One and the Many

Salt Ankara

March 2 – April 4, 2017

10jumbo1966 Uluslarası Filibe Fuarı’ndan altın madalyayla dönen Jumbo’nun İstanbul, Çemberlitaş’taki üretim tesisinde kutlama, İstanbul, 1966
Jumbo Arşivi
Celebration for the gold medal won at the International Plovdiv Fair at Jumbo production facility in Çemberlitaş, Istanbul, 1966
Jumbo Archive
Çankaya Municipality Contemporary Arts Center, Ankara

An outcome of SALT’s long-term research on Turkey in 1980s, the exhibition One and the Many opens with expanded content at Contemporary Arts Center (ÇSM) in Ankara in collaboration with Çankaya Municipality, following its initial presentation at SALT Galata in Istanbul.

One and the Many is a research-based exhibition that looks into the production and distribution of things. It tackles the period 1955-95 in Turkey, by following the material results of gradual industrialization as well as its contingent infrastructural disposals. The exhibition frames the topic primarily via the stories of selected artifacts common to the 80s, a period when industrial products met a voluminous consumer market for the first time.

Following a shift in the mid-80s from a mixed to a liberal economy, for the first time ever producers in Turkey could trade in foreign currencies without ultimate supervision by the state. This economic novelty complemented the infrastructure of industrialization, which had been championed since the 50s by the private sector. It allowed the state to create a plan to develop local industries with the aim of providing for foreign customers and competing internationally. The booming economy translated itself into a variety of goods, forming a visibly and materially globalized Turkey, clustered in the country’s larger cities.

Turkey’s urban centers became the key places of transition, providing simultaneously, hand and machine made, local and global brands, comfortable and provident lifestyle choices. Due to the growing accessibility of global communication networks, international influences of the time were readily present. The immediate images of abundance and prosperity soon hatched into promises of upgraded lifestyles. Although this was interpreted as offering a plurality of opportunities, it was in fact more specifically understood as an expression of dichotomies in social status. Defining studies and commentaries of the period have extensively dealt with this phenomenon.
22tofas70ler70s Tofaş, Murat 124, 1970’ler
Tofaş Arşivi
Tofaş, Murat 124, 1970s
Tofaş Archive

One and the Many traces a timeline through the period’s material culture, setting it in relation to how it was made accessible to the public gaze. By bringing together artifacts and stories from a wide variety of industries — including automotive, white goods, furniture, toy, stationery, pret-a-porter, textile, food and beverage, tableware, cutlery, and hygiene — the exhibition informs consumers of less known narratives and allows them to add information that will expand the research. It also bridges the period’s ripple effects on cultural economy by additionally introducing less common scenes from the practices of contemporary art and fashion: moments that expose the nurturing of a particular fascination with the concept of unique products. Specially selected from the Great Exhibition 2 in Ankara and Istanbul, 1990, for the ÇSM presentation, Nur Koçak’s works Vitrinler III and Vitrinler IV (1990) blend the industrial with an air of uniqueness. Bedri Baykam’s work titled This has been done before (1987), on the other hand, constitutes a criticism of the perception that creativity could only have origins in the West, a prolific topic in modern art debates of the period.

The research and narrative of One and the Many are structured around the notion of genuine copies. Questioning our standard expectation of ingenuity versus the opportunity of building atop each other’s ideas, the exhibition suggests a fresh perspective on the history of production in Turkey. From the early-day assembly industry, to today’s abundant copyright infringing replicas, copies have been scrutinized from both economic and intellectual viewpoints. One and the Many invites users to value things per se, recognize the ingenuity prompted by circumstances and appreciate copying as a method of learning.
4fatos80ler80s Fatoş Oyuncakları’nın İstanbul, Topkapı’daki üretim tesisi, 1980’ler
Fatoş İnhan Arşivi
Fatoş Toys production facility in Topkapı, Istanbul, 1980s
Fatoş İnhan Archive

A series of public programs including a talk and a workshop, as well as film screenings and exhibition tours, will take place during the exhibition. The audience is also invited to produce their own genuine copies on the central copy-table, which features drawings of domestic products from the period. The research conducted by participating students and academics in “One and the Many Workshop” at SALT Galata will be expanded with a new workshop in Ankara.


One and the Many was produced with rich contributions from collaborating industries, professionals, consultants, academics and students who provided various ideas, content and narrations.

Research team
Meriç Öner, Dilek Himam, İlhan Ozan, Cem Kaya, Ayşe Coşkun Orlandi, Asya Ece Uzmay, Emirhan Altuner, Merve Dokumacı, Özüm Yelkencioğlu.

Contributors
Ahmet Altekin, Atilla Argat, Hraç Aslanyan, Yahşi Baraz, Davut Beresi, Muzaffer Evci, Başak Gürsoy, Ali İhsan İlkbahar, Fatoş İnhan, Hüsnü Karagözoğlu, Sami Kariyo, Yıldırım Kaymal, Aytaç Kot, Jan Nahum, Suphi Öztaş, Adil Öztoprak, Baron von Plastik, Nalan Sakızlı, Hasan Subaşı, Arman Suciyan, Turgay Yıldız, Mustafa Kerem Yüksel.

Adel; Arçelik; Bingo; Dalin; Evyap; Fatoş Toys; Ford Otosan; Gorbon Tiles; Hotiç; İGS; İnci Deri; Istanbul Toy Museum; Izmir University of Economics, Faculty of Fine Arts and Design; Jumbo; Kelebek; Migros; Mudo; Oyak-Renault; Paşabahçe; Penti; Pınar; SEK; Selpak; TAMEK; Tofaş; Tofaş Bursa Anatolian Cars and Carriages Museum; Ülker; Vakko.


This exhibition is part of the five-year program The Uses of Art – The Legacy of 1848 and 1989, organized by L’Internationale.



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