Due to unforeseen circumstances, this event is now postponed to Sunday, November 19, 7 pm.
Acâibü’l-mahlûkāt is a Persian cosmology book from the 13th century, first translated into Ottoman and later into Turkish, with a foreword written by the current Turkish President. The book contains a series of mythological and fictional characters who explain the world. The book describes humans, djinnis, and creatures in the sky; precious stones, mountains, oceans, plants, and trees. Its images depict fantastical creatures, such as elephant-humans with wings, cow-reptiles, and many other idiosyncratic beings.
Inspired by this world, Göksu Kunak will present a live performance that tackles the notions of camouflage and self–censorship in relation to the politics and dictator(s) of an imaginary region. In this work, the concept of Taqiyya in Islam is at the center of a deeper exploration of camouflage: a hyper-camouflage in the sense of merging with a character; gender as a form of camouflage; and camouflage as protection. In this text-based performance, the images and movement patterns of the creatures from the book Acâibü’l-mahlûkāt emerge in a sci-fi imaginary realm and are complemented by motifs from the speculative non-fiction Cyclonopedia by Reza Negarestani. From a speculative perspective on the Middle East, Kunak makes references to Southwest Asian politics, (in)visibility and (un)veiling, pornography, time and decay.
408-412 Broadway, 10013-3699