Turkish/Armenian border, 2015, 13:21min
In collaboration with Antonio Fernández Ros, Julien Devaux, Félix Blume and the teens of Kars.
Francis Alÿs’ “Silence of Ani” comprises a display of Armenian duduks (ancient double-reed woodwind flutes) and videos. The story takes place in Ani, an ancient Armenian city near the border with Turkey, a fitting setting, not least in this Istanbul Biennial, which takes place during the centenary of the Armenian Genocide. The video shows the breathtaking and uncanny scenery of the valley of Ani, while the wind whistles through like a birdcall. Then children playing duduks in a game of hide and seek, slowly turn into a ballad about the future and an elegy of the past. But as the children approach one another the mood can induce an emotional discharge, exposing some viewers’ traumas. But children get tired and fall asleep on what is left of Ani, as though it’s a call for us to wake them up, wake ourselves up, and rejoice in the spirit of togetherness and peace.
courtesy by Francis Alÿs
Contributed by
Francis Alÿs