BREAKING NEWS! Fatoş İrwen has been released from Turkish prison!

Sorry, this entry is only available in İngiliz İngilizcesi. For the sake of viewer convenience, the content is shown below in the alternative language. You may click the link to switch the active language.

2 March 2020

BREAKING NEWS

Fatoş İrwen has been released from Turkish prison!!
Congratulations!
Welcome back!

——–

Artists at Risk (AR) has long been advocating for the release and just treatment of Fatoş İrwen (bio page).  Since 2016, İrwen faced harsh prison conditions under charges designed to silence dissident freedom of expression and activism in Turkey under President Tayyip Erdogan’s authoritarian regime.

As part of AR’s campaign, Fatoş İrwen was a participant in AR’s The AR Pavilion Berlin: Mutatis Mutandis in October 2018 (Documentation: The Artists at Risk (AR) Pavilion Berlin: Mutatis Mutandis) and her work has most recently been represented in Perpetuum Mobile’s AR PAVILION HELSINKI – MASS MEMORY MACHINES.

The Financial Times was one of the first major international newspapers to report her predicament (Rachel Spence, 27 September, 2019).

Photo by Ahmet Aküzüm

Fatoş İrwen is an artist and teacher from Diyarbakır, Turkey, who was imprisoned in 2016. The charges against her are based on evidence provided by an anonymous witness in relation to a protest she attended in 2013. She was taken into custody while trying to board an internal flight in Turkey, unaware of the nature of the charges against her. She was eventually charged with “resisting the police, opposition to the law against demonstrations and assemblies, propaganda for a terrorist organization, belonging to a terrorist organization” and sentenced to two years in prison.

Fatoş İrwen was born and raised in the Sûr neighborhood of Diyarbakır. She attended Dicle University. After receiving her diploma, she began teaching in Batman, in southeastern Anatolia. She later continued her art and teaching career in Diyarbakır.

 

Fatoş Irwen, El dikişi, Video of performative work, 2016.  This work was shown as part of the AR PAVILION – BERLIN.

After struggling to get access to art materials, İrwen was able to produce works in prison. However, Artist at Risk (AR)’s sources have explained that Irwen was imprisoned in the same jail where other prisoners held hunger strikes in support of the Kurdish cause. (Especially the case of the ex-MP of HDP is internationally known). Some of the strikers have already died there, and a state of heightened anxiety reigns in the complex. Reports suggested that Irwen’s health was in a fragile state, and in her last communications from prison she had been increasingly wary of censorship of her letters.

Fatoş İrwen is due to be released in the coming months, but her future under the current authoritarian regime is uncertain. Unlike Zehra Dogan, whose case was made famous by Ai Weiwei and Banksy, İrwen’s case is unfortunately little known internationally.

Artists at Risk (AR) is currently campaigning to bring attention to this brave young artist’s difficult and unjust predicament and ill-treatment by the Turkish authorities. We demand not only her immediate release from prison, but that she be able to travel and communicate without impediment to internationally recognized standards of freedom of movement and expression.

Further links:

Artist Fatoş İrwen, also thrown in jail, Kedistan Net, 03/10/2017.

If You Say it Forty Times (Video)

Istanbul Biennial: eco-warriors outdone by dissidents, Financial Times, 27/09/2019.