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词条 Naeem Mohaiemen
释义

  1. Education

  2. Films

  3. Installations

  4. Writing

  5. Awards

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2011}}{{infobox person
|name=Naeem Mohaiemen
|image=
|caption=
|birth_date={{birth year and age|1969}}
|death_date=
|nationality=Bangladeshi, British
|occupation=Visual Artist, Filmmaker, Writer
|website = {{URL|www.shobak.org}}
}}Naeem Mohaiemen (born 1969) uses film, installation, and essays to research South Asia's postcolonial markers (1947, 1971). His projects on the 1970s revolutionary left explores the role of misrecognition within global solidarity.[1][2]

He is a 2014 Guggenheim Fellow and a 2018 Turner Prize nominee[3]. His work has been exhibited at the Venice, Lahore, Sharjah, Marrakech, Momentum (Nordic), Labin, and Eva (Ireland) Biennials, Mahmoud Darwish Museum, documenta 14, Kiran Nadar Museum, the Museum of Modern Art New York, Bangladesh Shilpakala Academy, British Museum, and Tate Britain.

Education

Mohaiemen graduated from Oberlin College in 1993 with a BA in Economics and Concentration in History. He was a member of the college's Board of Trustees (1994–1996). He is currently a Ph.D. candidate in Anthropology, with a Certificate in Comparative Literature,[4] at Columbia University.

Films

  • Tripoli Cancelled (2017), premiered at Documenta 14 in Athens. British premiere at the British Film Institute London Film Festival.[5] American premiere at Museum of Modern Art, New York.[6]
  • Two Meetings and a Funeral (2017), premiered at Documenta 14 in Kassel (which derives from The Young Man Was project). British premiere at Tate Britain as part of 2018 Turner Prize shortlist[7]. American premiere at Art Institute of Chicago.[8]
The Young Man Was
  • Part 4: Abu Ammar is Coming (2016) – examines a photograph of five men who were supposedly Bangladeshi and affiliated with the Palestinian Liberation Organisation in the early 1980s, questioning how contemporary relations between the involved nations might be reshaped.[9]
  • Part 3: Last Man in Dhaka Central (2015) – premiered at the 56th Venice Biennale as part of "All The World's Futures" curated by Okwui Enwezor.[10]
  • Part 2: Afsan's Long Day (2014) – premiered at the Museum of Modern Art in New York as part of "Doc Fortnight".[11] It had a festival premiere at Oberhausen[12] and a British premiere at the British Film Institute London Film Festival.[5]
  • Part 1: United Red Army (2011)[13] – about Japan Airlines Flight 472 (1977) Hijacking in Dhaka, premiered at Sharjah Biennial, Hot Docs,[14] and International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam (IDFA),[15] has shown at The New Museum[16] and is in the permanent collection of the Tate Modern.[17][18]
Prisoners of Shothik Itihash
  • Der Weisse Engel (2008)
  • Rankin Street 1953 (2009)

Visible Collective: Disappeared in America (2002–2006)

  • Patriot Story (2004, with Jawad Metni)
  • Fear of Flying (2005, with Anjali Malhotra)
  • Lingering: Twenty (2005, with Sehban Zaidi)
  • Invisible Man (2006)
  • White Teeth (2011)

Installations

Mohaiemen co-founded Visible Collective,[19] a collective of New York-based artists and lawyers investigating security panic. Visible's work exhibited internationally, including the 2006 Whitney Biennial of American Art ("Wrong Gallery" room)[20] and L'institut des cultures d'Islam in Paris.[21]

His solo projects have looked at military coups ("My Mobile Weighs A Ton" at Dhaka Gallery Chitrak),[22] surveillance ("Otondro Prohori, Guarding Who?", Chobi Mela V at Bangladesh Shilpakala Academy),[23] Indian partition ("Kazi in Nomansland" at Dubai Third Line),[24] architectural nationalism ("Penn Station Kills Me" at Exit Art),[25] and dueling leftist and Islamist politics ("Live True Life or Die Trying" at Cue Art Foundation, New York).[26] Chapters from his ongoing research on the 1970s ultra left have shown at the Pavilion (Bucharest),[27] New Museum (New York),[28] Frieze Art Fair (London),[29] and MUAC Mexico City.[30]

Writing

Mohaiemen is author of Prisoners of Shothik Itihash.[31] He edited the anthologies Between Ashes and Hope: Chittagong Hill Tracts in the blind spot of Bangladesh nationalism,[32] Collectives in atomised time,[33] and System Error: War is a force that gives us meaning.[34]

He was the primary critic of Dead Reckoning, a book by Sarmila Bose on the 1971 war of Bangladesh. His response was cited by the BBC[35] and published in Economic & Political Weekly ("Waiting for a real reckoning on 1971").[36] Bose responded to his remarks in the same periodical, followed by a rebuttal from Mohaiemen.[37]

Essays on Bangladesh history include"Muktijuddho: Polyphony of the Ocean",[38] "Accelerated Media and the 1971 Genocide",[39] "Musee Guimet as Proxy Fight",[40] "Mujtaba Ali: Amphibian Man" (The Rest of Now, Rana Dasgupta ed.),[41] "Mujib Coat" (Bidoun journal),[42] and "Everybody wants to be Singapore" (Carlos Motta’s The Good Life).[43] He wrote the chapter on religious and ethnic minorities in the Ain o Salish Kendro Annual Report for Bangladesh.[44]

Essays on diaspora include "Known unknowns of the class war" (Margins, Asian American Writers Workshop),[45]"The skin I'm in: Afro-Bengali solidarity and possible futures" (Margins, Asian American Writers Workshop),[46] "Beirut, Silver Porsche Illusion" (Men of the Global South, Zed Books),[47] "Why Mahmud Can’t Be a Pilot" (Nobody Passes: Rejecting the rules of Gender and Conformity, Seal Press),[48] and "No Exit" (Asian Superhero Comics, New Press).[49]

Essays on culture include "Islamic Roots of HipHop" (Sound Unbound, MIT Press; Runner Up for Villem Flusser Theory Award),[50] "Adman blues become artist liberation" (Indian Highway, curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist)[51] and "At the coed dance " (Art Lies: Death of the Curator).[52]

Awards

  • 2014: Guggenheim Fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation[53]
  • 2018: Turner Prize nominee[54][55]

References

1. ^[https://www.ica.art/whats-on/artists-film-club-naeem-mohaiemen-united-red-army-young-man-was-part-i-qa ICA Film Club]
2. ^Documenta 14
3. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/exhibition/turner-prize-2018/naeem-mohaiemen|title=Naeem Mohaiemen|last=Tate|website=Tate|language=en-GB|access-date=2019-01-14}}
4. ^Columbia University: Our Graduate Students
5. ^[https://whatson.bfi.org.uk/lff/Online/default.asp?BOparam::WScontent::loadArticle::permalink=materialevidenceamajorminorhistory] BFI London Film festival: Material Evidence
6. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/3896|title=Naeem Mohaiemen: There Is No Last Man|website=The Museum of Modern Art|language=en|access-date=2019-01-14}}
7. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/exhibition/turner-prize-2018|title=Turner Prize 2018 – Exhibition at Tate Britain|last=Tate|website=Tate|language=en-GB|access-date=2019-01-14}}
8. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.artic.edu/exhibitions/9059/naeem-mohaiemen-two-meetings-and-a-funeral|title=Naeem Mohaiemen: Two Meetings and a Funeral|website=The Art Institute of Chicago|language=en|access-date=2019-01-14}}
9. ^{{Cite web|url=https://ocula.com/artists/naeem-mohaiemen/|title=Naeem Mohaiemen {{!}} Artworks, Exhibitions, Profile & Content|date=2019-03-04|website=ocula.com|language=en|access-date=2019-03-04}}
10. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.labiennale.org/en/art/exhibition/artists/|title=Archived copy|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402121129/http://www.labiennale.org/en/art/exhibition/artists/|archivedate=2 April 2015|deadurl=yes|accessdate=18 April 2015|df=dmy-all}} Venice Biennial Artist List
11. ^  MOMA: Doc Fortnight. Retrieved on 18 March 2015.
12. ^  Oberhausen In Competition
13. ^Guy Mannes-Abbott, Sharjah Art Foundation, 18.03.2011. Sharjahart.org (18 March 2011). Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
14. ^  Hot Docs. Retrieved on 9 December 2012.
15. ^  IDFA Website. Retrieved on 9 December 2012.
16. ^  New Museum Digital Archive. Retrieved on 9 December 2012.
17. ^[https://vimeo.com/32672952] In conversation with Bernadette Buckley. Retrieved on 9 December 2012.
18. ^  Out of the Archive, London Consortium at Tate Modern. Retrieved on 9 December 2012.
19. ^Press. Disappeared In America. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
20. ^"Down by Law", curated by Wrong Gallery. Whitney.org. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
21. ^Collectif Visible – Institut des Cultures d'Islam. Institut-cultures-Islam.org. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
22. ^Nader Rahman, "Blurred pictures and sharp words", Star Weekend Magazine, 29 August 2008. Thedailystar.net (29 August 2008). Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
23. ^Jamil Mahmud, "Naeem Mohaiemen takes a look at fear mongering", The Daily Star, 20 February 2009. Thedailystar.net (20 February 2009). Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
24. ^Beena Sarwar, "Artists Take On Post-Colonial Partitions", IPS, 6 February 2009. Ipsnews.net (6 February 2009). Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
25. ^History | 2007. Exit Art. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
26. ^Brian Boucher, Art in America, 1/15/2010. Artinamericamagazine.com. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
27. ^"What was socialism, and what comes next?", Pavilion, #10–11. (PDF) . Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
28. ^ArtCat Zine – Events – Naeem Mohaiemen at New Museum. Zine.artcat.com (27 January 2009). Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
29. ^"Retour à Frieze", Le Monde, 26 October 2010. Lunettesrouges.blog.lemonde.fr (26 October 2010). Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
30. ^{{es icon}} Concepción Moren, "arte, ficciones, política y violencia", El Economista, 20 June 2011. Eleconomista.com.mx (30 June 2011). Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
31. ^[https://www.amazon.com/Prisoners-Shothik-Itihash-Naeem-Mohaiemen/dp/385562030X/ Prisoners of Shothik Itihash on Amazon]
32. ^Samya Kullab, "Championing Pahari Rights", Star Weekend Magazine, 17 September 2010. Thedailystar.net (17 September 2010). Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
33. ^Collectives in Atomised Time, with Doug Ashford, Idensitat Press. Idensitat.net. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
34. ^[https://www.amazon.com/dp/8836608426 System Error, with Lorenzo Fusi, Silvana Press]
35. ^[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-13417170 Alastair Lawson, "Controversial book accuses Bengalis of 1971 war crimes", BBC, 16 June 2011]
36. ^Economic & Political Weekly, Vol 46 No. 36, 3 September 2011 {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120425051119/http://www.bricklanecircle.org/uploads/Flying_Blind.pdf |date=25 April 2012 }}
37. ^Sarmila Bose, "Dead Reckoning: A Response". Economic & Political Weekly, Vol 46 No. 53, 31 December 2011 {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130723022728/http://www.bricklanecircle.org/uploads/Bose_and_Naeem.pdf |date=23 July 2013 }}
38. ^ 
39. ^Economic & Political Weekly, Vol 43 No. 04, 26 January 2008
40. ^[https://www.amazon.com/dp/1933347430 Playing by the Rules: Alternative Thinking/ Alternative Spaces (9781933347431): Robert Atkins, Julie Ault, Rene Block, Winslow Burleson, Biljana Ciric, Renaud Ego, Sofija Grandakovska, Boris Groys, Marina Grzinic, Pablo Helguera, Naeem Mohaiemen, Raphael Rubinstein, Irene Tsatsos, Steven Rand, Heather Kouris: Books]. Amazon.com. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
41. ^Silvana Editoriale. Silvanaeditoriale.it. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
42. ^Bidoun #14
43. ^[https://www.amazon.com/dp/1934890189 Carlos Motta: The Good Life: Art in General New Commissions Program Book Series Vol. XVIII (9781934890189): Eva Diaz, Anne J Barlow, Stamatina Gregory: Books. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.]
44. ^http://www.askbd.org/hr_report2008/15_Religious.pdf
45. ^[aaww.org/known-unknowns Asian American Writers Workshop]. Retrieved on 18 March 2015.
46. ^Margins/ Asian American Writers Workshop. Retrieved on 6 March 2013.
47. ^[https://www.amazon.com/dp/1842775138 Men of the Global South: A Reader (Global Masculinities) (9781842775134): Adam Jones: Books]. Amazon.com. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
48. ^[https://www.amazon.com/dp/1580051847 Nobody Passes: Rejecting the Rules of Gender and Conformity (9781580051842): Matt Bernstein Sycamore: Books]. Amazon.com. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
49. ^[https://www.amazon.com/dp/159558398X Secret Identities: The Asian American Superhero Anthology (9781595583987): Jeff Yang, Parry Shen, Keith Chow, Jerry Ma: Books]. Amazon.com. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
50. ^Sound Unbound – Table of Contents – The MIT Press {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110805011730/http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=11401&mode=toc |date=5 August 2011 }}. Mitpress.mit.edu (31 May 2008). Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
51. ^Indian Highway Catalogue SOLD OUT Serpentine Gallery. Retrieved on 12 November 2011.
52. ^A Contemporary Art Quarterly
53. ^2014 Guggenheim Fellows- Creative Arts-Film-Video
54. ^[https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/exhibition/turner-prize-2018/naeem-mohaiemen 2018 Turner Prize Nominees]
55. ^{{cite news|first1=Adrian|last1=Searle|accessdate=2018-12-05|title=Turner prize 2018 review – no painting or sculpture, but the best lineup for years|url=https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2018/sep/24/turner-prize-2018-review-tate-britain-naeem-mohaiemen-luke-willis-thompson-forensic-architecture-charlotte-prodger|newspaper=The Guardian|date=24 September 2018|issn=0261-3077|via=www.theguardian.com}}

External links

  • {{Official website|www.shobak.org}}
  • [https://columbia.academia.edu/mohaiemen Academia]
{{Artists of Bangladesh}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Mohaiemen, Naeem}}

8 : 1969 births|Living people|Bangladeshi male writers|Bangladeshi artists|Bangladeshi film directors|Bangladeshi academics|Oberlin College alumni|Columbia University alumni

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