July 25, 2024

SUPPOSE YOU ARE NOT AT ARTER MUSEUM İSTANBUL ...

 



SUPPOSE YOU ARE NOT AT ARTER MUSEUM İSTANBUL CURATED BY SELEN ANSEN

ÖMER MEHMET KOÇ COLLECTION

JANUARY 01, 2024 – DECEMBER 29, 2024





SUPPOSE YOU ARE NOT AT ARTER MUSEUM İSTANBUL CURATED BY SELEN ANSEN …

ÖMER MEHMET KOÇ COLLECTION ....

JANUARY 01, 2024 – DECEMBER 29, 2024

Suppose You Are Not, the first private collection exhibition held at Arter, materialises a wide and deep territory not only in terms of the artworks and objects it encompasses but also the diverse mediums and themes that these artefacts are concerned with. Titled with inspiration from a line in Omar Khayyam's (1048–1131) Rubaiyat [Quatrains], the exhibition which brings together over 600 works, functional objects, rarities, furniture, and books produced in different periods explores the relations that emerge through the juxtapositions formed by a collection.

Curated by Selen Ansen, the exhibition Suppose You Are Not probes the ways in which the domestic context of a collection can be transferred into a museum context. In so doing, it explores the possibilities of restaging and articulating the affinities created between distinct objects by means of a collector’s desires and endeavours. The exhibition, which spans the 4th and 3rd-floor galleries of Arter, brings together works by almost 400 artists, anonymous artefacts and mass-produced items, as well as multifarious objects. Initially formed for an individual purpose within the boundaries of a private space, now made public through a curatorial approach in an art institution, this body of works presents a world at the junction of times and forms that defy habitual classifications. This world, which brings to existence the collector as an abstract subject interacting with the artefacts in their possession, allows a form of experience that connects reality and fiction, as objects leaving the private sphere reformulate their unique character in a new context. Approaching the collection as a multifaceted and living organism, Suppose You Are Not proposes to reflect upon the kinship between the ordinary and the extraordinary, the practice of collecting and the objects that populate our daily lives.

Formed with works selected from the Ömer Koç Collection, Suppose You Are Not is concerned with finding worldly ways to rise upwards in a world where everything falls and keeps falling, and with providing possibilities to formulate infinitude where finitude is the rule. Based on Omar Khayyam’s verses, where the poet reminds us to embrace life freely by transcending the limits of our own selves, the exhibition blurs established boundaries while exploring the attribution of new meanings to objects in a realm devoid of chronology and hierarchy.

In this territory populated by objects of all sorts, the conglomeration of books, furniture, paintings, sculptures and photographs not only tells us of human pleasures, desires, aspirations and dreams of past lives; it also reflects the spirited viewpoint of the collector. Suppose You Are Not delves into the passionate striving to collect and preserve the traces of humanity, the good and the evil, the ephemeral gestures, states, allusions and movements ranging from the most sublime to the most mundane, from the most permanent to the most ephemeral, which manage to persist by being conveyed from the dead to the living. Through the connections they give birth to in the exhibition space, the numerous works and objects brought together open up a field of vision that allows the emergence of new associations and alliances.

 

A WORLD OF WONDERS BY CLAUDIA SWAN …

(…….)

I have called the Ömer Koç Collection a world of wonders. As a historian and an admirer of the collector and his collection, that is how I am able to make sense of it. To explain, I turn now to the history of wonders and to a particular form of collecting – Wunderkammer collecting. But first, an etymological digression. Modern definitions of the word “wonder” include “something that causes astonishment” and “the emotion excited by the perception of something novel and unexpected, or inexplicable; astonishment mingled with perplexity or bewildered curiosity.” Wonders can be miraculous or confounding and even, though this reaches into archaic meanings, evil or shameful. Synonyms for the verb form include “to marvel.” The most celebrated wonders are, famously, the seven wonders of the ancient world – in Greek, “theamata” (θεάματα), “sights” – as in “things to be seen” – or “thaumata” (θαύματα), the verb form of which, “thaumazein”, means to marvel, to admire, even to venerate. Antipater of Sidon, one of those who enumerated wonders of the ancient world, wrote in the first century BCE: “I have gazed on the walls of impregnable Babylon along which chariots may race, and on the Zeus by the banks of the Alpheus. I have seen the hanging gardens [of Babylon], and the Colossus of the Helios, the great man-made mountains of the lofty pyramids, and the gigantic tomb of Mausolus [at Halicarnassus]; but when I saw the sacred house of Artemis [at Ephesus] that towers to the clouds, the others were placed in the shade, for the sun himself has never looked upon its equal outside Olympus.” These exceptional monuments inspire wonder through the noblest of the senses – sight – and sight alone. Even the sun, in Antipater’s account, renders judgment through sight.

Centuries later, in the wake of the Renaissance in Europe, a new form of collecting emerged that was also structured around wonder. Beginning in the sixteenth century, collections known as Wunderkammern (German, “chambers of wonder”) were cultivated, visited, recorded, and emulated across the continent. Princes, patricians, humanists, pharmacists, doctors, scholars, artists and others assembled capacious, wildly varied collections of works of art, wonders of nature, and everything in between. Based on a longstanding convention of housing valuable goods in a Schatzkammer or treasury at courts and cathedrals alike, Wunderkammer collections featured precious natural items – narwhal tusks, rhinoceros horns, ostrich eggs, fossils, gems, shells and corals – often deemed powerful, alongside works of art and ingenious handicraft, scientific instruments, mechanical works, antiquities, exotic (foreign) goods and more. Imagine a space in which a single collector has brought together plumage of birds of paradise; paintings on canvas, panel, and stone; elaborate automata capable of being set in playful motion; crystal and stone vessels; foreign arms and armour; and a variety of other objects made of myriad materials and in a variety of sizes, shapes, and forms. No two Wunderkammern were alike, each a reflection of the collector’s interests, access, networks, and wealth, and none survives intact.

 

* The quoted sections on this page are taken from Claudia Swan’s essay “A World of Wonders” and , that featured in the book accompanying the exhibition. [Suppose You Are Not, ed. by Selen Ansen and Süreyyya Evren (Arter: Istanbul, 2024), p. 277-278.]

 

You may click below link to visit Arter’s past exhibition news of “ARTER MUSEUM EXHIBITIONS: NURİ KUZUCAN - PASSAGE, SARKIS – ENDLESS & IN ITS OWN SHADOW” from My Magical Attic.

https://mymagicalattic.blogspot.com/2023/12/arter-museum-exhibitions-nuri-kuzucan.html




SUPPOSE YOU ARE NOT - 4 TH FLOOR




NASAN TUR

Arms 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12 (From the Series Arms), 2006

C-print 6 pieces

Dimensions: 257 x 107 cm each (framed)





MELTEM IŞIK

Twice Into the Stream (Untitled No: 2), 2011

Pigment-Based Archival Print on Fine Art Paper

Dimensions: 213 x 143 cm (Framed)

 

MELTEM IŞIK

Twice into the Stream (Untitled No: 4), 2011

Pigment-Based Archival Print on Fine Art Paper

Dimensions: 213 x 143 cm (Framed)

 

MELTEM IŞIK

Twice into the Stream (Untitled No: 15), 2011

Pigment-Based Archival Print on Fine Art Paper

Dimensions: 213 x 143 cm (Framed)





ANONYMOUS

Bye Bye the Pooh 2018

Taxidermy, Satin Ribbons, Pearly Resin

Dimensions: Height of the bear: 1.01 m; Balloons: 56 x 97 cm







MENGÜ ERTEL

Ordeal of Jeanne d’Arc, 1980

Felt-Tip Pen and Watercolour on Paper

Dimensions: 41.5 x 31.5 cm (Framed)







JOANA VASCONCELOS

Marilyn, 2009

Stainless steel Pans, Lids and Cement 2 Pieces

Dimensions: 297 x 155 x 410 cm each





TIP TOLAND

Monkey Mind, 2010

Stoneware, Paint, Chalk, Pastel

Dimensions: 68.6 x 63.5 x 96.5 cm





ANTONY GORMLEY

Drawn Apart 2000

Cast iron

Dimensions: 152 x 187 x 133 cm







BALTHASAR BURKHARD

Fuss II/Pied II (Foot II), 1983

Black and White Photograph

Dimensions: 171 x 136 cm





FRANCESCO ALBANO

On the Eve 2013

Wax, Polyester Resin, Iron, Ceramic

Dimensions: 170 x 176 x 213 cm





FRANCESCO ALBANO

On the Eve 2013 (Detail)





ANONYMOUS

Pulpit model Mid-19th century

Wood

Dimensions: h: 50 cm ø 33 cm







ANONYMOUS

Staircase Model Late 19th–Early 20th Century

Wood, Metal

Dimensions: 35 x 42 x 32 cm







ANONYMOUS

Staircase Model, 19 th Century

Wood







VERNER PANTON

A pair of Panton Chairs 1958–1967

Plastic, 2 pieces

Dimensions: 85 x 50 x 60 cm each







MARC NEWSON

Wooden Chair, 1988

Beechwood

Dimensions: 70 x 95 x 83 cm





GERRIT THOMAS RIETVELD

Zig-Zag Chairs ca. 1932–1939

Solid Maple Segments, Transparent Varnish 2 Pieces,

Dimensions: 74 x 28 x 40 cm each





HERBERT von THADEN

Adjustable Lounge Chair ca. 1947

Birch-Veneered Plywood and Metal

Dimensions: 95 x 90 x 50 cm







ANONYMOUS

Ashanti stool Date unknown

Painted Wood

Dimensions: 49 x 51 x 30.5 cm







BERTOZZI & CASONI

Ossobello, 2010

Polychrome Ceramic

Dimensions: 80 x 63 x 49 cm





ANIL SALDIRAN

Untitled, 2012

Pigment on Canvas

Dimensions: 62 x 52 cm (Framed)





BERNARD ADRIEN STEÜER

Artist’s Foot, 1897

Pencil on Paper

Dimensions: 26 x 21.5 cm (Framed)





ANIL SALDIRAN

Untitled, 2012

Pigment on Canvas

Dimensions: 62 x 52 cm (Framed)










GÜRBÜZ DOĞAN EKŞİOĞLU

Reading a Book 2000

Ink and Watercolour on Paper

Dimensions: 39.5 x 29.5 cm (Framed)





LUCIAN FREUD

Francis Bacon 1951

Charcoal and Pencil on Paper

Dimensions: 68 x 55.5 cm (Framed)







PAUL FRYER

For Laplace (Fear), 2008

Oak staircase, Waxwork Figure, Bird’s Wings, Glass Eyes, 

Steel Plate, Books and Tools

Dimensions: 246 x 96 cm





PAUL FRYER

For Laplace (Fear), 2008 (Detail)







FABIEN MÉRELLE

Study of a Mask, 2014

Pencil on Paper

Dimensions: 54 x 42 cm (Framed)





GEORGE TOOKER

The Mirror, 1978

Lithograph on Arches Paper

Dimensions: 75.5 x 64 x 5 cm (Framed)





PAUL RUMSEY

Library Head, 2019

Charcoal on Paper

Dimensions: 110 x 84 cm







PETER SIMON MUHLHÄUßER

The Innerself 2009

Glass, Carrara Marble and Epoxy Resin

Dimensions: 20.5 x 32 x 21.5 cm





DAVID FARRER

Javan Rhinoceros 2007

Paper Mache and Wood

Dimensions: 65 x 86 x 58 cm





NINA SAUNDERS

The Age of Reason, 1995

Red Leatherette Chair Upholstered With Central Ball

Dimensions: 100 x 133 x 91 cm







SİNAN DEMİRTAŞ

Self-Portrait, 2008

Oil on Canvas

Dimensions: 100 x 250 cm







FRANCESCO ALBANO

Self-Portrait 2014

Wax, polyester, plastic

Dimensions: 30 x 33 x 40 cm







RICARDO CINALLI

Pas de Cheval 2006

Pastel on Tissue Papers

Dimensions: 260 x 244 cm (Framed)





NAPOLEON SARONY

An Autographed Photograph of Oscar Wilde, 1882

Silver Print Made From Glass Plate Negatives

Dimensions: 43 x 29 cm (Framed)





YAEL ERLICHMAN

Digging Dog, 2004

Bronze

Dimensions: 72 x 26 x 46 cm









AARON SISKIND

Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation #37 (Christmas Card) 1953

Gelatin Silver Print Flushmounted to Board

Dimensions: 17.5 x 14.5 cm (Framed)







ALBRECHT DURER

Rhinoceros, 1515

Woodcut Print on Paper

Dimensions: 40 x 48 cm (Framed)





GARY ANDERSON 

He Always Was a Strange Boy, 1995

Mixed media

Dimensions: 17 x 17 cm (Framed)





ANONYMOUS

An Okimono in the Form of a Human Skull With Frog ca. 1920

Stoneware

Dimensions: 11.5 x 11.5 x 8 cm

 

ANONYMOUS

An Okimono in the Form of a Human Skull With Serpent ca. 1920

Ceramic

Dimensions: 9 x 13 x 8 cm





SANTISSIMI (ANTONELLO SERRA & SARA RENZETTI)

Naturalists, 2011

Silicon, Resin and Human Hair

Dimensions: 7 x 14 x 4.2 cm





NANCY FOUTS

Still Smiling, 2012

Plaster of Paris, Paint and False Teeth

Dimensions: 16.5 x 23 x 14 cm





SANTISSIMI (ANTONELLO SERRA & SARA RENZETTI)

Naturalists, Date Unknown

Silicon, Resin and Human Hair

Dimensions: 7 x 14 x 4.2 cm





VLADIMIR FEODOROVITCH STOZHAROV

A Man Posing ca. 1960

Oil on Canvas

Dimensions: 87 x 71 cm (Framed)





ROY LICHTENSTEIN

Pistol, 1964

Dimensions: Felt, 223,5 x 127 cm (Framed)









EVAN PENNY

Back of Martha, 2006

Silicone, Pigment, Aluminium

Dimensions: 81 x 89 x 17.8 cm





LÉA BELOOUSSOVITCH

Self-Portrait, 2010

Chromogenic Print Facemounted on Plexiglas

Dimensions: 35 x 35 cm







KONRAD ADOLF LATTNER

Two Men with a Boat on the Beach, ca. 1930

Watercolour on Cardboard

Dimensions: 74 x 53.5 cm (Framed)







F.AD. MÜLLER SÖHNE COMPANY

Prosthetic Eye Box, Date Unknown

Dimensions: 28 x 27.5 cm (Open) 18 x 27.5 cm (Closed)









ILYA REPIN

Study of a Child, Date Unknown

Black and Coloured Chalk

Dimensions: 56 x 47 cm (Framed)





DOUGLAS GORDON

Never, Never, 2000

Two Chromogenic Prints Mounted on Board 2 Pieces,

Dimensions: 62.5 x 78 cm each (Framed)







MASSIMO KAUFMANN

Untitled, 1997

Bronze 3 Pieces

Dimensions: 23 x 13.5 x 3 cm (Left Hand),

23 x 13 x 3.5 cm (Right Hand), 11 x 23 x 18 cm (Face)







LUIZ PHILIPPE CARNEIRO DE MENDONÇA

Box with Hands, 2020

Wood Assemblage

Dimensions: 86 x 75 x 9 cm





MARTHA WILSON

Thin-Skinned 2014

Colour Photograph

Dimensions: 73.6 x 43.2 cm (Framed)











ARTER MUSEUM İSTANBUL




ABOUT ARTER MUSEUM İSTANBUL

At its new building, Arter continues to be a sustainable, vibrant cultural hub, making its broad range of programmes accessible to everyone.

Having presented 35 exhibitions from 2010 to 2018 at its building on Istiklal Street, Arter moved to its new building in Istanbul’s Dolapdere district in September 2019. At its new building designed by Grimshaw Architects, Arter continues expanding the range of its activities beyond exhibitions to performances and events across many disciplines.

Arter’s building has 18,000 square metres of indoor area and features exhibition galleries, performance halls, learning areas, a library, an arts bookstore, and a bistro.

Arter brings together artists and audiences through celebration of today’s art in all its forms and disciplines.

COLLECTION & EXHIBITION

Instigated in 2007 and conceived on an international basis, the Arter Collection values and welcomes novel ideas, discourses, and tendencies in contemporary art, embracing all formats that might be considered unconventional.

The Arter Collection comprises more than 1,400 works by around 400 artists as of 2022 and brings together various contemporary expressions, positions and practices from all around the world. The collection includes works from the 1960s to the present, covering a broad variety of media ranging from painting, drawing, sculpture, print, photography, film, video, installation to sound, light and performance-based practices.

Incorporating a plurality of themes, concepts and gestures, the Arter Collection offers an inspiring source for the practice of exhibition making and contributes to the programme. Alongside the exhibitions drawn exclusively or primarily from the collection, Arter also presents curated non-collection solo and group exhibitions in order to re-contextualise and give visibility to works both from within and outside the collection.

EVENTS

Arter’s multi-disciplinary Events Programme features outstanding and innovative examples of performing arts, classical, contemporary and electronic music, film, performance and digital arts.

Placed in dialogue with the collection and exhibitions where possible, the events are not limited to Arter’s two performance halls, the Sevgi Gönül Auditorium and Karbon, but are also held in different parts/spaces of the building. Collaborating with local and international artists, curators and various institutions, Arter commissions and co-produces new works.

https://www.arter.org.tr/about-us

















ARTER MUSEUM İSTANBUL BOOKSTORE












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ARTER MUSEUM İSTANBUL & CHILDREN








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ARTER MUSEUM İSTANBUL 










THE ECOLOGY OF A HOUSE OF CORRESPONDENCE BY CANA BOSTAN

‘’ During the days that followed his return home, Des  Esseintes browsed through the books in his library, and at the thought that he might have been parted from them for a long time he was filled with the same heart – felt satisfaction he would have enjoyed if he had come back to them after a genuine separation. Under the impulse of this feeling, he saw them in a new light, discovering beauties in them he had forgotten ever since he had bought and read them for the first time. Everything indeed – books, bric – à – brac and furniture – acquired a peculiar charm in his eyes. (…) He steeped himself once more in this refreshing both of settled habits, to which artificial regrets added a more bracing and more tonic quality ‘’¹


“ If I myself did not understand, it was no wonder that others could not understand

                                                                                                                What drove Des Esseintes “²

ON THE THRESHOLD OF (SOME) THINGS

In his 1993 novel The Club Dumas³ (El Club Dumas), a portrayal of obsessive bibliophiles, Arturo Pérez- Reverte fastens his narration onto the story of The Nine Gates of the Kingdom of Shadows (Umbrarum Regni Novem Portis), a book whose publisher was condemned to death by burning by the Inquisition because it was believed to contain instruction that would serve to summon the devil⁴. While striving to authenticate a manuscript of The Three Musketeers, purported to have belonged to Alexandre Dumas himself, the bookhunter Lucas Carso meets with collector Varo Barjo in Madrid, prompting him to accept the latter’s uncanny job offer. This forms the beginning of a tense detective story, ultimately transforming a collectors’ item into a symbol of immortality. One of the reasons which led Varo Borja, perhaps one of the greatest collectors of devilish books in the history of literature, to go on the trail of The Nine Gates of the Kingdom of Shadows, an extremely rare book printed in Venice in 1666, only three copies of which have survived to this day, is his aspiration to become the Lord of Chaos himself. Eventually, the power bestowed upon the collector by the intelligence which he has gathered on the most formidable upsetter of the natural order of things – the devil – is such that it may provide him with the very secret to immortality. Thus, the preservation of worldly objects in the light of a precise set of principles materializes as the very action that drives the desire for eternal life.


One of the most remarkable images of the desire for eternal life is kept in a catalogue published in the year 1599. Titled Dell’historia Natural, this catalogue is the first known printed work to contain a representation of a cabinet of curiosities (wunderkommer), a reflection of the desire to combine chaos with the microcosmos. With the cabinets of curiosities, where diverse objects such as extraordinary plants, rare animals’ limbs, stones, manuscripts, scientific documents, palaeolithic hand-made artefacts , mystical objects, totems and, of course, works of art were displayed according to entirely personal interests and preferences, for the very first time, the world’s knowledge and magic were forced side by side into a single “closet”. As a matter of fact, toward the mid – 1500s, these cabinets of curiosities, which were initially set up in real closets but soon came to occupy rooms connected by labyrinthine corridors, promptly became a status symbol, providing but a meager spatial reflection of a grandiose idea, that of “eternal life” itself. This knowledge – object association – both being read (con-lego) and placed (con-ligo) in connection to one another – provided the background for what later evolved into the rational and ordered catalogue of human knowledge during the Age of Enlightenment. The most famous embodiment of this virtual catalogue, in the Enlightenment’s intellectual frame work, was, of course, the Encyclopaedia, assembled under the editing supervision of Denis Diderot and Jean La Rond d’Alembert over the years 1751-1772.⁵ This dictionary of sciences, arts and crafts, which constituted the very materialization of the aspiration to compile, in between two covers, a puzzle that would never reach completion and was even, in fact, onto-logically condemned to eternal deficiency, was conceived out of the nation of a cross-section of the world, consisting in singularities capable of extending to universalities. Following the Renaissance and the Age of Enlightenment, which during the nineteenth century had made not only life but the inorganic elements of culture, leaving their imprints on the former, the subjects of the regime of knowledge, as the subconscious was taken into consideration as well, world knowledge came to be derived from a temporal construction of a different nature: a sort of collection of dreams.


A night spent in a cabinet of curiosities would be enough to pull dreams away from the realm of sleep and project them onto steep walls of objects in a state of sheer awakedness. There, the knowledge cast on the objects by the morning has long withered. Dazzled by the Enlightenment’s brightness, the eye recedes into the shadows. This dialectics of light opens up a limbo, a world of shadows, before the gaze. Now, this age, no longer under the truth of the sun but of street lamps, surrounds things with the shadow of artificial light. The nineteenth century was also the very first moment in history when things became displayed in window displays. The object behind the glass pane and the collector waiting before the window display now met one another under the rays of artificial light, which rendered both half-transparent. By assuming his/her position within this moment of optical transformation, the collector, broadly viewed as one of the main social archetypes of the nineteenth century, no longer noticed and observed objects one by one but rather a mass thereof. Thus, the body came to be defined not only by the object but by the artificial light as well, alternately making it either visible or invisible. Indeed, being positioned (somewhere) does not only determine the object’s fate; it also sheds light on the next movement of the hand that holds it. All in all, the objects determines the direction of the organ, frees the body from its aimless swinging about, and opens up a pathway for a stroll from one room to the next.


Concurrently with the contamination of light by shadow, the material world surrenders to oblivion. Just as a thigh in a cramped position during his sleep reminded Proust of the birth of Eve from Adam’s rib⁶, so the body, subdued by the formlessness of things forgotten, relinquishes its capacity for motion to an unbounded ponderousness, its skeleton to the pain that stems from the ultimate torsion, and its sensuousness to a wound kept forever opened. Put to the test by a material resistance, by virtue of which realism slips into the gap that separates the body from reality, the three main components of the corporeal material – motion, bones and flesh- do not attempt to compensate for their irremediable lack; on the contrary, they preserve all sorts of diminution within absence itself. Thus, the body records immobility and inexpressiveness within motion, fracture and cleavage within the bones, and ruptureand tear within the flesh. That being so, the main spatial extension of accumulation being the trunk, the fundamental image of this form of existence whose integrity is defeated, is mending. Unlike healing, patching, curing or remedying, what is being performed here is a sort of detective work, an enquiry into a lost space. Just as a rip itself is somehow the very moment when stitching up begins, that operation starts with the identification of a tear, a cut, which occurred somewhere in time before translating that time into space. Indeed, objects do not stand facing one another because they occupy an empty space, but by virtue of the principle of porous proximity. Space, void, objects, the body and artificial light coexist without disrupting the balance that informs the very notion of time. And what allows for this adhesion, this coexistence, or, as Aby Warburg phrased it, this “law of the good neighbor”, is correspondence. Initiated, at least content-wise, by the Romantics, further elaborated by Charles Baudelaire in his The Flowers of Evil, and eventually articulated with genuine, physical experiences for the first time by Marcel Proust, correspondence constitutes the fundamental principle upon which this coexistence, this communication and balance rest.⁷ As for the collector, he/she is driven, again through the agency of the principle of correspondence, to conserve the monadologic design that operates within the order of things and eventually breathe life into the objects by coercing them into abandoning their resting places – spellbinding and reducing them into mere nostalgic elements, triggering their intentional memory.


This, however, is not some sort of the whole of things to which the collector would attribute the image of his/her fractured self. As a matter of fact, the very principle of correspondence opposes a resistance against the idea that some sort of series of fragments might be likened to a whole. On the contrary, wht infuses şt is a roaming mimetic desire whereby each singularity is capable of reflecting the whole universe. The logic of correspondence is precisely what keeps the probability intact for the primordial balance – that which allows the collector to become part of his/her collection or various collections of different objects to be merged inside a broader one – to repeat itself.


According to the Dictionnaire de la langue Française, the classic French dictionary assembled by French linguist Émile Littré, initially published in four volumes by Hachette over the years 1863-1874, which in time came to be designated after its author, simply under the sobriquet of Littré, the word “object” (objet) is defined in its seventh sub-entry as “anything that causes, drives or motivates an emition or a passion”. In the present case, as far as the collector is concerned, passion bears a double meaning. Indeed, as per its etymological origin, a passion is not something which the subject initiates but rather something the latter is caught by; in other words, it commands passivity: the subject falls under the object’s influence, is affected by it, caught into it. On the other hand, by recording objects on a symbolic level, the subject, too, creates its own reflection in the mirror of immortal things. Passion unites a desire, which is to say a horizon, forever escaping and receding as one draws nearer, and a face, remaining forever “beautiful”, which consists of the objects. By doing so, it builds up a higher reality, a simulation area, where the game of desire may forever be kept circulating. When the principle of correspondence is at stake, the collector becomes a player, siding with things, as phrased  in Francis Ponge’s 1942 book titled Le Parti pris des choses (Taking the Side of Things). The term ‘object-game’, or shall we venture ‘obgame’ (objeu), forged by the poet by merging the words object (objet) and game (jeu), supplies the idea of the game of passion with another dimension, which forbids the poetic, economic or political consumption of things. Thus, as the collector leans over objects in order to deliver them from functionality – within the current order -, so do the objects place the spirit of things within the mechanisms of desire at work in the collective subconscious. The act of disrupting the objects’ functionality, which is at stake here, does not suggest a form of death, neither is desire being reduced to consumerism or a profane form of appropriation. What is actually being hinted at here is a theoretical interstitial area, which both allows the objects to live and enables the collector’s willingness to search. I a rather similar fashion to how Franz Kafka put together, by having it carry its own representation within itself, such a poetic that would meet the dire need felt by the creature Odradek – sparking jealousy wherever he appeared because of his extraordinary longevity – for the amphibious spirit’s world of objects, this theoretic interstitial area also creates a series of objects whose display is being kept on hold. They await being recorded in a database, finding their proper place in a singular location, and thus reaching incorruptibility. They do not vitiate the shadow’s share, which artificial light provides them with, nor do they betray the gaze – contradicting component within the gaze itself. In other words, the theory (viewpoint)  implied here, as is the case in Baudelaire’s “Correspondences” (“Echoes”)⁸, is regulated by the regime of the gaze, which stems from the symbolic wood in response to the totem tree’s course. Every thought articulated regarding the world of objects bound to each other by correspondence it exposed together with such elements as involuntary intuition, feeling or oblivion. Thus, what turns into an inventory of moments is the body of the objects themselves. What, somewhere in time, gave weight to the objects is no longer limited to history. It now also consists of glimpses of the future, oozing from the pores of the present being lived. The objects that will soon leak into the realm of dreams not only give corporeal shape to the phantoms of the past but to prophecies as well. By means of its own singularity, but also together with those that surround it, the object opens up a parenthesis for space, one that is likely to deepen it towards history. Thus, the correspondence principle – to which books standing side by side on a shelf owe their ability to be read in more than a single way -  makes the subconscious  one among the things contained by a dream scene, forfending any hierarchy between that which looks and that which is looked at. This passive attack, directed by the collector – who transforms the objects into the occupation of space – against psychology, conveys the very convulsions sparked by the blow delivered to psychoanalysis by Anti-Oedipus down to the smallest unit where the creation’s capillary vessels extend: the house. The house is the altar where memories are etched into objects, a temporal refuge for nomadic works of art, a spirit cocoon carrying the collector’s body, a bulwark fending off the foreigner’s gaze, a monad equipped with windows, and, essentially, the correspondence between the indoor and the outdoor.





THE OPPOSITE SITE OF THINGS

Where does the collector stand within a cosmology where space, stemming from the solidified void in between the objects of a collection, is considered as reaching out to the whole creation? Even though the topography of the collector figure summons up such a notion as settlement or such a mode of existence as entrenchment, it is of the utmost importance to always think of it as at the farthest end of a considerable distance. Not that which separates a wall from the door so much as that which extends from a painting, a sculpture, a book, a carpet or a stairway to the entire creation. As for the ontological   tendency which prompts the collector to “enclose” objects, it stems from the abovementioned cartographic signs and symbols. Quiet like the ephemerality of the collector, who carries an elusive truth by his/her side, the objects of a collection, too, stand on the very brink or emerging point of the idea of escaping or breaking away. Once they begin to sway in the house of correspondence, the objects – which cannot distinguish their own death from their own liveliness as long as the collector has not rendered them useless – become overcome (oufhebung) while being preserved at the same time. This overcoming, occurring concurrently with the historical overriding of the collector, provides the objects not only with tonality but, in the general sense, with a manner of detectability/perceivability. This detectability, in turn, contains the lost object that hasn’t reached consciousness yet. The fidelity which the collector feels for his/her lost object turns melancholy into his/her manner of experiencing the world. The very melancholy in question here, much more than a feeling, rather constitutes an idea and even an “action”. The collector, who, by perceiving, observes the moment when the past acquires a citable quality, shows a vital interest in dead historical objects. However, this interest is not of a nostalgic nature. What is at stake here is a tendency to refrain from building such a notion of history that would ease the existential concerns as to the present while being assembled out of the privileged moments of a past that is longed for. In order to possess an image of the past as a whole, it disposes of a perception that must make absolute atonement for history. This perception is precisely what gives melancholic collectorship its momentum, busy as it is with temporary settlement on the one hand and its own will to condemn itself to astonishment on the other.


The collection’s objects draw a twisted portrait of the collector, not only through their presence within the collection but through their manner of clinging to absence as well. The object whose absence leaves the collection incomplete grants a negative consistency to the collector. The involuntary knowledge imparted by oblivion, postponement, having missed an opportunity, or by loss – which contains all of the above – is the chronic trigger of this form of knowing without knowing: the tendency to accumulate In a scenario where a hard copy of Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita, signed by the latter for Graham Greene, is “snatched” by a famous actress, the lost object of a collector busy building their ideal library deepens the collection’s own story. However, the defective object, which the collector will eventually possess, is nothing but the fate that awaits those forever placed on hold by yet another library. This ontological intervention of loss of life gives rise to a pacification economy.  By recording the excess of void contained within the collection onto itself, the missing object renders the search infinite. The impulse to multiply things, stemming from the object’s absence – in other words, this dialectics between pacification and provocation – renders the collection immanent to itself. This very immanence stems from the fact that the collector’s figure is not external to the collection; rather, it is the organ that has recorded the collection’s irremediable defect onto itself. Under this light, the collector’s decipherability depends on literalism, in other words, on the illusion that what shows and what is shown correspond with one another. Such an illusion brought to its most radical and almost instates correcpondence as consubstantiality. Here, the fake becomes the founding element of truth, and the irrational is what sets rationality in motion. This situation could well be likened to how, in Joris – Karl Huysmans’ 1884 novel Against Nature (À rebours), considered a major blow delivered against the naturalist muvament, the aesthete Jean des Esseintes, devoting much time and money for this purpose, designs his bedroom as a monk’s retreat fit for purification from his sins. Just as in Proust’s lines, pretence comes into play in the form of prophecy. Here, in this carefully assembled poverty decorum, fakeness coincides with the very moment that precedes truth. Deception, caused by the fact that the words cannot find their proper place within time, bewitches the order of things. In that sense, this literary work is the sanctification of a mechanical form of artificiality. Des Esseintes’s goal is, no matter how excruciating it may be, to find the ultimate home, which presents itself as the right tool in order to encircle a playful memory. The latter must have felt it: within a collection of modes fossilized inside the backbone of an amber memory, perhaps only the past possesses an autonomous present. In Huysmans’ universe, the spirit of things is no different from the holy spirit, which is why he eventually found his ultimate home in the Catholic Church. In Proust’s world, on the other hand, the faith in the Trinity is reflected and diffracted on the surfaces of a porcelain tea cup, a tray and a sugar bowl standing side by side.


Still, by following the traces of the Trinity’s infinite fragmentations, both writers always believed in the fact that fake memories of lifeless objects could disrupt historic necessity, in other words, in a contingent notion of history.


What grants history its contingency is the non – hierarchical arrangement of times. The collector writes a minor history, where what is ancient fits within the same space as what is current. Within such a historiography, which challenges the positivist or progressist understanding of history, a mind, pursuing its occupation with weary earnestness as would a cosmic curator, is likely to turn into a pen that no longer writes but, in order to write, opens up empty lines, fills them with ink blots, and leaves its traces behind as would a pen – sharpener: shaving off and petering out. The next that a collector would scribble down under the influence of such a frame of mind could be likened to the translation of an image of the past by a scrivener before a courthouse, giving it the appearance of a juridical document. Such a “translation” would record privileged moments in the history of culture in the shape of passages. However, a two - sided manipulation is at work in the selection of those privileged moments. On the one hand, the collector bewitches the historic order of things; on the other, he/she grants non – monumental coordinates both to the objects which he/she is set to preserve and to the march of history as well. Indeed, there are such coordinates that become devoid of decipherable finesse once one surrenders to the dominant cultural codes. For instance, there is a common belief that rhinoceroses mark their territory with pink tears. These animals are actually known to leave small amounts – sometimes designated as “tears”, sometimes as “sweat” drops – of a sort of mucus, which they secrete as skin protection against the sun, on branches, bushes and the likes as they go. In that sense, one could think of the way in which a collector marks the world as inverted, as though he/she drew such an itinerary that would secure his/her remaining forever lost. The collector loses him/herself vertigo, spanning history. Thus, the collection, as multi-layered wreckage of loss, becomes a convenient mode of “existence”.


Gathering the objects of a collection, all the more so when breathing life into them inside the house of correspondence, imprints a somewhat grandiose time notion onto a form of petiteness, of scantiness. Seduced by both mythological and natural history, the collector tends to feel culture as a dynamic that almost appears of its own accord, mono-temporal and mono-spatial. This feeling is precisely the reason why collectorship came to be designated in psychoanalytical literature as a neurosis which also contains its own cure. Yet, in this context, one should note that Sigmund Freud himself made a distinction between collectorship and hoarding (syllogomania) in his introduction To Psychoanalysis (1917). According to this distinction, while hoarding, i.e. the accumulation of objects without order or principle, is considered an obsessive-compulsive disorder, collectorship is viewed as a primal and safe manner of exerting control over the world. Yet, considering the collector’s elegiac happiness with regard to the notion of the symbolism of loss, invalidating the grip of reality would certainly provide more meaningful perspectives. The mythical axis of this elegiac happiness extends all the way to Eros and Thanatos, which we could also phrase in more mundane terms as a melancholic reflection carried out along the orbit that connects pleasure with death, the low and the high, the naked and the covered, or what comes down with what goes up. In such a context, what is at stake is not so much the reorganisation of the subject’s own story, highlighted as a heroic salvation or the illusion of a safe defeat, as it is the suspension of the disappearance of the object encircled by the ego. The collector’s melancholy transforms an inner world on the brink of death, the loss of aura in the orks of art, or the eternal defect in history into a condition of decipherability. Here, things are endowed with the right to be forgotten. The melancholic, happily going on the trail of his/her lost object, is wary of such suppressions, in Freudian terms, as the identification and designation of the object of mourning or burial ceremonies. He/she does not fall for the delusion that consists in bringing the remains, whether in memory or the physical world, of what is lost back to dead – or mortal – life. On the contrary, he/she is faithful to the knowledge enshrouded by death and ambitions to address it or present it him/herself, thus revealing the daring presumption of an anti – therapeutic thought set to summon up a normal – not branded as conservative – and a pathological thought. The “melancholic” collector creates a gaze between vision and him/herself, which the word seeing itself cannot enter, so much so that the astonishment which he/she feels, not at the existence of something, but at its not having disappeared yet, is precisely what enables him/her to start a collection. Bewitched by the fact that he/she still shares the same world with the rhinoceroses, so very close to the dinosaurs, he/she may summon that magic into his/her home by means of rhinoceros mummies. Against the manner in which history enshrouds things with death, he/she extracts “death”, the only concept capable of representing transcendence, from the backdrop of things and summons it inside. Thus, as an elegy, things may extend from a finiteness coiled up on itself to a happy infinity where objects call for repetition. Such is the method by which the collector renders the transcendent within his/her immanent world: by taking the side of things.


THE SIDE OF THINGS

For the collector, bound to the past by devotion, patience and composure, the present provides erotic and thanatologic urgencies. For he/she is constrained by the eternity of things with which his/her coexistence would remain pointless in his/her absence. The things which, not being included in his/her collection, are rendered replaceable within myriads of relations of possession represent a threat to him/her. This other world, both here and now, grants authority to mythical powers within the secret agreement passed between the collector and things. A theatre of memory, receiving Eros and Thanatos on the same stage, is adorned with the pieces of the collection. The collector, on the other hand, is responsible for prompting their lines to every piece in the play. The prompter is the person who deprives the play’s text of glorification; through his/her presence, he/she acts as a reminder of the fact that the sacred writer (or, in another context, market)’s authority may be forlorn. The very moment when the line – an ideal copy of the prayer, divine words read by heart – is erased from the object’s memory is when the prompter/collector steps in, reading out loud. As is the case in every ritual where oblivion and decipherability come in contact with one another, several layers of repetition come into play here. The dialectic tension between the prompter-collector and comedian-object is felt across all of these layers. As for what restitutes the volatile shape, or in other words, the ephemerality of the word learnt by heart, it is, once again, correspondence, which renders objects rememberable in relation to one another: such a principle that places the oldest piece, dating from 1943, within a book collection, face-to-face with twentieth-century pieces of furniture, and convenes stairways with sofas, folding screens with carpets, and mirrors with self-portraits.


The history of culture, which the collector is so tightly bound to, is actually, and ironically too, the history of the dispersion of Eros. Ironically indeed, because the collector usually includes in his/her collection, say, a seminal book with regards to the culture at large  due to how that object aroused a desire in him/her, and on the basis of such sensual criteria as emblems, or goat-skin binding, for instance. A great number of traditions, from institutionalized religions to Western philosophy, have associated (if not accused) materiality, in other words, the physical/material world and what etymologically refers to the mother/women (mater) , with sin and malevolence. Eros, on the other hand, comprises everything that reminds the body of its fullness and absolute integrity when inside the womb, thus pleasing it. In a sense, the gains of culture are just representations of separation from the mother. Indeed, due to its being positioned on the opposite pole with regards to logos, Eros is deprived of the order and discipline required in order to bring about or become a part of the culture. As a matter of fact, its attempt to conceal this very lack by means of sensual pleasure may be viewed as the trap that awaits those who are born into the world of culture. The collector carries the traps laid out by Eros into the field of culture. Besides, as it preserves both cultural staticities’ and erotic dynamics’ independence, this conveying neither remains eclectic nor achieves a genuine synthesis as a result. Under such gold contact, each piece of the collection becomes a subject for psycho-history, as much as it does for a sort of archaeology of the future. A self-portrait, for instance, signals the evolution undergone by self-representation just as much as it does the erasure of the stages of the self from the future within a fixed expression. By the same token, a mirror may place the point of view of twelfth-century humans, which associated the reflection with the demon, on a glass pane whose back surface has been glazed, inside the future’s narcissistic prison. Likewise, folding screens may renew a delayed desire felt sometime in the past as someone undressed, within an image of intimacy long turned into a fake wall. As for a “stairway”, either leading down to Eros or up towards culture, it may sift the history of descents and ascensions through the filters of fairy tales or the holy scriptures and imprint them onto a houses’ memory. Just as the ladder seen by Jacob in his dream in the Old Testament is, Rapunzel’s hair and the steps that cause Cinderella to leave a single shoe behind in her escape are all symbols of passages across different forms of existence and bridges connecting the oldest layers of the past with the furthermost of the future.


THE SELF – PORTRAIT

The theories that have sparked one of the most fundamental debates of our times, such as object-oriented ontology, denying humans any privilege before objects, devise their fundamental questions by assessing perceivability through the criteria of the possession of the other’s gaze.⁹ Despite most views on the other’s gaze being based on the notion of the face – more precisely on that of possessing a face – these approaches, deriving approval from the methods which broke down the dualisms brought about by the regimes of looking that existed in the post – war context, currently encompass the inorganic, following a trail that extends from the posthumanists to the compostists. As for the self-portrait, it is an object that is heavy with dialectical tensions with respect to how it concurrently hosts the vulnerability of the face and the safety of being encased inside a frame. There, the self possesses the others’s gaze. In self-portraits, the face defaces and defeats the memory associated with the body’s shape. This object is, in a sense, the self-representation’s memorial, speaking in the name of the other. Yet somehow, self-portraits are also eternal resting places where their painter may indulge in the aesthetics of ruins. Van Gogh is known to have completed more than thirty self-portraits between the years 1886 and 1889; Frida Kahlo, too, produced a great number thereof while her entire body was encased in an orthopedic plaster corset after suffering a severe accident, which she gave an explanation for by saying ‘I am the subject I know best’. In this version of self-occupation, I provide sometimes a flesh, sometimes a face, sometimes a shape, no matter how blurry it might be, to the remains, the damage, the leftovers, the decomposition and ruins of myself. This framed burial place places the dispersion of the self between brackets and suspends it. In self-portraits, the ego masks the canvas and fastens the face to the history of the world; as it does, it sometimes tears down the face, sometimes history.


THE MIRROR

The mirror is the amphibious version of the self-portrait. Every single movement that occurs before this object draws the image anew in connection to the impressionist tradition. In a sense, it is memory’s certification authority. Just as Rodolphe, in Théophile Gautier’s Celle-ci-Celle-là , runs up to mirror every morning, anxious to check whether horns have sprouted on his head during his sleep, memory too looks for consistency as per its self inside this glazed glass. This object, which could be regarded as Narcissus’ discovery, constituted both the latter’s hearth and crime scene. All the mediations of the history of culture fit between the eye and the gaze by virtue of the mirror. It forms the place where vision recognizes, and simultaneously loses, its own appearance, while I does its uniqueness, its breaking apart from another I. The absoluteness of ephemerality crystallises within this reflection. The mirror is what allows the copy, fakeness, light/shadow plays, and, of course, partition to reunite with a face, a scene and surface.


THE FOLDING SCREEN

The folding screen applies the mirror’s logic of false multiplication to decoration. In this respect, it becomes a manipulative object, directed no longer only towards the gaze but to the surface that encompasses it as well. It is sometimes used in order to create room for silence and even meditation amid spiritual anxieties and ruckus, sometimes to form an inner chamber, enclosing the intimacy that suffuses the act of dressing and undressing. Folding screens are mysterious tunnels, opening up only for a room’s esoteric congregation before extending from rituals to births and burials, fro dowry exhibitions to the preservation of smell and warmth. Within this manner of veiling, the image of a hole punctured so as to peer into the house’s interior is at work. In this respect, a folding screen is a vulval object, and it is no coincidence that throughout the history of cinema it was invested with erotic insinuations, both covering and opening the naked body of women to the stranger’s gaze. It is a separator, disconnecting the gaze from its objects, only to better reunite them on the plane of fantasy.

The ecology of a house of correspondence takes shape underneath the tendencies of a collector who leaves pebblestones, stars, or the dead in cemeteries where they are. The worldliness of such a collector, who professes to be the prophet of the natural places of things, gives an altogether different disposition to the idea of belonging/possession. In its wake, closure begins. By his/her very concerns as to the step starting with which a world of objects that prolongs multiplication by carrying their own lack deserves to be regarded as a collection and the boundary whose crossing causes the same ensemble to lose such a privilege, that collector keeps the door to closure forever open. “Why don’t you play Donizetti anymore,” asks the woman, to which the man replies, “Because we started talking”. That is how Man of Flowers (dir. Paul Cox, 1983), the story of Charles, a collector of artworks, flowers and undressing women, ends: with a composition that silences, relying on the authority conferred by desire. As for the collector of the house of correspondence, he/she appeases his/her desire to be seen by multiplying what is visible. There, neither are mirrors passive witnesses nor the faces of self-portraits naked. By turning into one another’s armour, the pieces of the collection repress such an indiscretion, for they look at each other so lengthily that a table may well begin to bear the knowledge of being-a-chair, or a stairway the memory of having been a folding screen. What allows for such a poetic and mimetic circularity and ultimately provides the nature of things with the capacity for movement is, of course, the collector’s gaze, that which assigns its own unique room to each piece of the collection, expression of the countless facets of his/her own spirit’s objectivation/reification. Each in their own unique unique rooms, things now possess safe conduct, allowing them to circulate through all the dreams that were once dreamt in history.

Trans. By Baptiste Gacoin 





1-      Joris-Karl Huymans, Against Nature, trans. by Robert Baldick (Baltimore: Penguin, 2003, p. 286

2-      Ibid., “Preface Written Twenty Years After the Novel”, preface trans. by Patrick McGuinness, p. 436

3-      Arturo Pérez – Revert, The Club Dumas, trans. by Sonia Soto (New York: Vintage, 1998).

4-      “Legend has it that Lucifer, after being defeated and thrown out of heaven, devised the magic formula to be used by his followers: the authoritative handbook of the shadows. A terrible book kept in secret, burned many times, sold for huge sums by the few priviledged to own it … These illustrations are really satanic hieroglyphs. Interpreted with the aid of the text and the appropriate knowledge, they can be used to summon the prince of darkness.” Reverte, op. cit., p. 57.

5-      Denis Diderot and Jean Le Rond d’Alembert, Encyclopaedia, or a Systematic Dictionary of Sciences, Arts, and Crafts, trans. by John Mortey (London: MacMillan, 1905)

6-      Marcel Proust, In Search of Lost Time, trans. by C. K. Scott Moncrieff, vol. 1, p. 6, Centaur, 2016.

7-      Etymologically speaking, “correspondence” (from the Latin correspondentia) bears the meaning of “responding to, heading towards one another”. The word is mostly used in order to express an exchange of written messages, the like of letters. As for the poem by Baudelaire, titled “Correspondances” (“Echoes”), part of the letter’ The Flowers of Evil, it received an exceptionally high number of renditions in its Turkish translations: “Uyuşumlar” (concordances, Ahmet Necdet), “Eşduyumlar” (synesthesiae, Sait Maden), “Haberleşmeler” (conversations, Vasfi Mahir Kocatürk) and “iletişimler” (communications, Erdoğan Alkan). However, in this poem, Baudelaire does not consider the relation between nature and the subject as a duality. Quiet on the contrary, what he touches on are the many ways in which supernatural affinities, or subconscious kinships, leak into this relation. Therefore, the notion’s conceptual consistency  appears more precisely when examined in light of the literature that backs ,it, stretching from the Early Romantics to Critical Theory. The present essay aims to retain the richness of this conceptual track, which is why the Turkish term that was chosen is “mütekabiliyet”  (reciprocity). According to Nişanyan’s etymological Turkish Dictionary, “mütekabil”, which stems from the Arabic root “kbl”, is an adaption of the world “mutakãbil …., meaning corresponding, greeting, reciprocal. By the same token, “tekabul” (correspondence) initially meant “meeting face-to-face”. Within the modern world, what allows us to acknowledge the presence of the mythical, or the residues of ancient rituals in the field of technique, are these reciprocities or correspondences, hence their rendition in the present essay as mütekabiliyet.

8-      Charles Baudelaire, The Flowers of Evil, trans. by Cyril Scott (London: Elkin Mathews, 1909), p.10.

9-      The course of the mediation that widened the spectrum of theory progressed from the visible to what occupies space, fro space to void, from openness to echo, and fro acoustic to silence. Indeed, since the most efficient defacement strategy was identified as “silencing”, it so happens that, in the most radical enclosing facilities, the likes of slaughterhouses, zoos and laboratories, priority is granted to minimizing noise first and foremost. Seen as the silent form of existence that is presumed not to resist, but on the contrary to surrender, the gesture that consists in silencing provides great comfort and ample room to the perpetrator of violence, responsible for putting merchandise in circulation. Likewise, only through the mediation of a double denial principle – in other words, by adding a piece of knowledge regarding, say, the primitiveness of their nervous systems, aside from their being  of a different nature that humans – are we entitled to speak of the otherness of underwater creatures, considered bereft of voices because the sounds which they emit exceed humans’ audition spectrum. In that case, the emergence of Noah’s neo-ark from underwater, and that of its occupants – forming a collection of living creatures – from slaughterhouses could be predicted ; or still, we would be inclined to believe that divine justice should occur through the revocation of the painful steps enforced on all the  living beings whose perceivability has been usurped. Of course, by suspending such a theologico-poetic prediction, the contexts brought forth by the abovementioned examples ought to be associated with the notion of the right to possess rights. The notion of justice cannot be thought of through the mediation of beings exclusively endowed with juridical status. Under that light, all forms of second nature  –  the habitus of the inorganic  - are capable of transforming “closure” into a milieu where the usurpation of perceivability is revealed. The house of correspondence – that is, a landscape area (second nature) that maintains a part-subject, part-object epistemology in effect, whereby the collector him/herself is a piece of his/her collection of living objects – is such a place: there, the objects possess, if not a face, the other’s gaze; there, the objects reunite their collector with decipherability.

You may click below link to reach exhibition book “Suppose You Are Not” to read more essays as “A Door Either Open or Shut” by Selen Ansen and “A World of Wonders” by Claudia Swan.

https://www.arter.org.tr/publications





SUPPOSE YOU ARE NOT - 3 TH FLOOR




ARNE JACOBSEN

Giraffe Chair, 1957

Laminated Beech, Ash and Upholstery

Dimensions: 103 x 60 x 58 cm





ANONYMOUS - ATTRIBUTED TO WILLIAM FETNER

Keyhole Chair – 20 th Century





ANSELM KIEFER

Melancholia, 2004

Mixed Media on Canvas With Glass Polyhedron

Dimensions: 280 x 381 x 57 cm





HELMUT KOLLE

Boy Lying Down, 1925

Oil on Canvas

Dimensions: 98 x 107.5 cm (Framed)





SEMİHA BERKSOY

Self-Portrait, Hope 1972

Oil on Panel

Dimensions: 111 x 81 cm (Framed)







JAMIE SALMON

Older Self, 2015

Silicone, Pigment, Resin, Hair and Metal

Dimensions: 56 x 44 x 38 cm







JULIE RRAP

Horse’s Tale, 1999

Cibachrome Photograph

Dimensions: 139.5 x 130 cm (Framed)





EVAN PENNY

Self-Portrait 2003

Silicone, Pigment, Hair and Fabric

Dimensions: 69 x 70 x 20 cm







EVAN PENNY

Self-Stretch, 2004

Silicone, Pigment, Fabric, Hair, Plastic and Metal Brackets on Wood Support

Dimensions: 79.3 x 19.3 x 5.7 cm







MARC CHAGALL

Self-Portrait on Easel 1949

Brush and India Ink on Paper

Dimensions: 53 x 42 cm (Framed)







EADWEARD MUYBRIDGE

Hammering at an Anvil and Using a Hatchet, Saw (Self-portrait) 1887

Calotype

Dimensions: 52.5 x 64 cm (Framed)





SEDA HEPSEV

Auto-Control, Self-Portrait 2010

Acrylic on Canvas

Dimensions: 60 x 80 cm







OLIVER JONES

Passport Photo #2 2010

Pastel on Paper

Dimensions: 223.5 x 184 cm (Framed)





PABLO PICASSO

Head, 1928

Oil on Canvas

Dimensions: 63 x 54 cm (Framed)





THEO van DOESBURG

Self-Portrait, 1911

Oil on Canvas

Dimensions: 55 x 45 cm (Framed)







DAVID HOCKNEY

Self-Portrait, 1982

Make-Up on Paper

Dimensions: 66.5 x 56.6 cm (Framed)





NEJAD DEVRİM

Self-Portrait ca. 1952–1955

Oil on Canvas

Dimensions: 50 x 41 x 4 cm (Framed)





ANDY WARHOL

Feet, 1960 - 1962

Black Ballpoint on Paper

Dimensions: 58 x 49 cm (Framed)





GIORGIO CHIRICO

Self-Portrait, 1930

Oil on Canvas

Dimensions: 67 x 80 x 7 cm (Framed)







BRUCE NAUMAN

Studies For Holograms a-e (Cordes 1-5), 1970

Screenprint on Paper 5 Pieces

Dimensions: 77 x 83 cm each (Framed)





ANTONY GORMLEY

Shrive VII (Twisted), 2011

Cast Iron

Dimensions: 181 x 46 x 40 cm





JOHN COPLANS

Self-Portrait, Body Language No 1-3-4-5, 1986

Gelatin Silver Print 4 Pieces

Dimensions: 76.5 x 66.5 cm each (Framed)








DERRICK GUILD

Clara and Oval Miniature Painting 2023

Oil on Canvas; Oil on Linen

Dimensions: 154.5 x 194.5 cm (Framed) 10.5 x 7.5 cm (Framed)







ZHANG DALI

Artist’s Bust (Suicide), 1999

Bronze with Gold Patina

Dimensions: 70 x 60 x 30 cm





MAURIZIO CATTELAN

Untitled, 2009

Polyurethane Rubber and Sterling Steel

Dimensions: 51 x 38 x 18 cm







ALEXANDER MASOURAS

East 95th Street III, 2023

Oil on Linen

Dimensions: 95.5 x 80.5 cm (Framed)







LEYLÂ GEDİZ

The Other Pair I & II 2010

Epoxy and Paint

Dimensions: 30 x 70 x 57 cm, 47 x 240 x 70 cm







ANONYMOUS

Anatomical Model of the Human Torso Early 20th Century

Plaster

Dimensions: 77 x 33 x 25 cm





YÜKSEL ARSLAN

Arture 85, 1965

Ochre Stone, Earth, Tobacco, Urine, Blood, Ink and Pencil on Paper

Dimensions: 82 x 63 cm (Framed)





CHUCK CLOSE

9-Part Self-Portrait 1987

Polaroid

Dimensions: 212 x 166.5 cm (Framed)







GAETANO PESCE

Donna, ca. 1970 Lounge Chair and Ottoman (Manufactured by B&B Italia)

Dimensions: 104 x 114 x 116.8 cm Ottoman: 60.9 cm





REBECCA ACKROYD

Garden Tender, 2020

Gouache and Soft Pastel on Satin Paper

Dimensions: 191 x 140 cm (Framed)





HARLAND MILLER

Incurable Romantic, 2010

Oil on Canvas

Dimensions: 235 x 155 cm







KERRY STEWART & ANA GENOVES

Ghost, 1995

Cast Fibreglass and Acrylic

Dimensions: 186 x 150 x 100 cm









İRFAN ÖNÜRMEN

Curriculum, 2018

Concrete

Dimensions: 88 x 93 x 50 cm, 85 x 81 x 50 cm







ARTIST UNKNOWN

Study of a Male Lying, 1941

Ink on Paper

Dimensions: 28 x 49 cm (Framed)





MIGUEL CALUMARTE VAQUER

Josephine Baker, 1930

Pastel on Paper

Dimensions: 63 x 48.5 cm





OTTO DIX

Studies of Self-Portrait, 1929

Pencil on Gray-Brown Wrapping Paper

Dimensions: 68 x 58 cm (Framed)





ERNST FUCHS

Self-Portrait Through the Mirror 1946

Pencil on Paper

Dimensions: 80.5 x 67.5 cm (Framed)







ARA GÜLER

Self-Portrait with Fikret Adil, ca. 1950

Photograph

Dimensions: 49 x 36 cm (Framed)





VISCOUNT FRANCIS HASTINGS

Marquise Luisa Casati Stampa of Soncino 1934

Oil on Canvas

Dimensions: 92.5 x 76 cm (Framed)





PEDRO FRIEDEBERG

Hand Chair, ca. 1964

Carved Laminated Pine Wood 3 Pieces;

Dimensions: 87 x 46 x 50 cm, 86 x 48 x 52 cm, 86 x 48 x 52 cm







PETER BEARD

The Mingled Destinies of Crocodiles and Men, 1965

Gelatin Silver Print

Dimensions: 83 x 92 x 4 cm (Framed)







SAM JINKS

Untitled (Boy), 2013

Silicone, Pigment, Resin and Human Hair

Dimensions: 10 x 105 x 40 cm







ERWIN WURM

Toilet, 2014

Polyester and Wood

Dimensions: 77 x 11 x 67 cm







ERİNÇ SEYMEN

Miracle 2004

Oil on Canvas

Dimensions: 150 x 90 cm







GUSTAV KLIMT

Old Male Nude With Clasped Hands, ca. 1900–1907

Black Crayon on Paper

Dimensions: 76 x 59 cm (Framed)







ECEM YERMAN

Anyone 2023

Wood

Dimensions: 162 x 60 x 54 cm







RICHARD ZIEGLER

The Police 1929

Oil on Canvas

Dimensions: 109 x 127 cm (Framed)







BRIAN GRIFFIN

Portrait of British Jazz Musician and Humanist George Melly, 1990

Chromogenic Print

Dimensions: 67.5 x 67.5 cm (Framed)









DAPHNE WRIGHT

Kitchen Table 2014

Hand-Painted

Dimensions: Jesmonite Figures: 105 x 65 x 70 cm, 60 x 45 x 45 cm,

Chairs: 90 x 40 x 40 cm each, Table: 76 x 100 x 190 cm











COLLECTOR ÖMER MEHMET KOÇ