STUDIO KALLEINEN

101 FOR ALL -EVENT @ SALO ART MUSEUM, 31 AUGUST, 2023

Salo Art Museum is organizing an event around our work 101 For All. Three locals, farmer Esa Ranniko, veterinarian Jerina Wallius and business coach Juho Nenose, each have 20 minutes to present the work from their own perspective without interruption. They are free to choose whatever they want from the sea of 30 topics and 1,900 video clips. The event is in Finnish and it is moderated by Tellervo. Welcome 31 August 7pm!

WINDOW CLEANER ORGANISED A COMPLAINTS CHOIR @ THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF ART. READ HERE THE ARTICLE ABOUT IT, BY JOSE GARCIA OLIVIA

“In 2020, in the middle of the pandemic, many complaints rose against universities, especially art universities where studios and workshops are fundamental for most of the students. Imagine international students who pay up to £29.000 a year, and what they are receiving is a Zoom link. They are fighting for fair adjustment of the fees in accordance with what they are receiving 14 . It’s also important to mention that art university strikes began even before the Covid-19 outbreak when staff complained for 14 days all around the UK for zero-hours contracts, pay devaluation, rising workloads and the gender and ethnicity pay gap 15 . In parallel, students demonstrated by the lack of tutorials, crowded workshops, and the number of students per course.

All these discontents built up energy of collective action against the institution. From that place, a complaint choir was the perfect tool to use. Due to the lockdown, video call was the only channel where we can attempt to sing together. For the aim of this project, it didn’t matter how harmonious singing was performed; it was more about the action of singing collectively as a political performative tool. ”

READ THE WHOLE ARTICLE AND SEE THE CHOIR VIDEO @ https://www.cleanyourwindow.co.uk/articles/complaintchoir/

LUNCH-BYTES HELSINKI, NOVEMBER 19

Oliver will be speaking at the last lunch-bytes session in Helsinki. This session focuses around the topic “The Commons”:

[… a concept that has gained attention in recent debates on online culture, as well as cultural production more generally. In its original meaning the term “commons” refers to land or a public area that is open for collective use, shared, managed and maintained by a collective. In today’s art world, the commons is often used in reference to spaces and practices that are shared by groups aiming to resist commodification and forge an existence outside the capital-driven art market, or to sites for art-related organisations and groups threatened by gentrification. Art is here considered a common good that should be accessible to everyone rather than being subjected to the enclosures generated by market forces.

If we turn to online culture and its history, one can see a significant shift in how networked environments have been perceived as common spaces. The 1990s ideal of cyberspace where knowledge and resources are shared freely has mostly given way to the realisation that the web has become a commercial and enclosed space. The creative commons movement has largely been swallowed by the web 2.0, where services are freely accessible to all but valorised by only a few. Still, the emergence of the internet has also opened up more sustainable models for autonomous production. Free software, open data, and peer-to-peer networks are examples of common online resources and initiatives that enable exchange outside (or alongside) the commercial networked platforms

Looking at these developments, this Lunch Bytes event asks a number of explorative and critical questions such as: What are the consequences of the fact that our spaces for cultural production both on- and offline are increasingly privately owned and subject to control by corporate interests and government agencies? What kind of communities do the shared and networked spaces to which users contribute and look after, ranging from Wikipedia, peer to peer networks, to e-flux’s Time/Bank project (a platform and community for the arts where goods and services can be exchanged without the use of money) constitute? What role can artistic practices play in such a processes?

How do alternative spaces and forms of sociality emerge in a city like Helsinki when it comes to the production, exhibition and discussion of art?

Departing from these questions, the discussion will look at alternative ways to collectively manage resources for artistic production, such as on- and offline spaces, exhibition rooms, tools of production, and networks for knowledge exchange and production. It will inquire what the consequences are when concepts related to “the commons” meet with the realities of production. Furthermore, it will critically discuss the value of “the commons” in relationship to the widely shared experience of precarity, as public funding for the arts is eroding and entrepreneurial strategies seem to govern both the arts and the current online environment. …]

Invited experts and artists:

– Oliver Kochta-Kalleinen, artist, Helsinki
– Julieta Aranda, artist, co-founder of e-flux and Time/Bank, Berlin
– Jaakko Pallasvuo, artist, Helsinki
– Matteo Pasquinelli, philosopher, London