An artist has demanded the organizers of Manifesta 16 take away an set up from the exhibition in Essen, Germany, alleging {that a} piece within the present plagiarizes one in all her earlier works.
The piece, titled Elevation and made by the Turkish sculptor Nasan Tur, consists of reclaimed church pews put in on their aspect inside St. Gertud Church and engraved with nameless musings submitted by the general public. Bochum-based artist Dorothee Bielfeld advised the German outlet Waz that the Elevation’s central visible motif—meter-high upright pews, remodeled by their reorientation into indirect towers—intently resembles her 2010 work Aufrichten (Elevating Up), created for Ruhr.2010, a cultural marketing campaign in Germany’s Ruhr area.
Elevation invitations guests to carve needs, worries, and hopes into the church pews. Bielfeld’s Aufrichten additionally employs a participatory conceit: Guests to Christ-König-Kirche may deposit slips of paper bearing their ideas into pipes embedded within the wall.
The sooner work was put in in Hamburg’s Christ-König-Kirche and featured 29 picket pews positioned upright; the impact, she mentioned, was of being misplaced in a forest. Bielfeld advised WAZ that she was “completely devastated” upon seeing photographs of Tur’s work at St. Gertrud’s Church. “I delved deeply into the topic of decommissioned church buildings,” she mentioned of its creation. “Since then, I’ve centered on the repurposing of church buildings in addition to the altering nature of worship providers. So that is actually my space of experience.”
She added that lower than an hour after studying of Elevation, she contacted Manifesta 16 to request its removing from the exhibition. A spokesperson for Manifesta 16 mentioned in an announcement to the press that, whereas the installations bear “superficial” visible similarities, the biennial stands by a curatorial evaluation by Leonie Herweg and René Block, who, “with out prejudice,” deemed Tur’s work artistically impartial. The curators additionally famous that Tur’s work was a part of an ongoing, participatory venture.
Tur denied Bielfeld’s accusations, describing them in an emailed assertion to ARTnews as “false and baseless,” and including that the media protection of the controversy has affected him “deeply.” He continued: “As Ms. Bielfeld didn’t reply to a proposal for a face-to-face assembly between Manifesta and the curators—and I’d have been joyful to attend as properly—however as a substitute despatched me a threatening letter through her lawyer, I’ve now needed to have interaction a lawyer myself to guard myself.”
Manifesta opened in Germany’s Ruhr area on June 21 and runs via October 4. The most recent version of the nomadic European biennial unfolds this 12 months throughout 4 cities—Duisburg, Essen, Gelsenkirchen, and Bochum—with 12 historic church buildings internet hosting site-specific installations. The curatorial framework focuses on reactivating these principally disused areas as alternatives for civic and cultural encounters.
ARTnews has contacted the organizers of Manifesta 16 for additional remark.

