Of Dice and Men

Delfina Foundation, 29-31 Catherine Place, Victoria, London
Of Dice and Men image
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Event has ended
This event ended on Friday 1st of April 2016
Admission
Free
Location

Delfina Foundation, 29-31 Catherine Place, Victoria, London

Nearest Tube/Rail Stations
Victoria 0.25 miles

Delfina Foundation is delighted to present Didem Pekün’s video installation Of Dice and Men.

A throw of the dice acts as a metaphor for individual existence, where the patterns of everyday life are driven by chance and our actions are a choice. The throw affirms a sense of urgency, as well as an awareness of how our lives and history are in a perpetual state of repetition, yet with paradoxical variations.

Of Dice and Men is an essayistic video diary punctuated by moments of subjective consequence. Presented in dialogue across two screens, the footage captures London and Istanbul, the two cities that Pekün’s life straddles and is torn between.

Exhibition dates: Opening reception:
In Conversation:
03/03–01/04, Mon-Sat, 11am-6pm
02/03, 7-9pm (following the In Conversation)
02/03, 6-7pm artist with curator Nick Aitkens
Delfina Foundation is delighted to present Didem Pekün’s video;includes footage of the Occupy movements that began in London in 2011 as well as Istanbul’s Gezi protests in 2013, interlaced with more joyful and elusive experiences: boys diving into the Bosphorus or a first encounter with a feat of nature.

Attuned to the differing neoliberal conditions, dynamics and pressures of these contexts, Pekün mediates moments of rupture and violence in day-to-day life. In making this work, Pekün was driven by a desire to capture and make sense of a present that she felt was shifting around her, palpable in the unfolding events and the emergence of a new political subjectivity. Of Dice and Men is a reflection on how we react to and negotiate the unfolding present, where subjectivity and political agency are brought to bear.

Through its cyclical composition, and meditative, rhythmic temperament, Of Dice and Men speaks to the repetitive flow of history. Here history appears as a play, the same play performed anew across generations but with different directors, actors, and sets. The play is performed in different languages, with different audiences, each experiencing the script in new ways.

Tags: Exhibition

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