Salt Galata is expected to open in a former bank space in September.
Salt Galata is expected to open in a former bank space in September.
Salt Galata is expected to open in a former bank space in September.
Salt Galata is expected to open in a former bank space in September.

Turkey blends a pinch of old world and contemporary art into Salt


  • English
  • Arabic

Situated on a narrow street in Karaköy, a district in the European side of Istanbul, the building that used to house the headquarters of the Imperial Ottoman Bank is an architectural jewel. It was designed by the Franco-Levantine architect Alexander Vallaury and completed in 1892, with a neoclassical facade facing west and an orientalist facade facing east.

Established in 1863, in the aftermath of the Crimean War and the height of the Tanzimat era, the Ottoman Bank was tasked with improving the empire's economy and managing its public debt. Among its many initiatives, the bank financed the expansion of Beirut's port and the construction of railway lines linking Beirut to Damascus, Baghdad to Berlin. As the curator Vasif Kortun is fond of saying, it was the International Monetary Fund of its day.

Given that the majority of its shareholders were British and French - and the majority of its middle management staff Armenian and Greek - the bank wobbled awkwardly through the First and Second World Wars. It remained the central bank of the young Turkish republic until the 1930s, before it became a private financial institution in the 1950s. At its peak, it operated 80 branches, from London and Paris to Sofia and Bucharest to Benghazi, Beirut, Bethlehem and Baghdad. The last branches to open were in Qatar, Abu Dhabi and Oman in the late 1950s and 1960s. In 1996, the Dogus group, one of Turkey's largest private-sector conglomerates, bought the Ottoman Bank and wound down its international activities. Five years later, Dogus folded it into one of its main subsidiaries, the Garanti Bank, and turned the headquarters in Karaköy into a museum and a research centre.

On an unseasonably cold afternoon last month, the building was closed, its grand façades hidden behind panels of construction scaffolding and a skin of green netting. The insides were gutted as a small army of workers and craftsmen scaled the stripped-down stairwells, hopped from one elegant five-metre-high ceilinged room to another, and paused on wooden planks jutting from the floor to eviscerated windows overlooking the Golden Horn.

If all goes to plan, the building will reopen in September after a period of extensive renovation. The museum, archives and research centre will remain intact, as will the layers, sediments and striations of its history. Yet everything housed in the bank's headquarters will be part of a very different institution known as Salt.

Salt represents the consolidation of three previously separate initiatives supported by Garanti Bank: the Ottoman Bank Archive and Research Centre, which deals with social and economic history; Garanti Galeri, which specialises in architecture, design and urbanism; and the Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Centre, which delves into contemporary art and visual culture. Over the past two years, the three entities have been pooling their libraries, resources and ideas into Salt, which, just to make things more confusing, will be split across two different venues.

On that same cold day in April when the old Ottoman Bank building, soon to be renamed Salt Galata, was cloaked in protective covering, another historic building - the six-storey structure that was Platform's home from 2001 through 2007, which is now called Salt Beyoglu - was opening its doors to the public for the first time. The two buildings, separated by a 15-minute walk, are now institutionally yoked. For the next five months Salt Beyoglu will be carrying the weight and preparing the ground for the inauguration of Salt Galata, which is timed to coincide with the opening of the next Istanbul Biennial.

In many ways, Salt represents the fourth generation of contemporary art spaces in Istanbul. Since the early days of the republic, the arts and culture sector has hinged on the private funding of wealthy industrial families who now run large corporations and major banks. In the 1980s, those banks opened galleries in Istanbul. In the 1990s, they created art centres. In the 2000s, they established museums and foundations. Salt, therefore, looks like the next frontier.

"In Istanbul now, there are a lot of institutions that stage exhibitions but few that produce intellectual content or content at all," says Kortun, Salt's director of research and programmes and curator of the UAE's 2011 pavilion at the Venice Biennale. As the founding director of Platform and the Proje-4L Istanbul Museum of Contemporary Art, Kortun knows the institutional progression well. In addition to writing prodigiously on the relationship between art spaces and the city, he also devoted the 2005 Istanbul Biennial, which he co-curated with Charles Esche, to a probing and reflective study of Istanbul itself. With Salt, he says: "We are trying to create a new institution to get the city to where we want it to be. We are always starting from a point of institutional erasure.

"Every time new players come onto the field, they think they are the best and they reinvent the wheel. I was like this. But the idea now is to establish a particular kind of continuity."

Salt's mission statement is a mouthful, but the gist is to use the two buildings to explore the points where different disciplines cross one another with the potential to generate new concepts and ideas. Salt Beyoglu has three floors of exhibition space, currently hosting a showcase for the Ars Viva Prize (an annual award cycle for emerging artists in Germany) and a retrospective for the artist Hüseyin Bahri Alptekin (who died, age 50, in 2007), in addition to a forum or meeting space, a rooftop garden and a "walk-in" cinema, which effectively breaks down the notion of tightly scheduled film screenings (in theory, anyone with a hard drive can enter the cinema, plug in, and spontaneously produce a video programme).

Salt Galata, which is twice the size of Salt Beyoglu, will include a library of about 35,000 titles, a series of workshop spaces, rooms wholly dedicated to scanning and digitising archival materials and an "open archive" that will be used to tease out some of the more troublesome aspects of working with historical documents and making them public.

In keeping with Salt's spirit of openness, Mimarlar Tasarim, the architectural office of Han Tümertekin, who won an Aga Khan Award for architecture in 2004, is leading the renovation of both buildings, at a total cost of €45 million (Dh245m), according to Salt's marketing and communications director, Ceylan Tokcan Yüceoral. But six additional design firms in Turkey have been commissioned to work on different elements, activities and spaces within the institution. Even the font used in all of Salt's correspondence (from signage to way-finding systems and its website) is a customised, open-source typeface developed by the New York-based design studio Project Projects.

The first public event staged at Salt was a conversation between Kortun and Project Projects' Prem Krishnamurthy, who likened the institutional identity of the space to a community and a venue. Every four months, a new designer will be invited to update Salt's typeface, called Kraliçe. "If someone asks for Salt's logo, we'll send the typeface instead," says Krishnamurthy.

"The typeface will go out into the world and change, and so the way the institution looks will change over time." All of this, adds Kortun, was devised in response to the question: "How do you write the name of an institution that does not exist in and of itself?"

Salt is also acting as a kind of test case for other arts initiatives and institutions around the region. Its predecessor, Platform, had a loose relationship with the Townhouse Gallery of Contemporary Art in Cairo and the Lebanese Association for Plastic Arts, Ashkal Alwan, in Beirut. The three organisations were involved in a joint residency programme at a time when all of them were reformulating their roles in their respective cities.

Just as Platform has reconfigured itself as a research centre that moves beyond the mere production and display of contemporary art, Townhouse has transformed itself into a foundation. In addition to being an exhibition space and an incubator for curatorial thought, Townhouse functions as a de facto community centre with much of its activity devoted to community outreach. Ashkal Alwan, meanwhile, has turned its attention to creating a new, independent art school, not only in response to the so-called educational turn in contemporary art, but also to meet an acute need for more progressive artistic training in Lebanon. Taken together, these organisations illustrate the extent to which art spaces have extended far beyond art itself.

This raises the inevitable question of funding. How will these bigger and better institutions sustain their work?

"It's not only how much money you can raise," says Kortun, "but also how little you can spend. There's nothing wrong with modesty.

"We can use our money efficiently. There's no reason why a huge institution can't work like a small- or medium-sized art centre."

Kaelen Wilson-Goldie is a staff writer for The Review.

Ticket prices

General admission Dh295 (under-three free)

Buy a four-person Family & Friends ticket and pay for only three tickets, so the fourth family member is free

Buy tickets at: wbworldabudhabi.com/en/tickets

MATCH INFO

What: 2006 World Cup quarter-final
When: July 1
Where: Gelsenkirchen Stadium, Gelsenkirchen, Germany

Result:
England 0 Portugal 0
(Portugal win 3-1 on penalties)

'Munich: The Edge of War'

Director: Christian Schwochow

Starring: George MacKay, Jannis Niewohner, Jeremy Irons

Rating: 3/5

Directed by: Craig Gillespie

Starring: Emma Stone, Emma Thompson, Joel Fry

4/5

Benefits of first-time home buyers' scheme
  • Priority access to new homes from participating developers
  • Discounts on sales price of off-plan units
  • Flexible payment plans from developers
  • Mortgages with better interest rates, faster approval times and reduced fees
  • DLD registration fee can be paid through banks or credit cards at zero interest rates
UK-EU trade at a glance

EU fishing vessels guaranteed access to UK waters for 12 years

Co-operation on security initiatives and procurement of defence products

Youth experience scheme to work, study or volunteer in UK and EU countries

Smoother border management with use of e-gates

Cutting red tape on import and export of food

COMPANY%20PROFILE
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EDate%20started%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%202020%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EFounders%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Khaldoon%20Bushnaq%20and%20Tariq%20Seksek%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EBased%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Abu%20Dhabi%20Global%20Market%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ESector%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20HealthTech%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ENumber%20of%20staff%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20100%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EFunding%20to%20date%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20%2415%20million%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
Greatest of All Time
Starring: Vijay, Sneha, Prashanth, Prabhu Deva, Mohan
Director: Venkat Prabhu
Rating: 2/5
Ferrari 12Cilindri specs

Engine: naturally aspirated 6.5-liter V12

Power: 819hp

Torque: 678Nm at 7,250rpm

Price: From Dh1,700,000

Available: Now

F1 The Movie

Starring: Brad Pitt, Damson Idris, Kerry Condon, Javier Bardem

Director: Joseph Kosinski

Rating: 4/5

The%20specs
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EPowertrain%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3ESingle%20electric%20motor%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EPower%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E201hp%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ETorque%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E310Nm%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ETransmission%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3ESingle-speed%20auto%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EBattery%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E53kWh%20lithium-ion%20battery%20pack%20(GS%20base%20model)%3B%2070kWh%20battery%20pack%20(GF)%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ETouring%20range%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E350km%20(GS)%3B%20480km%20(GF)%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EPrice%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EFrom%20Dh129%2C900%20(GS)%3B%20Dh149%2C000%20(GF)%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EOn%20sale%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Now%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
The specs

Engine: 1.5-litre turbo

Power: 181hp

Torque: 230Nm

Transmission: 6-speed automatic

Starting price: Dh79,000

On sale: Now

ELIO

Starring: Yonas Kibreab, Zoe Saldana, Brad Garrett

Directors: Madeline Sharafian, Domee Shi, Adrian Molina

Rating: 4/5

HOW TO WATCH

Facebook: TheNationalNews  

Twitter: @thenationalnews  

Instagram: @thenationalnews.com  

TikTok: @thenationalnews 

The Bio

Name: Lynn Davison

Profession: History teacher at Al Yasmina Academy, Abu Dhabi

Children: She has one son, Casey, 28

Hometown: Pontefract, West Yorkshire in the UK

Favourite book: The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho

Favourite Author: CJ Sansom

Favourite holiday destination: Bali

Favourite food: A Sunday roast

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Results

2.30pm: Expo 2020 Dubai – Conditions (PA) Dh80,000 (Dirt) 1,600m; Winner: Barakka, Ray Dawson (jockey), Ahmad bin Harmash (trainer)

3.05pm: Now Or Never – Maiden (TB) Dh82,500 (Turf) 1,600m; Winner: One Idea, Andrea Atzeni, Doug Watson

3.40pm: This Is Our Time – Handicap (TB) Dh82,500 (D) 1,600m; Winner: Perfect Balance, Tadhg O’Shea, Bhupat Seemar

4.15pm: Visit Expo 2020 – Handicap (TB) Dh87,500 (T) 1,600m; Winner: Kaheall, Richard Mullen, Salem bin Ghadayer

4.50pm: The World In One Place – Handicap (TB) Dh95,000 (T) 1.900m; Winner: Castlebar, Adrie de Vries, Helal Al Alawi

5.25pm: Vision – Handicap (TB) Dh95,000 (D) 1,200m; Winner: Shanty Star, Richard Mullen, Rashed Bouresly

6pm: Al Wasl Plaza – Handicap (TB) Dh95,000 (T) 1,200m; Winner: Jadwal, Dane O’Neill, Doug Watson

Volvo ES90 Specs

Engine: Electric single motor (96kW), twin motor (106kW) and twin motor performance (106kW)

Power: 333hp, 449hp, 680hp

Torque: 480Nm, 670Nm, 870Nm

On sale: Later in 2025 or early 2026, depending on region

Price: Exact regional pricing TBA

Stamp%20duty%20timeline
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EDecember%202014%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20%20Former%20UK%20chancellor%20of%20the%20Exchequer%20George%20Osborne%20reforms%20stamp%20duty%20land%20tax%20(SDLT)%2C%20replacing%20the%20slab%20system%20with%20a%20blended%20rate%20scheme%2C%20with%20the%20top%20rate%20increasing%20to%2012%20per%20cent%20from%2010%20per%20cent%3A%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3EUp%20to%20%C2%A3125%2C000%20%E2%80%93%200%25%3B%20%C2%A3125%2C000%20to%20%C2%A3250%2C000%20%E2%80%93%202%25%3B%20%C2%A3250%2C000%20to%20%C2%A3925%2C000%20%E2%80%93%205%25%3B%20%C2%A3925%2C000%20to%20%C2%A31.5m%3A%2010%25%3B%20More%20than%20%C2%A31.5m%20%E2%80%93%2012%25%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EApril%202016%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20New%203%25%20surcharge%20applied%20to%20any%20buy-to-let%20properties%20or%20additional%20homes%20purchased.%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EJuly%202020%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Chancellor%20Rishi%20Sunak%20unveils%20SDLT%20holiday%2C%20with%20no%20tax%20to%20pay%20on%20the%20first%20%C2%A3500%2C000%2C%20with%20buyers%20saving%20up%20to%20%C2%A315%2C000.%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EMarch%202021%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Mr%20Sunak%20extends%20the%20SDLT%20holiday%20at%20his%20March%203%20budget%20until%20the%20end%20of%20June.%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EApril%202021%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%202%25%20SDLT%20surcharge%20added%20to%20property%20transactions%20made%20by%20overseas%20buyers.%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EJune%202021%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20SDLT%20holiday%20on%20transactions%20up%20to%20%C2%A3500%2C000%20expires%20on%20June%2030.%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EJuly%202021%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Tax%20break%20on%20transactions%20between%20%C2%A3125%2C000%20to%20%C2%A3250%2C000%20starts%20on%20July%201%20and%20runs%20until%20September%2030.%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
Apple's%20Lockdown%20Mode%20at%20a%20glance
%3Cp%3EAt%20launch%2C%20Lockdown%20Mode%20will%20include%20the%20following%20protections%3A%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EMessages%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Most%20attachment%20types%20other%20than%20images%20are%20blocked.%20Some%20features%2C%20like%20link%20previews%2C%20are%20disabled%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EWeb%20browsing%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Certain%20complex%20web%20technologies%2C%20like%20just-in-time%20JavaScript%20compilation%2C%20are%20disabled%20unless%20the%20user%20excludes%20a%20trusted%20site%20from%20Lockdown%20Mode%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EApple%20services%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EIncoming%20invitations%20and%20service%20requests%2C%20including%20FaceTime%20calls%2C%20are%20blocked%20if%20the%20user%20has%20not%20previously%20sent%20the%20initiator%20a%20call%20or%20request%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EConnectivity%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Wired%20connections%20with%20a%20computer%20or%20accessory%20are%20blocked%20when%20an%20iPhone%20is%20locked%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EConfigurations%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Configuration%20profiles%20cannot%20be%20installed%2C%20and%20the%20device%20cannot%20enroll%20into%20mobile%20device%20management%20while%20Lockdown%20Mode%20is%20on%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
Electric scooters: some rules to remember
  • Riders must be 14-years-old or over
  • Wear a protective helmet
  • Park the electric scooter in designated parking lots (if any)
  • Do not leave electric scooter in locations that obstruct traffic or pedestrians
  • Solo riders only, no passengers allowed
  • Do not drive outside designated lanes
The Brutalist

Director: Brady Corbet

Stars: Adrien Brody, Felicity Jones, Guy Pearce, Joe Alwyn

Rating: 3.5/5

Dust and sand storms compared

Sand storm

  • Particle size: Larger, heavier sand grains
  • Visibility: Often dramatic with thick "walls" of sand
  • Duration: Short-lived, typically localised
  • Travel distance: Limited 
  • Source: Open desert areas with strong winds

Dust storm

  • Particle size: Much finer, lightweight particles
  • Visibility: Hazy skies but less intense
  • Duration: Can linger for days
  • Travel distance: Long-range, up to thousands of kilometres
  • Source: Can be carried from distant regions