5:25pm

Installation views of COVER at Krinzinger Projekte 30 September - 20 November

On September 28, 2010 at 11:03am

feat. Deniz Erbas

Installing at Lothringer13, Munich fort Cityscale exhbition.

July,2010

Opening: Friday, September 17, 2010 at 6 p.m. 

After Party:  DJ Murat Meriç - TURK-İŞ FUNK by 8 p.m. 

  

Exhibition dates: 18.09 - 07.11.2010 

CCA Ujazdowski Castle 

ul. Jazdow 2, 00-467 Warsaw - Poland

www.csw.art.pl

 

Artists: Can Altay, Osman Bozkurt, Ergin Cavusoglu, Deniz Gul, Emre Huner, Ceren Oykut, Didem Ozbek, Bas Princen, Tayfun Serttas, Solmaz Shahbazi, Ali Taptik

 

Curators: Kaja Pawelek & Serra Ozhan

Exhibition Design: Jakub Szczesny, Centrala Designers’ Task Force

 

 The exhibition Diverçity. Learning from Istanbul takes the city as a resource of fictive narratives, private (hi)stories, dreams and desires, still in the process of recreations, and speculations. Here, poliphony and fragmentation make one unable to grasp the city in a fixed formula, because as the exhibiton claims, urban and architectural potential is continuously re-constructed by negotiations, by individually-organized temporary systems, by the local adaptations and phenomena of the everyday practices in which innumerousstrategies of survival (mostly considered as informal in the system) are created.

Beyond any strict urban planning or architectural perspectives, the intension was more to give voice to the inner and more personal artists’ observations and intuitions. What results are the tiny pieces of reality and fiction, recognized, combined, transformed and retold.

 

Fictive narrations, based upon a long tradition of story telling allow to reveal different, often marginal or hidden, images and voices. That is why a lot of diverse voices can be heard – those of monologues of the inhabitants of a collapsed city district; dialogues of the people brought by daily coincidence to the microcosm of a small grocery; girl questioning and playing with the new rituals of consumerism; photographer’s testimony, who recalls desire of self staging.

 

Small gestures and rituals can generate distinctive city locations, which contribute to the vast mechanism of the city, like informal ‘republics’, characterised by alternative visual or performative codes. They create its intensity on the very street level, in the form ofspectacle of everyday life shortcuts, ad hoc relations, and coincidential occurences like quotidien performances.

 

Contemporary city speeds up, so that the historical architectural layer of the past, taken for granted, becomes somehow a materializedphantom. It returns however, in the internal, individual encounters, memories and phantasies. If we go beyond the economy-based categories such as growth, expansion, or modernisation, what images and stories could be revealed when one imagines the city’s future– and its future inhabitants? The horizon ahead seems less and less predictable, balancing between rising hopes and dystopian disillusions,and the future begins imperceptibly now and can go beyond with our imagination. For some of the artists‘Imagined now’ goes thousand years ahead in the drawing projections or is documented in the images of the city’s outskirts, where

the city expands its borders and changes its shape, shifting from the mass scale to micro scale.

 

The exhibition spatial setting by Kuba Szczęsny sets areas of high density and open space, by aiming to condense the relations between the art works and the public and to create separated and fragmented intimate perspectives. It suggests chaos resulting from the meeting of different ways of organizing the city, in which the former rules of development are being erased by the new established ones. The effect is intended to be a structure which makes the viewer engage in the search of one’s logic of visiting or rather winding through the rooms. In this context both the space and public would experimentwith this potentiality, forsee and hear what is hidden behind. Same as the city itself the exhibition can be performed in that sense. It will be an exhaustingly nice walk through the districts of a foreign city.

 

http://www.csw.art.pl/index.php?action=aktualnosci&s2=1&id=246&lang=

Eröffnung: 22.07.2010, 19.00 Uhr

Hissen der „WeltstadtmitHerz-Fahne“ am
Orleansplatz/Einmündung Weißenburger Straße: 18.00 Uhr
Eröffnung in der Lothringer13,
Städtische Kunsthalle München: 19.00 Uhr

Ausstellung: 23.07.–19.09.2010

Kuratiert von Beral Madra & Deniz Erbaş (Istanbul) und
Dr. Cornelia Oßwald-Hoffmann & Françoise Heitsch (München)

VIDEOIST – Videokooperative Istanbuler Künstler
Eröffnung im Lothringer13_Spiegel: 22.07.2010,
19.00 Uhr
Dauer: 23.07.–18.09.2010, Mi–Sa, 14.00–18.00 Uhr

Nothing Surprising

  

NOTHING SURPRISING

x-ist hosts Ali Taptık’s second solo exhibit in Turkey “Nothing Surprising” between 24 December 2009 – 16 January 2010.

 

Ali Taptık is facinated with small, ordinary things of everyday life and the individual’s place in the “here and now”. This strong underlying issue was the core of his previous series “Accident and Fate”, stories which he continues telling in his latest series “Nothing Surprising”.

Taptık approaches buildings, structures and things similar to the way he interacts with people. He connects with them on a personal level. Every “thing” that stands out as an emotional element is a surrogate for a word. The words build up a narrative and give the series its real name. Through content that concerns everyone, regardless of its personal origin, the artist creates an environment that is similar to literature.

 “Nothing Surprising” started with the trend word “crisis” affixed to all things/ events that are societal, political or economic in nature.  Even though this much repeated word creates expectations of a drastic change, the “reality of crisis” depicted in Taptık’s photographs explains that nothing is actually changing. Photography critic Lauerence Cornet talks about this unchangeablity as: “Wooden, clotted, fixed, rooted, frozen… People or buildings, his subjects are as unchanging as the world. Hidden behind a curtain, a shutter, a scaffolding, a t-shirt or thick black hair, characters and architecture bear the weight of this metaphoric cover.”

 Taptık will continue adding new stories and portraits of “now” based in Istanbul to his series “Nothing Surprising”.

with text by Christian Caujolle

“Since he began photography in 2001, Ali Taptik engages in chronic mid-fictional, semi-autobiographical account of his own life in Istanbul. Through his portraits of people or places, he reinvents special atmosphere, its own history …
 In this series started in 2004, Ali Taptik explores possible links between accident and destiny - hence the title Kaza ve Kader. Between the element of chance and fate, he questioned the action of man on the course of his life. His work is in a dialectic of opposites, in a thin gap between the inside and outside, between the private and the public. Inner space, outside space, whose boundaries are blurred, in which he sailed in an incessant comings and goings. Photographs of Ali Taptik so are windows on the world inside a mirror.

Released : November, 10th 2009
Collection : Hors Collection
English/French
ISBN 13 : 978-2-35046-185-4
Format : 200 x 245
88 pages
Paperback
46 color photos

Filigranes Editions

türkçe ufak not: Filigranes Türkiye’ ye ne yazıkki dağıtmıyor ama kısa süre Türkiye’ de de satilacak.

Open House // Açık Ev, the new collaboration between Ali Taptik and Okay Karadayilar is already out but there won’t be any official pictures on the web until the exhibition ends. Open House is a set of decontextualized once-functional photographs: interiors from real estate listings.

48 pages ,A6, 4 color printed on 60gr Enzo you can find it Kartal in the exhibition curated by Marcus Graf, Temporary Harassment. 

Go and get it, there might be only few copies left!

Kaza ve Kader @ imageSingulieres - 2009


 « Kaza ve Kader » *
Galerie Dock Sud.
Du 30 avril au 10 mai. 


Ce jeune photographe turc nous invite à découvrir « son » Istanbul et à remiser nos préjugés.

Né en 1983, architecte de formation, Ali Taptik est autodidacte. Après un séjour en Suède, où il a effectué une partie de ses études, et un autre en France où il a été invité en résidence, il a choisi de vivre à Istanbul. Une ville dont il nous livre ici un étonnant portrait. On y découvre une « modernité » insoupçonnée avec des adolescents stanbouliotes pas si différents des nôtres. Nos vieux préjugés - la Turquie fait-elle partie de l’Europe ? - s ‘évaporent avec les images d‘Ali. Un travail d’une quarantaine de tirages couleur dans le droit-fil du nouveau style documentaire. Ali Taptik travaille aujourd’hui comme photographe, producteur de films et critique pour différents journaux turcs.

* ” Accident et Destin “

Jessica Dimmock/ Subhash Sharma /Mishka Henner /Sharron Lovell/ Ali Taptik :
Five Photographers Look at Poverty in Five cities of the world:

When : 29-April to 13-Jun 2009 
Where : The Atrium,London School Of Economics

LSE Photography Initiative exploring representations of poverty.
Viewing Restricted : [Re]presenting Poverty is a major new exhibition which sets out to explore different notions, representations and manifestations of ‘poverty’ within a global context. The exhibition features newly commissioned work in film and photography by five artists who examine poverty in its many guises in Five different cities New York,Mumbai,Shanghai,London and Istanbul.

The participating artists are:
Jessica Dimmock (New York): Jessica Dimmock captures the experiences of impoverished patients trapped in a public hospital hidden in the heart of New York and cheek-by-jowell with the city’s well-to-do.

Mishka Henner (London) : Mishka Henner examines the growing spatial segregation between rich and poor in Hackney, one of London’s poorest boroughs historically. Through photographs, text and audio, he considers people’s relationship to the urban environment in private and public spaces.

Sharron Lovell (Shanghai) : Sharon Lovell charts two migrant families’ experiences in Shanghai. Working with a barber and vegetable seller, who tell her their stories, she portrays their lives in an interactive multi-media project that they helped to edit.

Ali Taptik (Istanbul) : Ali Taptik traces contentious redevelopment projects in historic districts of Istanbul such as Sulukule, staying on the border between public and private.

Subhash Sharma (Mumbai): Subhash Sharma follows poor Mumbaikers’ on their day off, capturing the varied pleasures of leisure in the city’s diverse locales.

Presenting contrasting styles and approaches to their ‘subject’, the artists reveal hidden and untold stories of communities and individuals in contrasting geographical, social and cultural contexts, where the issue of poverty is often underwritten by politics of class, race and migration. Mindful of issues of voyeurism, objectification and condescension, the exhibition and related events series aim to challenge thinking and encourage debate about the conventional modes and mechanisms through which poverty is often represented and understood.

http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/artsAndMusic/artProjectsAndExhibitions/ViewingRestricted.htm