Watched! Surveillance, Art & Photography

Surveillance & Photography
Feb 18, 2017 – Apr 23, 2017
© David von Becker
© David von Becker
© David von Becker
© David von Becker
© David von Becker

“First of all, I know it’s all people like you. And that’s what’s so scary. Individually you don’t know what you’re doing collectively.” Dave Eggers, The Circle

Total surveillance? Video cameras in banks, department stores, and public spaces; algorithm-based advertising and cookies on the Internet; government data collection and private cloud storage—today, we take permanent observation and data sharing for granted as a normal part of our everyday lives. We are constantly using services like Google Maps, watching live streams of films, trying out exciting new health apps and exploring unimagined possibilities for self-tracking. We follow friends and complete strangers on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, and we ourselves are constantly being tracked. We profit from the new digital technologies and services and are willing to open up more and more of our private lives to public view. Surveillance and big data have long since become a major social issue.

© David von Becker
© David von Becker

Contemporary surveillance is not limited to visual monitoring. Yet to understand how surveillance works, it is necessary to address the photographic aspect. Today, our entire existence is being photographed and visualized to an unprecedented degree, raising new questions about voluntary and involuntary visibility as well as photohistorical issues of observing and being observed. The exhibition Watched! Surveillance Art & Photography examines the complexities of modern surveillance with a focus on photography and visual media. The works in the exhibition deal with themes ranging from technologies used by government and regulatory agencies to everyday surveillance practices that have become integral parts of our lives, especially in social media. The question is: How can contemporary art and media theory contribute to a better understanding of our modern surveillance society?

The Berlin exhibition presents works by around 20 international artists who offer different commentaries on and reactions to precisely this question. It combines emerging artistic practices, represented by young artists such as Julian Röder, Viktoria Binschtok, and Esther Hovers, with the work of internationally recognized artists like Hito Steyerl, Trevor Paglen, Jill Magid, Hasan Elahi, Paolo Cirio, Adam Broomberg & Oliver Chanarin, James Bridle, and Ai Wei Wei to present as wide as possible a spectrum of artistic approaches. The artists in the exhibition appropriate technologies like video surveillance, facial recognition, Google Street View, digital lifelogging, and virtual animation. They probe the need for safety and security, which is frequently used as an argument for increasing surveillance while often ignoring the problems of discriminatory controls and criminalization that follow. The viewer is invited to think about how we can live in a society with diverse surveillance networks without contributing to the inequalities that surveillance produces.

© David von Becker
© David von Becker

The exhibition has been organized in cooperation with the Hasselblad Foundation, Valand Academy, Kunsthal Aarhus, and C/O Berlin. It was curated by Louise Wolthers and Dragana Vujanovic (Hasselblad Foundation), Niclas Östlind (Valand Academy), and Ann-Christin Bertrand (C/O Berlin). It is part of a research project launched by the Hasselblad Foundation on surveillance, art, and photography in Europe since the turn of the millennium. The accompanying book, published by Walther König bookstore-publisher, contains artworks by 40 artists as well as essays by numerous scholars and was selected by Time Magazine in November as one of the “Best Photobooks of 2016”.! Watched! Surveillance, Art & Photography, 2016, 296 pages, 38 euros.

The exhibition in Berlin has been made possible through a generous grant from Hauptstadtkulturfond (Berlin Capital Cultural Fund).

As part of their inter-institutional cooperation, C/O Berlin and the Museum for Photography will be presenting three thematically related exhibitions on the topic of surveillance and photography starting in February 2017 with artists representing diverse current and historic artistic positions.

Since June 2016, C/O Berlin has been hosting discussions on the topic of surveillance with experts from a variety of disciplines. The next event in this series will take place on February 18, 2017; the series will end with the exhibition Watched! Surveillance Art & Photography in April 2017.

© David von Becker