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Escaped, Found a Hideout, Still on the Run (Animal News) at PLATO Ostrava

Artists: Yevgenia Belorusets, Cecilia Bengolea, Jan Bražina, András Cséfalvay, Annika Eriksson, Fuki, Kateřina Konvalinová & Jiří Žák, Eva Koťátková, Simona Kossak & Lech Wilczek, Zdeněk Košek, Denisa Langrová, Karolína Matušková & Lucie Zelmanová, Tuan Andrew Nguyen, Jim Nollman, Viktorie Pražáková, David Přílučík, Hana Puchová, Ruta Putramentaite, Tabita Rezaire, Jonáš Richter, Lívie Škutová, Adam Tománek & Martin Tománek, TV Páteř, Cecilia Vicuña, Aleksandra Waliszewska

Exhibition title: Escaped, Found a Hideout, Still on the Run (Animal News)

Curated by: Eva Koťátková, Jakub Adamec, Edith Jeřábková, Zuzana Šrámková

Venue: PLATO Ostrava, Ostrava, The Czech Republic

Date: October 12, 2023 – March 10, 2024

Photography: ©Martin Polák / all images copyright and courtesy of the artist and PLATO Ostrava

Note: Exhibition’s text by Edith Jeřábková is available here

Animals Open Own Newsroom in PLATO Gallery. New Exhibition Takes Them as Equal Fellow Inhabitants of City

If urban animals were able to tell us about their lives in Ostrava, what would we learn? And what if they did their own news reporting? The international exhibition Escaped, Found a Hideout, Still on the Run, with the subtitle Animal News, is the result of such a reflection (on view until 10 March 2024).

Almost exactly one year after the opening of the gallery in the refurbished city slaughterhouse, visitors strolling through the new exhibition can imagine what it would be like to coexist with animals in respect and without fear. Since the beginning of PLATO’s most challenging exhibition project to date, the exhibition concept authors Eva Kot’átková and Edith Jeřábková have been motivating visitors to leave behind the human viewpoint and perceive the exhibition through the perspective of an animal.

Immediately upon entering the Ostrava City Gallery of Contemporary Art, viewers realise that there is a difference. At the ticket office for the new exhibition, you will find the usual gallery merchandise such as T-shirts or bags but in addition, you will discover a display case with a set of crocheted animal outfits made by artist Lívie Škutová. The exhibition guards and guides are a fox, a hare, an owl, a raven, a pigeon, a bee and a roe deer. The videos of these animal avatars were created by artist András Cséfalvay and they were given voices by people from the PLATO team. The exhibition set-up, designed by Eva Koťátková in collaboration with Ruta Putramentaite, consists of giant animal bodies, scratching posts, kennels, dens, perches, hiding places and objects resembling a drooping tail or an oversized paw; they can be touched, stroked and cuddled. The artworks are installed in a way that makes it possible for them to be viewed by dogs, cats or ferrets – these are allowed access (on a leash) to all the exhibition rooms with works by the twenty-five participating artists.

The section of the former pork slaughterhouse transformed by the creative team into a newsroom bringing reports from public and hidden places in Ostrava, as well as more distant sites, has become the most dynamic area of the exhibition Escaped, Found a Hideout, Still on the Run. Twenty-three reports take the form of video, audio, drawings, photography and various combinations of these. Swedish artist Annika Eriksson has made a new film for the exhibition, presenting the view of seagulls, poultry and farm animals on life at the landfill and an abandoned farm in Ostrava. Painter Hana Puchová has made a cartoon reportage to convey the life of wild horses from the meadows in Kozmice near Ostrava. In a video reportage about pigeons in Ostrava, David Přílučík together with activist Fuki attempt to change people’s negative attitude towards pigeons, which has spread since pigeon airmail was replaced by technology. Jiří Žák is interested in the life of canaries helping miners in Ostrava coal mines. Tuan Andrew Nguyen uses an artistic double projection to document animal life in Vietnam, sometimes in a very raw and critical way. Another example shows the intimate and almost magical picture of the coexistence of Polish biologist and professor of forest sciences Simona Kossak (1943–2007) and her partner, natural scientist, artist, photographer and writer Lech Wilczek (1930–2018) with forest animals in the Dziedzinka settlement in the Białowieża Forest. Jim Nollman contributed a radio piece to the exhibition, composed in 1973 for Thanksgiving, in which he recorded himself singing children’s songs together with three hundred turkeys.

“We have conceived the exhibition as an environment consisting of different zones in which the animal is mixed with the human, the exhibition setup is mixed with applied objects, and the temporary, the changing is combined with the permanent. We envision the gallery as a big animal newsroom where exhibitions, reports and formats of shared learning and working take place side by side. The individual contributions and investigations intersect, bringing a plastic and ambiguous picture of animal actors and actresses,” say the authors of the concept, Eva Koťátková and Edith Jeřábková. Koťátková is involved in the project in three different ways: as the designer, curator and exhibiting artist.

Throughout the exhibition, the newsroom will be enlivened by meetings of the editorial team with the public. On 24 November, the first of three open all-day Editorial Meetings will bring a programme for children and school classes led by the exhibiting artists in the form of scratching and meowing classes or a workshop on the theme of the inner animal. In the evening public session, activist Fuki, for example, will open a pigeon hair salon inspired by these birds’ “hairstyles.”

Hana Puchová, Kozmice Meadows 16, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Simona Kossak & Lech Wilczek, From Lech Wilczek Archive, undated. Courtesy of Ida Matysek. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Simona Kossak & Lech Wilczek, From Lech Wilczek Archive, undated. Courtesy of Ida Matysek. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Cecilia Vicuña, Why Listen To Animals?, 2016/2023. Courtesy of the artist. Bees Being, 2021. Courtesy of Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI), New York. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Annika Eriksson, Checking the Stove, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

András Cséfalvay, Animal Custodians (Pigeon), 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák. Annika Eriksson, Checking the Stove, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Fuki, Pigeon Hair Salon, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák. Ruta Putramentaite, Home #2, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Fuki, Pigeon Hair Salon, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Yevgenia Belorusets, The Living Corner, From The Series Modern Animal          , 2019–2021. Courtesy of the artist and The Naked Room. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

András Cséfalvay, Animal Custodians (Owl, Hare), 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Eva Koťátková, Animal Newsroom, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák. András Cséfalvay, Animal Custodians (Deer), 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Eva Koťátková, Animal Newsroom, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Eva Koťátková, Animal Newsroom, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Animals (TV Páteř [Spine], Jílová Crew, dogs, spiders, cats, fish, trees), The Jílová Crew Discovers Animals, 2023. Courtesy of the artists. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Viktorie Pražáková, To Trust, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák. Eva Koťátková, Animal Newsroom, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

David Přílučík, Is it the flight or the fall what my friend is falling for?, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Denisa Langrová, Jana Chmelařová, Chimerx, 2023. Courtesy of the artists. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Ruta Putramentaite, Creature #18, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Jiří Žák, Kateřina Konvalinová, If you have a canary with a poor singing voice, it will never stop singing after this training video!, 2023. Courtesy of the artists. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

András Cséfalvay, Animal Custodians (Bee), 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Cecilia Bengolea, Bestiary, 2019. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

SUGAR BE MY CARAMEL (Karolína Matušková a Lucie Zelmanová), Soft, Soft, Soft, Hard as Fuck, 2023. Courtesy of the artists. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Tabita Rezaire, AMAKABA, Singing Bee Garden, 2021. Courtesy of AMAKABA. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Jan Bražina, I’ve Turned Into A Statue And It Makes Me Feel Depressed, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Aleksandra Waliszewska, Untitled, Undated. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Tuan Andrew Nguyen, My Ailing Beliefs Can Cure Your Wretched Desires, 2017. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Jonáš Richter, Dances of Coexistence, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Lívie Škutová, Hidden Places, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Martin Polák

Fuki, Pigeon Hair Salon, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Dominika Goralska

Lívie Škutová, Hidden Places, 2023. Courtesy of the artist. ©PLATO, photo: Dominika Goralska

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