Istanbul

Please install Flash® and turn on Javascript.

London
Lisbon
Berlin
Copenhagen
Paris
Barcelona
Amsterdam
Istanbul
Stockholm
New York
Rome
Prague
more cities...
 
en by Mashup Culture /  Jacob Fuglsang, 30. Apr 2008


above image of Bosphorus Bridge, connecting East to West by lightyear105's

Once again Miklagaard (Istanbul) is raising to take on the position as the Great City of Europe. It was the ultimate city for the Vikings and the heart of the Ottoman Empire back in the days. In 2010 Istanbul's status as The European Capital of Culture will once again make it THE city to visit, for people from all over the world. It has the energy of New York, the weather of Barcelona and the history of Rome...spiced up with a pinch of The Middle East.

The status of European Capital of Culture is this year in Liverpool (UK) and Stavanger in Norway. Next year it will be Linz and Vilnius, and in 2010 Istanbul (but also Essen, Germany and Pécs, Hungary).

The European Capital of Culture status will be of great importance for Istanbul, at this point in time. The Cultural Attaché's of Turkey all over the world are doing a great job in promoting this fact. To be honest, I would never have know that Liverpool, Stavanger, Linz, Essen and Vilnius has or will have this status. However, the PR campaign for Istanbul is worldwide and hard to miss. The above image is from the main AD spot in Copenhagen on the middle of the walking street Strøget and there is another one at Rådhuspladsen (The Time Square of Copenhagen).

The above bus was seen in New York and that same banner is hung all over the city. There is no doubt that Istanbul is a relevant destination for New Yorkers, as it is the city in the world that comes closest to the same kind of intense energy. Istanbul is also a city that never sleeps and the nightlife can be compared to most international metropoles.

With Turkey slowly on it's way into The European Community, it will be a great way for the world to re-discover Istanbul and the huge treasures of culture and lovely people the country has to offer.

As a matter af fact, Turkey is the most visited country by the Danes as the South West coast of Turkey is the closest (and cheapest way) to Paradise one can go with an airplane.

Read more about Turkey, Istanbul and Istanbul as the European Capital of Culture:

http://www.goturkey.com/

http://www.iksv.org/english/

http://www.istanbul2010.org

Related posts:

Wonders of the World

Istanbul According to Pistol Pete

Why Istanbul?

Published by
en by Mashup Culture /  Jacob Fuglsang, 13. Mar 2008

Above image by Børre Sæthres exhibition: "From Someone Who Nearly Died But Survived" at Brandt's Photographic Museum in Odense. The same town HC Andersen heard his first fairy tale.
 

In Greek mythology, Pegasus is the winged horse that was fathered by Poseidon with Medusa. When her head was cut of by the Greek hero Perseus, the horse sprang forth from her pregnant body. His galloping created the well Hippocrene on the Helicon (a mountain in Boeotia).

When the horse was drinking from the well Pirene on the Acrocotinth, Bellerophon's fortress, the Corinthian hero was able to capture the horse by using a golden bridle, a gift from Athena. The gods then gave him Pegasus for killing the monster Chimera but when he attempted to mount the horse it threw him off and rose to the heavens, where it became a constellation (north of the ecliptic).

Above image from the ceiling of Grand Central Station, New York. It is said the artists made it reversed so it could be better seen from the God's perspective.  

α Peg (Markab), β Peg, and γ Peg, together with α Andromedae (Alpheratz or Sirrah) form the large asterism known as the Square of Pegasus. 51 Pegasi, a star in this constellation, is the first Sun-like star known to have an extrasolar planet. IK Pegasi is the nearest supernova candidate. Spectroscopic analysis of HD 209458 b, an extrasolar planet in this constellation has provided the first evidence of atmospheric water vapour beyond the solar system.

 

 It should be no secret that Turkish Pegasus Airlines has a large fleet of airplanes with Pegasus on the tail. Pegasus Airlines was established in 1990 as a joint venture between Aer Lingus, Silkar Yatirim and Net Holding, with its head office located in Istanbul. Since its first commercial flight in May 1990, the airline has grown from a fleet of two aircraft, to a fleet of 17, which includes the very latest new generation Boeing 737/800s. In 18 successful years, Pegasus Airlines has become a leading charter airline in Turkey. With a fleet of 12 Boeing 737-800, 2 Boeing 737-400, and 3 Boeing 737-500, the airline operates charter flights, from Turkey to 99 destinations in 17 countries. Pegasus Airlines also provides wet lease to airlines in need of extra capacity. It also has very inexpensive flights between Copenhagen and Istanbul.

 

It is said that the first attemt of human flight was from the Galata Tower in Istanbul, and the gentleman who put on his wings and jumped out from the tower had a nice flight down over the rooftops and Bosphorus and felt he was alive.


above image of Sabiha & Atatürk from the Turkish Air Forces

The second international airport of Istanbul on the Asian side, is the Sabiha Gökçen International Airport, and is where Pegasus Airlines lands when they fly to Istanbul. Sabiha Gökçen (March 22, 1913, BursaMarch 22, 2001, Ankara) was the first Turkish female aviator and the first female combat pilot in the world. She was one of the eight adopted children of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.

 

Just after the introduction of the surname act (June 21, 1934), Atatürk gave her the family name Gökçen on December 19, the same year. Gök means sky in Turkish and Gökçen means 'belonging or relating to the sky'. However, she was not an aviator at the date and it was only six months later that Sabiha developed a passion for flying.


Atatürk attached great importance to aviation and for that purpose, oversaw the foundation of the Turkish Aeronautical Association in 1925. He took Sabiha along with him to the opening ceremony of Türkkuşu (Turkishbird) Flight School on May 5, 1935. During the airshow of gliders and parachutists invited from foreign countries, she got very excited. As Atatürk asked her whether she would also want to become a skydiver, she nodded "yes indeed, I am ready right now".
 

Published by
en by Mashup Culture /  Jacob Fuglsang, 9. Mar 2008

 

Text from: www.wonderclub.com 

For centuries it stood at the heart of two of the world's great religions: To Christians it was Hagia Sophia, Church of the Holy Wisdom, mother church of the Orthodox faith and of the thousand-year-old Byzantine Empire. To Muslims, it became Ayasofya Camii, Mosque of Holy Wisdom and jewel of Istanbul. But to people of all faiths, it was, in the words of sixth-century historian Procopius, a "spectacle of marvellous beauty, overwhelming to those who know it by hearsay altogether incredible. For it soars to a height to match the sky...stands on high and looks down on the remainder of the city...."

In A.D. 326, Constantinople was laid out on the shores of the Bosporus by Emperor Constantine. Thirty years later, his successor built its first great church - eventually called Hagia Sophia - but it stood only 172 years before rioting crowds burned it to the ground. This event, in 532, was perhaps auspicious: It occurred during the reign of Justinian the Builder, who would give the world the sublime "tent of the heavens" that still stands and in whose creation "God has surely taken part."

Reconstruction started just 39 days after the destruction of the original church. The gigantic structure was modeled loosely on the Roman Pantheon. Measuring 220 feet by 250 feet along its main floor, it was laid out as a rectangle, at whose center was a square. Soaring 180 feet above the square was a dome supported by four massive pendentives on equally massive piers. At the east and west ends of the dome square were two have domes serving as the apse and entrance bay. The engineering feat was even more incredible considering that only brick, mortar, and stone were used. Although the earlier Romans knew how to make concrete, these Eastern builders did not.

Justinian embellished the interior with riches. Four acres of gold mosaics shimmered from the ceiling, and multicolored marble gleamed from the floors, columns, and wall panels.

Less than six years after work on it began, Justinian's monument to Christendom was completed. In A.D. 558 much of it collapsed due to the many earthquakes in the region. Because the initial architects, Anthemius and Isodorus, were no longer living, the latter's nephew, Isidorus the Younger, was given the task of rebuilding. This time it lasted 400 more years before collapsing again, and being again rebuilt.

In 1204, knoghts of the Fourth Crusade marched on the Byzantine Empire's capital city, stripping it and Hagia Sophia so remorselessly that a chronicler called it the most awesome plunder "since the creation of the world."

 

When Rome's hegemony ended 57 years later, the Church of the Holy Wisdom was devoid of glittering wealth. Bulky buttresses were built to shore it up, but its days of glory, and those of Constantinople, were drawing to a close. In 1453, Sultan Mohammed II massed the Ottoman army in front of the city. After a 53-day siege, the Byzantine Empire's great capital capitulated, and the conqueror marched into town and directly to Hagia Sophia. His ulama recited a Muslim prayer, and the sultan declared Eastern Christianity's cornerstone a mosque.

For almost 500 years it remained such, its mosaics whitewashed to hide the "idolatrous" figures of humans. Koranic inscriptions were placed in the four corners beneath the dome; four minarets were erected at the corners of the exterior perimeter; a gilded bronze crescent replaced the large metal cross crowning the basilica.

 

While the changes offended Christians, the Mosque of Holy Wisdom enjoyed a place of high regard among devotees of Islam. In the 20th century, Turkish leader Kemal Ataturk viewed the structure as a unifying symbol for East and West. He closed the mosque in 1932, uncovered its medeival mosaics, and reopened Hagia Sophia as a museum in 1934. Nearly 15 centuries after Justinian, it stands as a monument to both human and divine wisdom.

images by:
www.tumaygunaydin.com

www.jayfugmik.com 

 

Published by
en by Bitchslap /  Bitchslap, 3. Feb 2008

 

Words and Photography by Peter Stanners
and flyers & snapshots by various artists


We landed in Istanbul at sunrise. The air was dry and warm and the day looked set to be a scorcher; such a far cry from the pre-autumnal drizzle that we'd left behind in Copenhagen. We were herded through passport control, the Scandinavians breezing through to the baggage terminal. And then there was me. A cursory flick through my British passport, "Visa? No Visa". What? Huh? But surely I'm European, we're all europ... Then it dawns on me. I'm not in Europe anymore.

I get escorted to a little plexiglass office around the corner where I get asked for £20, $20 or 20 for my admittance, which I don't have, so I get marched through passport control by a sour little woman to a cash machine then back to the visa man who inspects my notes, fresh from the cash machine, against the glaring halogen light in his booth. He peels off what looks like a cheap looking postage stamp, sticks it into my passport and waves me away. I deliver my newly validated passport to the young looking immigration official who examines it and eyes me knowingly. "English? Speak English well yes?" he asks. "Yes, yes of course I do." He places my passport on his desk and starts scribbling words on a small piece of paper. He presents them to me. "Dungeon? What is this?" Sorry? Hold on, wait a minute, is this some sort of intimidation, some initiation ritual?  "A dungeon? It's like a prison, except underground, and dark." I gesture what I hope in sign language might represent a dungeon before ploughing through 'morsel' and 'desolate'. He then smiles and hands me back my passport. "Thanks you" he says "Welcome to Istanbul".
 
 

above Triangle artist Michael Mørkholt by The Galata Bridge by the Bosporus

Istanbul lies on the Bosporus, a channel of water much narrower than the Øresund that links the Black Sea with the Sea of Marmara and ultimately the Mediterranean. This channel bisects a narrow strip of land, about 30km wide, which makes it easily controllable. Which is important when it is the most direct link from Europe to Asia. Much is made of Istanbul's unique position, of it holding the prestigious honour of being the only city in the world to straddle two continents. A city has existed on the site since 660BC and in the ensuing two and a half millennia has been the capital of the Roman, Byzantine, Latin and Ottoman Empires.



above The Blue Mosque
 
 
  
General Ataturk spoiled the fun in 1930 when, as part of his radical wave of reforms aimed at secularising the defunct Ottoman Empire, crowned Ankara the capital of the new Turkish state and renamed Byzantium, Istanbul.
 
 
 
We had to negotiate a small fleet of taxis to ferry us into Istanbul, despite the promise of a designated "Triangle Bus" that should have picked us up. I pack myself into a taxi, that unsurprisingly provided us with no seatbelts, with three Danish strangers and off we hurtle down the motorway towards Istanbul. The sun is well risen, the day truly started, the blanket of humid heat gently offset by the air roaring through the open window which offers views of miles and miles of concrete housing estates and industrial complexes set in an arid wasteland. I sip Søren’s whiskey and begin slipping further into that semi lucid state of beginning a new day without having ended the last, when suddenly the landscape drops away and we’re confronted by a blue, shimmering panorama. The Bosphorus twinkles below and Europe beckons ahead and I try as hard as I can to appreciate the moment of crossing from one continent to another in a taxi with total strangers, headed into the depths of an unfamiliar city whose historical majesty is globally unparalleled. But the wonderment eluded me, and I just sipped on the whiskey smoking my fifth cigarette of the day with a rising sense of nausea.
 
 
 
Istanbul is the first corner of the Triangle Project with New York and Copenhagen occupying the other two. Jacob Fuglsang Mikkelsen (above) created it as a musical and artistic exchange program. Tall, thirty something, with a slight stoop and a bald head, he was the brains behind the whole thing. This is the first stage, bringing Danish artists and musicians to Istanbul. I meet Jacob on the top floor of The Hall, A 130-year-old recently renovated Armenian Church, converted into top-end venue by a canny Brit, Allan. The Hall served as the Triangle Project’s headquarters and primary venue. The control room was on the top floor, a glass table cluttered with laptops and ash trays, drafts of the schedules stuck to walls, two resident mongrel kittens with its soot black mother and a roof terrace overlooking the densely populated side streets of Beyoglu, downtown Istanbul. It is only the second time I had ever met him, his big, yellow, wraparound sunglasses and cargo shorts making him look more like an off-duty marine in Operation Desert Storm than trans-Atlantic conceptual artist. His thoughtful eyes and easy manner are inviting though, and we are soon on the terrace talking about how crazy it is to be here while the sun fries my virgin northern-European skin.
 

Beyoglu is a district on the east side of the river on the European side of Istanbul. Through it runs Istiklal (above), one of the longest walking streets in the world with a million visitors a day. Down it runs a tram, it’s red and reminds me of the trams I’ve seen in movies of San Francisco, except it doesn’t climb obnoxiously steep hills and is pretty slow. It was apparently built to ferry bankers from where they lived at Taksim Square to the banking district, by the Galata Tower, at the other end. It’s a steep walk downhill from here to the river and is probably one of the strangest neighbourhoods I’ve been to. First it was the music shops, dozens of them all selling identical merchandise down a few streets. Then there was a similar lighting district, with hundreds of shops all selling the same identical light bulbs. Then the random tubing streets and the second hand furniture stores and the sign making neighbourhood, all in segregated districts, all competing to sell the same products as everyone else. Pretty much the opposite retail model of North-America and, increasingly, Europe where massive super stores sell everything you could possibly ever need under one roof, in one self contained district.
 
 
 
The first few days drift by uneasily. I suffer without sleep, becoming nervous and unsettled until my body catches up with the hours. By the end of the second day I had begun to feel settled. We had dinner on a roof terrace and I ate fresh sea bass to views of the monumental mosques, lit up brightly across the river. Down below, the streets were noisy and chaotic but so much more alive than pre-autumnal Copenhagen where once people feel the first bitter east wind of the season retreat indoors to hibernate. Tanja Schlander is with us, a tall skinny redhead who plays upon her uncanny likeness to Pippi Longstockings. I think she was a key organiser with the project and she talks of her time in Århus at art school then moving to Israel. She gives me knowing sideways looks as I speak to her about my photography. All the way through I’m reminding myself, “Peter, these aren’t people you can bullshit.” I ended up sounding pretty dull.
 

CLUB DIRTY PARTY - Hosted by DJ Bang!

 
 
 
The next night was the first real party. Copyflex and Kid Kishore (below) played the most incredible improvised bhangra, electro mashup with samples of the Colonel talking about the Biennale. Åsmund, aka Copyflex, had come to Istanbul to also represent the Colonel and his Biennalist movement.
 
 
 
Coinciding with the Triangle Project, the 10th Istanbul Biennale is a massive international art show with installations all over Istanbul.
 
 
 
above image "optimism in the age of global war" by Burak Arikan
 
The 10th Istanbul Biennial's theme was
“Not only possible, but necessary; Optimism in the Age of Global War.”
 
 
 
The Biennalist movement was devised by Colonel to encourage dialogue on this topic; is it real optimism? Why should we be optimistic? Should we be optimistic about global war at art conferences that are sponsored by multinational corporations (Saab, sponsor of the prominent Documenta modern art festival, produces warplanes). We wore white headbands with ‘Biennalist’ written on them in red to encourage lively, optimistic debate on the subject. They looked pretty cool.
 
 
 
I flitted between the Hall and Dirty throughout the night photographing Rosa Lux (above)
 
 
 
Copyflex (above and below with Christian Marcus a.k.a. DJ St Marcus)
 
 
 
Kid Kishore and Istanbul’s very own Bang! (in below e-flyer from DogzStar)
 
 
..causing a general raucous with the local crowd. I meet Arim and Hakan who wonder why we’re here. They’re young, early twenties and spoke good English. “You’re from Denmark? I would love to move to Scandinavia.” Hakan tells me. I tell him its cold and dark for ¾ of the year but he shrugs. “Turkey is not humanist you know?” he says “It is so hard to get things done. It is not organised.”
 
 
 
I ask him why he doesn’t go. It’s difficult, he tells me. It’s hard to get visas to work and visit and even then it’s too expensive to go without having some work. “If Turkey would join the EU it would give us the opportunity to do more.” I ask how many people are like him and Arim, educated English speakers. “Not so many” he says, “Even in Istanbul.”
 
 
 
It’s a sentiment expressed by Cev Edit and the band ‘Reverie Falls On All’ the next day at a Turkish artist talk in the hall. Cev Edit’s opinion of Istanbul and Turkey is not overly optimistic. It’s a draining experience with little international opportunity and exposure. Military service is compulsory for all men except for those in education, which explains their long stays at university. Things are getting better in Turkey though he says. Specialist Universities were opened in 2000 in Turkey that allows for more opportunity for Turks to study art and music without having to take the more competitive traditional route through academies. This might encourage a new breed of less conventional artists who don’t deal with typical Middle Eastern themes such as war and headscarves, which he himself is trying to stay away from.
 

On an English Stomach


I wake up the night after eating a donner kebab and my guts are upset with me. Cramping, diarrhoea and nausea keep me away from the action and close to a toilet. I can’t eat or drink without feeling like wanting to be violently ill. Nick (the one half of Bitchslap) and his girlfriend Mille eventually arrive and we end up chilling on the street outside the hall for the evening. It  is rented out tonight for a special wedding party and we sit outside while Silencio, MHM 1 and Rudeless paint on the adjacent wall next door to the transsexual brothel (below).
 
 
 
The brothel and the Hall have inverse opening hours so that the one doesn’t infringe on the business of the other; nobody wants to get caught going to have transsexual sex by their mates on their way to the Hall for a night out. The wedding caterers operate out of a modified lorry with full kitchen facilities in the back. As they pass by they offer us incredible canapés and hour d’oeuvres that we snack on while watching the stream of upper class Turks arrive in cars with blacked out windows.
 
Serdar, our local street gangster who arranged our painting walls in exchange for a small homage to him, guided the traffic and the local men sat on the undersized stools outside the little teahouse watching on. It was a good night.
 
 
 
The next evening I went to the hospital. There is only so long that I can manage going to the toilet five times an hour, being afraid of farting and perpetual stomach cramps. Tanja and Sarohan, one of the Hall employees, take a taxi with me to the local Turkish emergency room. People were slumped on the floor bleeding, burned and crying for attention. A foreigner with an upset stomach didn’t impress them. I was diagnosed as having a stomach ulcer, had a shot in my ass and was told to vacate the bed for some guy who’d been stabbed in the arm.
 
 
 
above food performance by Nikolaj Kirk
 
I fainted and was brought back in, given oxygen and nitrous gas to wake me up. Sarohan, acting as my translator, was speaking feverishly about the diagnosis with a doctor who casts me unsympathetic glances as he throws his arms in the air and walks out the room. Sarohan’s by my bed, “Pete, do you have insurance? There’s a private German hospital up the road.” We get to the German hospital and in hardly any time I’m upstairs in a private room with a drip in my arm waiting for the blood tests. Sarohan smokes out of the window and talks to me about Turkey. “I would love to be able to leave” he says. “But it doesn’t really look likely.”
 

Dogzstar Saturday September 8th 2007

 
 
 
Saturday night, I’m fully recovered thanks to antibiotics that mean I shouldn’t drink. I’m a bit dizzy because I had a few beers anyways and I ‘m thinking perhaps drinking isn’t the best idea.
 
 
 
I’m in the Dogzstar and people are gathered on the main floor waiting for Alberstlund Terror Korps (Kid Kishore and VJ Cancer) to come on stage. Cancer has been preparing his visuals all week, drawing by hand, scanning and colouring in on paint.
 
 
 
They come on stage in their green shirts, ties and masks when a chav barges to the front of the crowd, armed with a spray can and with a green stocking over her face. She starts spraying on fabric and ripping it apart, throwing it into the crowd who retract in an uneasy confusion, not knowing if this is part of the act. The music starts up, “Tag din telefon jeg ska’ snak… med dig, tag din telefon jeg ska’ snak snak med dig” and the techno drops when Yanne, dressed as an alien invader, appears hanging over the railings of the upper level. It’s a techno, ghetto-hardcore, alien invasion urban terror experience. Huge green ATK flags manned by Teppop are flying over the packed dance floor in the midst of which the alien and chav are scuffling for supremacy.
 
 
 
above Teopop who also performed at Dogzstar
 
 
 
People were clearly suffering the day after when we gathered for Åsmund’s (above) artist run (below).
 
 

above film still by Martin K Jørgensen who documented the whole week together with Sarah Rex

With our red and white ‘Biennalist’ headbands and posters explaining the Biennalist movement stuck to our bodies, we ran down a packed Istiklal, shouting “optimist!” and laughing and smiling and discussing the motto of this year’s Biennale while people wearily watched the spectacle.
A man in a light-blue shirt starts to run with us and I ask him if he’s ‘optimist’. “No I am Kurdish.” He says with a smile and runs on.
 

Monday The 10th of September 2007 

 
The final night was hosted by Bitchslap in the Hall. The acts were fantastic!
 
 
 
above flyer by yours truly.
 
 
 
Gry (above by jayfugmik) with her haunting, looped electro pop, Michael Mørkholt’s recorder accompanied laptop music,
 
 
 
Band Ane (above) with more laptop music and her crazy homemade microphone. In the side room we had a mini exhibition of Silencio’s posters and René Johannsen’s photographs while in the main room we held a slideshow of photos I had taken so far in Istanbul.

 
 
After performance artists Kargo had finished their show "Kargology"
 
 
 
an investigation of information patterns in public space as well as the ways individual people experience the constant flow of information in the city”

 
 
Mikkel Meyer (above)
 
 
 
Heidi Mortenson (above)
 
 
 
Copyflex, ATK, Rosa Lux and a various sortiment of the Triangle stable played and performed to the appreciative crowd.
 
 
 
above Paletti Cat Walk Performance
 

In The End of The Day 

It’s hard to reduce ten days, the drama and crises, misunderstandings and exhaustion of the triangle project to a few pages. We only had a couple of translators to communicate to the staff with and the constant changes to schedules were a perpetual headache, never really knowing what was going on where and when. I don’t think anyone really appreciated how much hard work it was all going to be and by the time is was the turn of Bitchslap to host a party, most people where so exhausted you could feel the tension lingering in amongst the small talk. It took me three days to recover. Lying in bed at home in Copenhagen the stillness was so overwhelming I wanted put on some loud trance to mimic the club down the street from the hostel that had serenaded us to sleep with euphoric electro every night. I dreamt of the wild street dogs police, the street vendors who toiled night and day at half a dozen jobs just to get by and the friendly homeless man who slept outside the hostel on cardboard who told us “In Istanbul, if you have no friends, you have no hope of surviving.”

It was a clever decision to have Istanbul as a destination for an art project. It’s volatile, insecure and wild, held forcibly together by a powerful military and police force who are trying to protect one man’s secular vision of almost a century ago; a vision that is being slowly eroded by the popular election of an Islamist president and the call for the removal of the ban on headscarves at school and in the workplace. The military has dissolved the government three times, 1960, 1971 and 1980, when they deemed its actions to be unconstitutional.
 
 
 
It is still illegal to insult Ataturk. This combined with Turkey’s obvious desire to become a part of the European Union results makes Turkey a perfect destination for encouraging constructive dialogue, artistic or otherwise. It is hard to assess what impact the project had on Istanbul as a whole, whether the art was accessible to the general population and not just the literate, educated few. It is a question, however, that can also be asked of art anywhere.

I kept on dreaming of Istanbul for days after I returned and the memory of its energy still resonates in me. It is a fucking mental place that had no signs of skateboarders but thousands of cops, stray dogs and homeless people. Is it European though? With as many young people looking west for inspiration, I can only hope that Turkey develops in a direction that encourages its youth to stay and invest in it’s own future once it joins the EU. Which might probably happen some decade soon. For now though I was glad to be home with the rain and cold and empty streets that are so typical of northern Europe. Seriously though, who needs the EU when you have fabulous weather?
 
For more info on The Triangle Project go the blog here 
and the myspace here
 
Published by
en by Mashup Culture /  Jacob Fuglsang, 16. Jan 2008


Back in the days, the center of the universe was not New York City.
It was called Miklagaard in the ancient Scandinavian language spoken by the vikings which was the most well travelled bunch of clubbers, crossing many oceans and distances to party like it was 1999. Their seeds have been spread along the coasts of northern Europe, only to reach the final destination in Constantinople, where they would chill with the sultan and enjoy his many harems, interesting food and welcoming attitudes.

Actually the vikings where making plans to take over the great city, but instead figured out that it would be smoother to work for the sultan as his personal bodyguards. In the Ottoman Empire they did not have too many people of that size and neither did they have too much blond hair and blue eyes. Later on in 16th century, the Swedish King Karl the 12th lost to the Russians at the battle of Poltava. He fled with his closest friends and was hosted by the Sultan that once again wanted to be involved with those friendly Scandinavians that already had made an imprint on the city. Actually an imprint to the extent that if you go up into the top balcony of Haga Sophia, you will see some rather old school tags made by an early rune tagger named Halvdan (trans. half Danish).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Basically Istanbul has been around a couple of thousand years before New York, and if you ever felt that New York had a strong energy of the instant feedback of what every action you take has on your life; Istanbul does too. One can cut the energy right out of the air with a shawarma knife, if one pleases.
If you want something different and had your overdose of London, Berlin, Barcelona and New York; Istanbul is the only answer. But hold on. What about all those dangerous Muslims with backpacks full of bombs? Well, if you think this to begin with, you should stop reading now, and go have a burger.



above image is a film still from Ali M Demirel's video for Plastikman

How is it to be young and creative in Istanbul?
Well, if you ask Ali M Demirel who spends most of his time travelling around the world with Plastikman, aka Richie Hawtin doing his visuals..he might say it is hard for him to find a job where any of the people there understands what he is doing, or can find a way to give him a job he is qualified to do.
Actually, over qualification is a common problem for young academics.
One of the reasons they become over educated is that, as long as you are in school, you can stay out of the army. 18 months of army duty is obligatory for all men in Turkey. This amount of time can--other than being a problem if you have a job with a career going for you--be a rather traumatising time in a young mans life. However, this also creates a very aware youth that lives for the moment. They have dealt with terrorism and wars since they were born. This also creates a strong underground, both in the music and art scene.


above image is the view over Galata Zaray Square and School from the Dogzstar terraz

Kutay Altinoz recently started the live music club Dogzstar together with his younger bother Kutay, after spending many years in the streets of London. He is one of the many Istanbul natives who after 2001 returned to the city to share their knowledge and education after escaping the city in the harsh 90's. Since 2005, Istanbul can be compared to any metropolis relevant for the worlds cutting edge cosmopolitans, artists, slackers and world explorers.

Published by
More Posts Next page »

Google Map