ART CITIES:Bern-Petrit Halilaj

Petrit Halilaj, RU, installation view, New Museum-New York, 2017, © Dario LasagniPetrit Halilaj uses his own biography as a point of departure, adopting exhibition processes to alter the course of private and collective histories. Encompassing sculpture, drawing, text, and video, many of Halilaj’s works incorporate materials from his native Kosovo and manifest as ambitious spatial installations through which the artist translates personal relationships into sculptural forms.

By Efi Michalarou
Photo: Zentrum Paul Klee Archive

Petrit Halilaj’s exhibition “Shkrepëtima” at the Zentrum Paul Klee forms part of a series of projects in New York, Runik (Kosovo), Bern and Turin in which the artist explores the history, identity and environment of his hometown in Kosovo. The exhibition revolves around the Kosovar village of Runik, where Halilaj grew up before fleeing with his parents to Albania in the wake of the Kosovo War. Halilaj explores the fact that the village of Runik, rebuilt after the war, is situated on top of one of the largest Neolithic settlements in Southeast Europe. Today, villagers still find Neolithic artefacts in the area, including pottery, ceremonial objects or figurines. The artist’s current work is driven by the question of what cultural and social role these historical artefacts play in the community of Runik today, or what role they could potentially play in the future. In the absence of formal cultural infrastructure, knowledge about the distant past remains scarce. Instead, the historical artefacts from the past stimulate the popular imagination, and speculation about their origin is rife. By means of telling the curious history of these objects, Halilaj’s video installation The city roofs were so near that even a sleepwalking cat could pass over Runik without ever touching the ground (2017) offers a portrait of contemporary Runik, and, by extension, of Kosovo as a young nation yet uncertain about its history and identity. In parallel to the exhibition, Halilaj is staging a major cultural event in the currently abandoned cultural centre of Runik. Halilaj has invited numerous locals from the village to participate in this performative and participatory event that he has conceived as a spark (Shkrepëtima in Albanian) that he hopes will initiate the cultural and social development of the community. As part of the exhibition at the Zentrum Paul Klee, Halilaj will present drawings, conceptual studies and sculptures that he has produced in the context of the preparations for this event. Here, the objects from the Neolithic past are poetically activated and transformed into migrating birds and other species that travel, trespass borders, explore new habitats, and settle temporarily in different places – be that in Runik, New York, Bern or Turin.

Info: Curator Leonardo Bigazzi, Zentrum Paul Klee, Monument im Fruchtland 3, Bern, Duration: 20/7-19/8/18, Days & Hours: Tue-Sat 10:00-17:00, www.zpk.org

Left: Petrit Halilaj, RU, installation view, New Museum-New York, 2017, © Dario Lasagni. Right: Petrit Halilaj, Shkrepëtima, 2018, Ink drawing on cover page of the magazine Shkrepëtima
Left: Petrit Halilaj, RU, installation view, New Museum-New York, 2017, © Dario Lasagni. Right: Petrit Halilaj, Shkrepëtima, 2018, Ink drawing on cover page of the magazine Shkrepëtima

 

 

Petrit Halilaj, The city roof were so near that even a sleepwalking cat could pass over Runik without ever touching the ground, 2017, Video (HD color, sound), 26min 55sec, © Dario Lasagni
Petrit Halilaj, The city roof were so near that even a sleepwalking cat could pass over Runik without ever touching the ground, 2017, Video (HD color, sound), 26min 55sec, © Dario Lasagni

 

 

Left & Right: Petrit Halilaj, Shkrepëtima, 2018, Ink drawing on archival document of the Koperativa of Runik
L&R: Petrit Halilaj, Shkrepëtima, 2018, Ink drawing on archival document of the Koperativa of Runik