Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament) at ArtNoble Gallery

Artists: Agnese Barbarani, Arijit Bhattacharyya, Paolo Ciregia, Critical Art Ensemble, Gaia De Megni, Thiago Dezan, Shadi Harouni, Délio Jasse, Infinite, Zazzaro Otto, Stefano Serretta, Francesco Vullo

Exhibition title: Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament)

Curated by: Arnold Braho with Stefano De Gregori

Venue: ArtNoble Gallery, Milan, Italy

Date: June 27 – September 27, 2024

Photography: all images copyright and courtesy of the artists and ArtNoble Gallery, Milan

Note: Exhibition catalogue is available here. Text by Sa.turn platform is available here

ArtNoble Gallery is pleased to present Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), a project by Sa.turn. The exhibition identifies the activation of disarmament processes as the primary urgency of contemporary society, in a historical period where the normalization of violence, the increase in armed conflicts, and the rapid expansion of the global arms market and war industries are at the center of public debate. According to SIPRI (Stockholm International Peace Research Institute), between 2014-18 and 2019-23, European states nearly doubled their arms imports (+94%).

The exhibition Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament) from its title to its display, aims to offer a critical perspective starting from the internalization of the definition of the theater of war (theater of operations), which is the geographical area where military strategy operations are conducted. The goal is to propose in a literally incisive way, processes and artistic works capable of offering new strategies for sabotaging violence through a repertoire of potential devices and acts. This sabotage aims to evade, render dysfunctional, disarm, but also propose strategies of escape, desertion, and “drop out” to weaken the war paradigm from the ground up.

Although there is a wide range of knowledge collected in dictionaries, glossaries, manuals, and cataloging structures that encompasses a vast series of violence devices, the concept of “weapon” here assumes a significantly broader meaning than commonly believed, reappearing in the form of devices, but also symbolic instruments and structures such as “state,” “flag,” and “nation.”

Starting from these considerations, Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament) attempts to offer techniques and tactics of disarmament, extending their practical limits. Disarming then means merely exempting the subject from using the weapon device, or is it necessary to challenge those economic macrosystems that contribute to fueling a death market for profit? Can desertion be a strategy of sabotage? Finally, disarmament by whom and in favor of what?

Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Theater of Dis-Operations (Act I. Disarmament), 2024, exhibition view, ArtNoble Gallery, Milan
Francesco Vullo, Flag (2024), Lame in acciaio di recupero, asta in ferro 236 x 145 cm
Francesco Vullo, Flag (2024), Lame in acciaio di recupero, asta in ferro 236 x 145 cm
Paolo Ciregia, (CTS) “capture the shield” (2024), Scudo originale polizia ucraina, adesivi rivoluzionari ucraini 100 x 58 x 10 cm
Paolo Ciregia, Pugni (2019), Stampa Inkjet Fine Art su Hahnemuhle Photo Rag Matt Baryta, 150 x 100 x 5 cm
Critical Art Ensemble, Marching Plague (2005-2007) Video, 16’
Arijit Bhattacharyya, The Blue Tiger (2024), Maschera, costumi, juta e manichino 230 x 130 x 50 cm
Infinite, PARAPHRASES (2021-ongoing) Audiovisual Piracy Videos, Different Ratios 7’33’’
Agnese Barbarani, Oggetti di lotta (2024), Stampa Inkjet print su carta Baryta Matte 41.3 x 31.5 cm
Agnese Barbarani, Oggetti di lotta (2024), Stampa Inkjet print su carta Baryta Matte 41.3 x 31.5 cm
Agnese Barbarani, Oggetti di lotta (2024) Stampa Inkjet print su 41.3 x 31.5 cm
Agnese Barbarani, Oggetti di lotta (2024) Stampa Inkjet print su 41.3 x 31.5 cm
Agnese Barbarani, Oggetti di lotta (2024) Stampa Inkjet print su 41.3 x 31.5 cm
Agnese Barbarani, Oggetti di lotta (2024) Stampa Inkjet print su 41.3 x 31.5 cm
Agnese Barbarani, Oggetti di lotta (2024) Stampa Inkjet print su 41.3 x 31.5 cm
Agnese Barbarani, Oggetti di lotta (2024) Stampa Inkjet print su 41.3 x 31.5 cm
Thiago Dezan, Untitled (2024), Stampa Inkjet FineArt 43 x 63 x 4 cm
Délio Jasse, Untitled (2024), Slide proiezione fissa Dimensione variabile
Délio Jasse, Untitled (2024), Slide proiezione fissa Dimensione variabile
Délio Jasse, Francobollo 1975 (2024) Serigrafia su carta, 70 x 100 cm
Gaia De Megni, Afelio (solo) (2024), Still video, stampa Inkjet su carta cotone, 100 x 57 cm. Performer: Marta Tabacco. Coreographer: Gloria Dorli- guzzo. Assistant director: Giorgia La Pegna. DOP: Gabriele Spallino. Project Manager: Elena Castiglia
Shadi Harouni, Last Day of the Bombardments (2007-2017), Fotografia e testo su carta, 40 x 30 cm
Stefano Serretta, Sutra 69 – 79 (Scontri tra autonomi e polizia, 14 maggio 1977, via De Amicis, Milano) (2022), Acrilico, pantone e inchiostro su carta, 35 x 50 cm
Stefano Serretta, Sutra 69 – 79 (Copertina Rosso numero 24,, aprile 1976, “Operai contro la Metropoli” (2022), Acrilico su carta, 35 x 50 cm
Stefano Serretta, Sutra 69 – 79 (Copertina A-Traverso, ottobre 1976, “Fuori tutti i Compagni dalle Prigioni”, sul processo per i fatti di Argelato) (2022) Acrilico su carta, 35 x 50 cm
Stefano Serretta, Sutra 69 – 79 (Barricate durante la Rivolta di San Basilio, Roma, 1974) (2022), Pantone e inchiostro su carta, 35 x 50 cm
Infinite, Untitled (2024) Idropittura su tela 201 x 135 cm
Zazzaro Otto, Per fare un tavolo ci vuole la guerra (2024), Tecnica mista, 191 x 175 x 80 cm
Zazzaro Otto, Per fare un tavolo ci vuole la guerra (2024), Tecnica mista, 191 x 175 x 80 cm
Zazzaro Otto, Il problema del colore del bagno rispettando il fengshui (pagina 13) (2024) Collage, 41 x 31.5 cm
Shadi Harouni, I Dream the Mountain is Still Whole (2017) HD Video, 17’06’’
Zazzaro Otto, KRIEG IN PRENZLAUERBERG (2013) Tecnica mista, 100 x 335 x 123 cm