Prelude: Waiting for the Barbarians Fall 2018 marked a decade of crisis in which Athens has been an incubator of revolt, opposition, reaction and regression. On 5 April 2017, the Athens Biennale declared a strategic postponing of AB6 in a year of “Active Waiting”, which was intended as a playful exercise on the political imagination of large-scale periodic exhibitions and functioned as a prelude to ANTI. The Athens Biennale office relocated to Bagkeion Hotel and organised a series of performative pre-Biennale events, such as
Klassenfahrt and
Documena, under the title “Waiting for the Barbarians”. It was curated by Heart & Sword Division, a group of artists, curators and theorists including
FYTA, Kostis Stafylakis, Nayia Yiakoumaki and Poka-Yio. Will there ever be any “Learning from Athens”? What do words such as “education”, “freedom”, “queer”, “north”, “south”, “indigenous” signify in contemporary cultural debates? Are we witnessing the coming of the Barbarians, or the taming of the Barbarian? AB6 Prelude: Waiting for the Barbarians reflected on such questions.
ANTI The sixth edition of the Athens Biennale, titled “ANTI”, was curated by
Stefanie Hessler, Poka-Yio, and Kostis Stafylakis, inhabiting four iconic neighboring venues in the area surrounding the
Old Parliament at
Syntagma Square. It was held from October 26 to December 9, 2018, offering a six-week-long unique experience of contemporary art in which more than 100 Greek and international artists and collectives activated the different aspects of ANTI through their contributions. The 6th Athens Biennale presented over 200 works, including 27 works that premiered at AB6, as well as a multi-layered program with close to 100 events. ANTI's main venue was the TTT building, an iconic Athenian building that since the 1930s has served as the central offices of the Hellenic Telecommunications Organization. The building, work of the architect
Anastasios Metaxas, with its Kafkaesque, administrative architecture and interior design, is a symbol of the transition from analog to digital communication. AB6 was also hosted at the former Esperia Palace hotel, once a busy hub of the political, business and cultural scene of Athens until 2010, when its operation suddenly stopped, and Benakeios Library, a historical landmark owned by the
Hellenic Parliament, closed since 2004, as well as the former building of TSMEDE, owned by the public insurance organisation. ANTI presented a distinct, idiosyncratic and uneasy
screenshot of our political, social and cultural momentum, highlighting how opposition inhabits both power and resistance,
reactionary and progressive outcries, and attitudes that demand new alternatives in the realms mostly shaping our lives today. ANTI was joyful, indulging, and comforting at times, unsettling, ominous, and dystopian at others. An exhibition about our times. The 6th Athens Biennale dealt with the impact of technology on our lives, work, and relationships; pointed out gendered and racialized injustices; raised questions of self-determination; thematized data-collection processes and surveillance; and scrutinized the seduction of fake news and our obsessions with our own image in the myriad of technological interfaces that surpass our reality today. ANTI confronted and examined scenarios of trans-human enhancement, cults of wellness as well as bodily and spiritual transformation. The artistic devices that constituted AB6 – from the gym to the KINO, from the online forum to the spa, from the office to the political front – revealed the dangers of today's neo-reactionary politics, asking what might motivate reactionary emotions and fantasies and how to change the current structures of pleasure. By inviting artists and other cultural producers to inhabit situations and devices mimicking, distorting, twisting, or amplifying contemporary life-theaters, ANTI was the departure point for numerous
instead-ofs. == References ==