ennemoffa – No Blog Title Set https://tapemodern.org Sat, 29 Jun 2019 18:03:09 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://i0.wp.com/tapemodern.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/cropped-favicon.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 ennemoffa – No Blog Title Set https://tapemodern.org 32 32 146610201 Introducing enne&moffa https://tapemodern.org/2019/06/29/introducing-ennemoffa/ Sat, 29 Jun 2019 15:21:57 +0000 http://tapemodern.org/?p=649
What the police officers told their headquarters in trying to figure out our actions: “No it’s not a protest…. Don’t worry, it’s just art.”

I know this may sound ridiculous, after so long and it is not even the person you know best who will be writing this post. Do not threat, the lovely Enne has something up her sleeve that will quite amaze you pretty soon! But for now, hello, my stranger friends! Although you may not know me through writing, I am the other half of Tape Modern the Moffa in enne&moffa.
Throughout these months of virtual inactivity on the media platforms of Tape Modern, we have been actually very busy with our dyad enne&moffa, who have been off gallivanting with various projects that have taken us as far as Asia and to the very convoluted and alienating world of social media chats. The two worlds that we recently had the privilege of being part of are a beautiful juxtaposition to each other; first we had the pettiness of a first world lifestyle, where people get in a fuss over ‘#firstworldproblems’ and the other, our trip to Bangladesh that put the realities of life’s struggles into perspective.
Late last year we started working on making happenings within Manchester. Happenings come from the ordinary, modified to reveal the absurdity of everyday life and placed back within an ordinary setting. The term was first created by the great Allan Kaprow in the 1960s, meaning something slightly different, but the concept feels just as relevant today so we created our own spin of it to appreciate the tradition. In a sense, we are reusing this form of art-making as a means to ask questions both from our performance practice and from the audience that has no restrictions on the context in which they see these happenings on the streets during their daily life routines. Happenings are also a form of experimentation and an active “sketchbook” for our performance practice and I believe they are born through the necessities of young energetic artists and from the more obscure and illogical parts of our brain.

One person actually accepted our offering of breakfast toast and ate it.

‘the cashier only allowed us 24 jars’ (Two bodies covered in jam, a camper battery, a power inverter, toaster and toast. 11 am busy street) was the happening that spurred the most interest from people and the media. I don’t want to sound naive or stereotypical, but it seems that in our artistic mindset of creation, we seem to often end up in some kind of enne&moffa bubble that seems to perceive the world quite differently to the rest of the world. This includes not necessarily realising how big an effect this happening might have. Neither one of us is big on social media but now we really got inducted on how quickly news can spread. The variety of people’s comments ranged from extremely funny, witty, interesting and insightful to critical, abusing and intolerant. Experiencing a social media audience and the police was a fascinating new way in which our work was viewed. Within the online comments, there were many puns and innuendos about jam tarts, but by far the funniest was the ‘don’t waste food’ -criticisers while we were sitting right in front of a multinational supermarket store. Other comments were instead, thought-provoking, such as comments on our gender, pointing out that if we had been males the reaction and the underlying meanings of the happening would be very different. ‘the cashier only allowed us 24 jars’ achieved exactly what we were hoping for with the happenings and more. We were allowed into thousands of viewers opinions on an action that could or could not be considered art depending on who you asked. Many of the more offensive comments were deleted by what I assume are Facebook filters, the news articles are out there in the virtual space with the remaining comments if you wish to read them. An impressive thing about this happening was perhaps the level of shock that people expressed online compared to the audience who was actually present on Market Street, they were happily interacting with us and filming us. This community is so normalised to the atrocities that are happening all over the world to people, children and the planet, yet a little nudity takes what happened on a sunny day in autumn on Market St. up to the 8th most read article on the BBC. I can only imagine this is because it is in reach to have a say about what happened on Market St. whilst most news and politics is quite alienating.
Between this time and heading to Bangladesh we had a lot of interest from different media organisations, a few interviews, a contact from a reality TV show and a lovely exhibition in Manchester that deserves a mention for I believe the performance we did was one of our best; ‘power’ and I’ll explain why later on.

Our trip to Bangladesh sprouted from my deep-rooted love for Asia, I have worked in a few countries in South East Asia and thought it was time to explore South Asia, this time bringing my other artist half with me. We were accepted into the Dhaka Live Art Biennale and the Chittagong Open Art Biennale in February with a work called ‘Memorandum of Understanding’ that contemplated various aspects of waiting and the 21 st century culture of waiting. There we also worked with an LGBTQ+ film production group ‘Epiphania’ which invited us to do a work for a private event in the Goethe Institute in support and education of the LGBTQ+ community of Bangladesh for a small selected group of more open-minded people. For them, we performed ‘tähteinvälinen’ (don’t worry I hardly can say the title either).

“Tähteinvälinen” is a Finnish word for the space between the stars.

I won’t go too much into the works we performed there, as you may know, we don’t believe in our works being explained but rather be the means for thinking, questioning and conversations. Working in Bangladesh was a great eye-opener, not only in terms of life conditions and attitudes but also on an artistic level, being there gave us the ability to almost put our works on a measuring scale of powerfulness, and by power, I intend more an emotional, empathetic and universal language power. I am not going to distinguish myself from the complainers and the pettiness of some aspects of the western culture, I am right in there with most of you. But working there, while it was maybe not the most successfully organised biennale that we could have hoped for, it made me realise that working within these kinds of countries forces your work to speak of a much deeper human condition than previously, because there, your work is trying to reach people who have the basic priorities of life to concentrate on firstly, a struggle that has less space to indulge egotistic visual nonsense. If your work can speak there, you have achieved a little more balance on that measuring scale. I mentioned earlier that before leaving, enne&moffa did a work called ‘power’, this was a deeply personal work but as we later found out, it was deeply personal to most. The work considered laughter, the darker, depersonalising and instrumental laughter that comes from a form of defence mechanisms. Many of our works were ostracised straight out, due to the nudity factor, by many people in Bangladesh. Both for cultural reasons and for the true fact that they do not see nudity with the frequency the west does, however ‘power’ received an amazing amount of consideration and conversation openers from the most unusual people, woman and men. This led me to believe that on this imaginary weighing machine, one of our works had managed to definitely pull up the heavy weight of the other side, representing the sensitivities of all, independently from their geographical position.

Now we are finally both back in the UK, I say finally because I took a long detour instead of returning with Enne after the biennales. We are now boosted for energy, experience and widened our perspectives of the realities in which the world is floating in. On a human level, I think what was striking about this trip, seen from an outsiders perspective of course, was the different philosophy of life there. There seemed to be more love, more happiness and more smiles shared in a community that has much greater differences and not even comparable sized problems and restrictions to ours. They are looking at the west as an ‘ideological’ capitalist utopia, although we perhaps have more to learn from them seeing the division that is sprouting within the western countries in the last years and hopefully they will find a more sustainable way to achieve the comforts we take for granted here.
Coming soon: As I mentioned, Enne has something quite exciting up her sleeve, that I believe will be shared with you fairly soon. In the meantime, together with Scaffold Gallery, Tape Modern has organised a public performance event in Manchester on the 11th of July, Allure of Sorts. You can find more info on this on the Facebook event page here and you are very welcome to join us for a day of performance art!

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Where to begin after such a time… https://tapemodern.org/2018/12/18/where-to-begin-after-such-a-time/ Tue, 18 Dec 2018 17:49:19 +0000 http://tapemodern.org/?p=569 In the last post I said we were trying to find a new building as soon as possible. Well, it didn’t happen soon.
The blue building, the one we last moved into, was not good for us. It was big and gorgeous yes, but we couldn’t get running water without a flood, and the electricity situation was a bit precarious to say the least. On top of that, some of the supporting columns were dangerously rotten. Without running water everything felt difficult and our kitchen situation was sad. One can be happy without such luxuries but then you kinda want to be in nature, camping or something. This felt too much like surviving. The roof was the most beautiful thing about the building. The view was absolutely gorgeous!

After a few weeks, somehow the drabness of the building settled on the people. This was not a good time for us, so we took some time to figure out how we look after one another and how does the crew function as a community. This lead to some restructuring and part of our crew ended up merging with the bigger group, myself and Tape Modern included.
We took a new building with our new crew and it is perfect for us! We could do with more space since there are so many of us, but it’s in a fairly good condition and we still have a lot of communal and workshop space. The building used to be a radio station and a club. Our studio is in the loading bay bar, take a look:

It is an excellent space! That’s the long-story-short version of how we ended up in this building with a different crew and what our new place is like, now to Art News!


We have a new van! It is a beautiful (in all honesty it’s a bit battered second hand, but it is what we need), 2012 long wheel base Ford Transit. I am currently making a conversion plan to transform it into a “mobile studio gear and temporary accommodation”- solution. Unfortunately I can’t start the building itself in this space, we can’t drive vans in, but the next building will be chosen with that in mind.
It’s not only the conversion we can’t do right now. We can’t really facilitate an exhibition in this building either, so unfortunately the next show will be pushed to next year.

It’s not just because of the building; enne&moffa has been very busy with happenings/performance and it has definitely taken a toll on Tape Modern’s exhibition program. But it seems there is a time and a place for everything.
We have had a fantastic autumn with showing work and we are looking forward to enne&moffa’s upcoming performances, like the Dhaka Live Art Biennale. (If you want to know more about the work of enne&moffa, the dyad behind Tape Modern, take a look at what we’ve been up to while the gallery has been downshifting: enne&moffa

Even though we didn’t do an autumn show, the gallery hasn’t been in complete silence! We had the pleasure to be part of peace of video art by Finnish artist Aimo Hyvärinen. Him and his team are making a video installation and then possibly a documentary about artists working in peculiar conditions and the storage, moving and handling of works of art. We had a lovely day at the studio with David Malcolm Chapman and one of his students Gui who came to film us in the current studio. Since we had just moved into our new building there was not all that much to show in terms of finished work, but since we were in the process of some inventory it turned out to be a good time for their shoot. We had a lovely time chatting about the conditions of other artists and art world professionals they had interviewed while making this work, shared past experiences, talked about lost work, funny mishaps in evictions and other squat stories. Enne&moffa and Tape Modern thank everyone involved and thank Aimo for having us to be part of the peace. We are very much looking forward to seeing the installation in Helsinki in the autumn 2019. We’ll keep you all posted on that.

On a more personal note, there has also been a major change in my life, which was letting go of my flat. I have been working and part-time living in occupied properties since June, but since I had mandatory time left on my contract I had to keep my flat till last month. It feels very different living here without having my apartment, but I don’t feel homeless. This is good.

From the midst of all this flux, I apologize for not delivering the autumn show we promised but not to worry; there will be a next show and it will be a good one! We have loads of plans with Tape Modern and we’ll let you in on them as soon as the time is right. Till the end of the year though, there won’t be much to report. I’ll try to coax a guest article from Sophia for the next entry. Maybe she can give a little inside scoop of what’s been going on with the happenings and what was up with all that jam. If this tickled your curiosity, stay tuned.

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