Hosting an art exhibition in a mall or using a shopping mall as an art space became a trend as urbanization grew and almost every artist began to use those spaces to reach a wider audience.
Light installations, oil on canvas works, sculptures and performance art all have a new, rather unexpected place to be showcased rather than in museums or art galleries. All of them are popping up in shopping malls. As the growing population in the cities becomes more integrated to consumer culture art has evolved into new spaces, becoming more visible through placement in shopping malls.Akmerkez is one of Istanbul’s most prominent shopping malls, and its management considers supporting art to be a key part of the mall’s role in the city’s life.
“As a shopping mall we believe that we have a very important place in the cultural life of the city.
Therefore supporting contemporary art is not a luxury but a must for us,” Akmerkez brand manager Nur Ziyaoğlu Aytekin said, speaking to Hürriyet Daily News. “Each year we add new projects to our portfolio. We also receive international awards.”
Akmerkez’s project “Art at Akmerkez” received a Jean Louis Solal Marketing Award and a MAXI Award from the International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC) for 2012.
Akmerkez has hosted exhibitions by very important Turkish artists such as Abidin Elderoğlu, Adnan Çoker, Erol Akyavaş, Ferruh Başağa, Genco Gülan, Mustafa Ata, Ömer Uluç, Burhan Doğançay, Komet and Sabri Berkel.
The mall also hosted an exhibition featuring young Turkish artists during the 12th Istanbul Biennial.
One of the most significant art exhibitions Akmerkez has hosted was a solo show by Genco Gülan’s. “Genco Gülan is open of the most important artists in Turkey,” Ziyaoğlu said. “We organized this exhibition under two different concepts in 2010. While the corridors of the shopping mall hosted ‘The future of archeology,’ by Gülan, other parts of the mall hosted Gülan’s interpretations of works by Monet, Manet and Andy Warhol.”
Exhibitions receive a lot of interest from visitors to Akmerkez, Ziyaoğlu said. “We see this project [‘Art at Akmerkez’] as a sustainable one and we hope further projects will develop this trend. For our ‘boyamiko’ and edible art projects, for example, we address both children’s activities and art from a different angle.”
Banu Enginkaya, the brand manager of Astoria mall said, “It is very important to make art accessible to everyone, and in this sense shopping malls are very important places.”
Astoria displays work by artists from different backgrounds. “We exhibited portraits by Rasin Arsebuk, which he dedicated to his wife. Designs by Haliç University students were also displayed in Astoria. Every exhibition draws interest from our visitors. We have also seen an increase in our visitors,” said Enginkaya.“We believe that the exhibitions increase the relationship between artists and society. We can also see the profiles of different types of visitors thanks to those exhibitions. We usually prefer to open exhibitions that amaze our visitors.”
Noting that the mall decided on exhibitions in accordance with their visitor profile, Enginkaya said they also gave space to young artists. “We also organize other events such as signature days and festivals. Visitors like to participate in these events.” She added that those events also increase the visitors to Astoria shopping mall. Astoria also organizes joint exhibitions. Not only contemporary art, but also classical art and sculptures are included in Astoria’s events. For example, an exhibition of miniatures by Hatice Ünal and an exhibition from Adil Menemencioğlu’s Ottoman collection have been exhibited at the mall. Astoria also hosted a Bonsai exhibition, which attracted different types of visitors.