PLAINTEXT
Marta Bogdańska
'plaintext' in an espionage world & language is a text before or after encryption. Therefore it should be easily readable. After it becomes encrypted the message is obscure and unreadable without a key. Lebanon, especially Beirut, has a long history of spy stories (true and made-up). The country attracts a lot of attention in the media. But it became my second home. Since 2008 I have spent almost 8 years there. 'plaintext' is a project that spies on me, my feelings, and tries to decode my relationship to Lebanon. For 10 months I had been receiving Whats App messages on my cell phone while working in an international organization. These messages, vaguely called security updates, arrived several times a day and made me feel trapped in a 'danger zone'.. I decided to look at them closely, read into their codes and keys, and try to relate them to Lebanon that I know. At first glance the messages seem plain and clear scrupulously giving information, stating what happened or is expected to happen. To me they are a form of coded propaganda. In reality they conceal in the open what Lebanon is. On the other hand my photographs are personal, nostalgic, at times absurd. They relate to traces, objects, landscapes, forming a notebook or a diary. At times touristic, taken by someone who knows the country very well but still is a foreigner ('a spy'). They reflect on experiences of 8 years in Lebanon. This project evolves around notions of post-conflict discourse, creation of discourse of fear & danger, new technologies used in repetitive propaganda (as in bombardment of Whats App messages on one's phone), political geography and personal experience, and art as 'spying' & 'stealing' to create a new narrative.
Marta Bogdańska is a Polish photographer, visual artist, cultural manager. She holds a MA degree in Philosophy from Warsaw University. She graduated from the Academy of Photography, School of Seeing & Open Institute in Warsaw. Marta lived and worked in Lebanon for 8 years, where she realised artistic & cultural projects. Member of APP (Archive of Public Protests).
With additional background in gender studies & activism Marta’s artistic work focuses on geopolitical and social issues, gossip & fiction, as well as personal experiences. She experiments with various media including participatory workshops and sound installations..
Marta’s work was shown e.g. at OBSCURA Festival of Photography in Malaysia, at TIFF Festival in Wroclaw, at ODESA PHOTO DAYS 2020, BLICA - First Biennale of Arts in Lebanon. Photobook presenting SHIFTERS project is shortlisted for Mack First Book Award 2020. She was selected for several residencies, most recently Landskrona Foto Residency (2020), as well as Nida Art Colony, Gasworks, and Botkyrka Konsthal. She took part in ‘Re-Tooling Residencies Project’ organised by CCA Warsaw. She created & curated ‘Fenix Cities: workshops and exhibitions in Warsaw and Beirut’.
Shifters
Shifters project investigates animals in military, animal spies, animal subjectivity, and new ways of looking at animal history. It started as an archival research and a collection of articles about animal spies. Suspicious squirrels, spying dolphins, misidentified stork, nuclear lizards, and photographer pigeons – all these animals were accused of spying and information about it appeared in mainstream media. I am investigating the use of animals as soldiers, spies, police, and kamikaze. I am interested in tracing back the historical chapters of animals in wars & espionage, and analyzing the meaning of the term ‘agent’ itself: a spy but as well a subject doing action. Taking this into account I want to relate the multifaceted history of animals in war to the one of the liberation of animals and animal rights. New technologies will help us know more about animal capacities for sure. The post-human & new materialist theories try to incorporate feelings and experiences of non-human actors into their realm of reflection, and philosophy tries to expand into seeing the Other as not only human. How will it affect human societies and animals themselves?
The heart of this project is a 14-chapter artist book of 750 pages, author’s attempt to visualize the history of animals in military, police and in spy programs. The book uses archival & found footage as well as texts. SHIFTERS consist also of a 12-minute video essay, and a series of soundtracks created in participatory way during workshops.