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Heroes / SEHITLER

Köken Ergun

2018 01:28:06 TürkiyeEnglish, TurkishColorStereo16:9HD video

Description

Each year, crowds of Turkish, Australian and New Zealander tourists travel to Gallipoli, Turkey for a modern day pilgrimage. They honor their fallen soldiers who lost their lives in the Gallipoli/Çanakkale Campaign—one of the bloodiest conflicts of World War One—, which is considered as a defining moment in the establishment of the Turkish nation state as well as the beginning of national consciousness in Australia and New Zealand. With heightened emotions, they move around the historical battlefields, graves and war monuments with the help of guided tours tailored for each community.

Over the course of two years, Köken Ergun joined various Gallipoli tours, recording divergent war narratives told by different tour guides, emotional reactions of their audience, interviews with tour participants and patriotic theater plays organized by the Turkish state. The resulting film offers a rare insight into how nationalist emotions are kept alive through a ‘tourism of martyrdom’.

About Köken Ergun

Köken Ergun is an artist/filmmaker with a background in performing arts. After working with American theater director Robert Wilson, Ergun became involved with video art and film. His films often deal with communities that are not known to a greater public and the importance of ritual in such groups. Ergun usually spends a long time with his subjects before starting to shoot and engages in a long research period for his projects. He also collaborates with ethnographers, historians and sociologists as extensions to his artistic practice. Since 2020, following the Covid pandemic, Ergun has changed his practice by pausing to make films by himself and getting more involved in collaborations with other artists to make installations, fiction and animation films.

His works have been exhibited internationally at institutions including Documenta 14, Paris Triennale, Jakarta Biennial (2015 and 2021), Kathmandu Triennale, Martin Gropius Bau, SALT, Garage Moscow, Para-Site Hong Kong, Artspace Sydney, Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam, KIASMA, Digital Art Lab Tel Aviv, Casino Luxembourg and Kunsthalle Winterthur. His films received several awards at film festivals including the Tiger Award for Best Short Film at the 2007 Rotterdam Film Festival and the Special Mention Prize at the 2013 Berlinale. Ergun’s works are included in public collections of the Centre George Pompidou, Greek National Museum of Contemporary Art, Stadtmuseum Berlin, Australian War Memorial and Kadist Foundation.

Having studied acting at Istanbul University, Ergun completed his postgraduate studies at King's College London (classics) and Bilgi University (art history). He holds a PhD degree from Freie Universität Berlin (performing arts and anthropology).

Ergun is the co-founder of After the Archive?, an Istanbul based initiative that questions the role and function of archives in public memory and KIRIK; a space for people and subjects in the cracks.