Inke Arns on Tue, 20 Jun 2000 20:08:43 +0200 |
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Syndicate: MSE-exhibitions |
MSE-exhibitions ?kuc Gallery, Stari trg 21, 1 1000 Ljubljana, phone/fax.: +386 1 251 65 40 drustvo.skuc@guest.arnes.si 22 June ?16 July: Up to You! ? �gnes Eperjesi, Gábor Gerhes, Tamás Komoróczky, Kriszti Nagy, Hajnal Németh, Dezsõ Szabó, András Szigeti, Csaba Uglár (Budapest et. al.), curated by Barnabás Bencsik 20 July ? 13 August: Psychodelic ? Absolutno (Novi Sad), Department für öffentliche Erscheinungen (Munich), G.R.A.M. (Graz), �gnes Szépfalvi & Csaba Nemes (Budapest), curated by Anton Lederer & Margarethe Makovec 17 August ?10 September: What Am I Doing Here? ? Maja Bajevic (Paris, Sarajevo), Danica Dakic (Düsseldorf, Sarajevo), ?ejla Kameric (Sarajevo), Damir Nik?ic (Sarajevo), Rachel Rossner (Sarajevo), Neboj?a ?eric-?oba (Amsterdam, Sarajevo), curated by Lejla Hod?iæ 14 September ? 8 October: Small Country for Big Vacation ? Sandro �ukiæ (Zagreb), Alan Florincic (Rijeka), Andreja Kuluncic (Zagreb), Renata Poljak (Split), Sandra Sterle (Amsterdam, Zagreb), Slaven Tolj (Dubrovnik), Aleksandar Ilic: Weekend Art Project in collaboration with Ivana Keser & Tomislav Gotovac (Zagreb), curated by Ana Devic & Nata?a Ilic 2001: MSE-Exhibition Project of Galeria Neon (Bologna), curated by Gino Gianuzzi Up to You! Featuring the artists: �gnes Eperjesi Gábor Gerhes Tamás Komoróczky Kriszti Nagy Hajnal Németh Dezsõ Szabó András Szigeti Csaba Uglár Curated by Barnabás Bencsik After a long period mostly dominated by installations and site-specific works, in the last few years photography and video have gradually become the most significant media of the younger generations of artists on the Budapest art scene. For these artists, the handycam is an easy and accessible instrument allowing them to work independently, and their visual language ? a remix of MTV clips, junk-movies and low-budget experiments ? is a device for expressing the disoriented identity in the new society where moral values and social patterns are created and ruled mostly by the global market-economy and multinational trend-makers. Highly sophisticated images of life-styles spread by fashion magazines, various intellectual and art productions of different sub-cultures, music channels, party- and techno-scenes are the customary sources of these video pieces in which fiction and reality, personal identity and media-stars? virtual personalities mix one with another and dissolve into new types of narrative. In these works, photography is subject to different kinds of manipulation, from the PhotoShop effects to the reconstructed fake views of the everyday ambience. The images in these photographs are never original. The pictures always refer to already existing images. The artists use standardised images from the image banks of advertisement agencies, or create very similar compositions inserting their own bodies in them. Sometimes they even cannibalise banal images from the packages of mass-produced goods. The images ? be it photographs, computer prints, or executed in any other medium ? are always playing with the ambiguity documentation/ manipulation of the digitised photography, and in every piece the artists intended to redefine the notion of this traditional medium. PSYCHODELIC Featuring the artists: Department for Public Appearances (Munich) Apsolutno (Novi Sad) G.R.A.M. (Graz) �gnes Szépfalvi & Csaba Nemes (Budapest) Curated by Anton Lederer & Margarethe Makovec PSYCHODELIC focuses on the tendency in contemporary art production where artists try to work thematically on socially relevant structures. The structures that currently constitute society give artists the impetus for reflection and analysis. In many cases, artistic statements contain harsh criticism. In both a very specific and a literal sense, PSYCHODELIC deals with phenomena, such as mentioned above, which bear a certain "consciousness-extending" function. This should be understood in the sense that our consciousness is extended through additional insight and not in some esoteric sense. The aforementioned practices of art, however, do not correspond with scientific methods and do not offer spectacular results. They are characterised through a concentrated praxis, confronting us with phenomena and processes that are included in our world of daily encounters and which only stand out through their separation, i.e. the extraction of this everyday context. Further, there is transplantation into a different, not-specific context, especially by the means of exaggeration. It is this exaggeration ? often quite ironic ? that leads to psychodelic effects, and a certain context suddenly seems self-evident. We want to establish another sub-group, on which the exhibition will focus. You could overwrite the sentence: "There are quite a lot of things people can think of to be amused." The world of daily experiences is thus limited to entertainment. Either you take the existing chances with pleasure, or you have to kill your time. One of the great philosophers once said: "How many things you don't need for a living." Nevertheless, there are many things and acts we cherish. Thus it doesn't seem very likely that once they did not exist. What Am I Doing Here? Featuring the artists: Maja Bajevic Danica Dakic ?ejla Kameric Damir Nik?ic Rachel Rossner Neboj?a ?eric-?oba Curated by Lejla Hodzic "Few of us brought up in contemporary North American society really know our place. Displacement is the factor that for many defines a colonized or expropriated place. Even if we can locate ourselves, we haven't necessarily examined our place in, or our actual relationship to, that place." Lucy Lippard, ?The Lure of the Local" The "What Am I Doing Here?" exhibition was conceived over the past few months, through conversations with artists, as a work in progress. The works that originated in this time are concerned with various dilemmas that confront the artists. Damir Nik?iæ succinctly expressed the basic question, which each participant poses in his/her own way: "What am I doing here?" The questions of one's own position, perspective, and place, and one's connection with the problems of identity, language, nationality and country, are underlined by the consequences of the war in Bosnia. ?SMALL COUNTRY FOR BIG VACATION" - EXHIBITION PROJECT Advertising message used in Croatian tourist campaign in the middle of the 1990s Featuring the artists: Sandro �ukiæ (Zagreb) Alan Florinèiæ (Rijeka) Aleksandar Iliæ: Weekend Art Project In collaboration with Ivana Keser & Tomislav Gotovac (Zagreb) Andreja Kulunèiæ (Zagreb) Renata Poljak (Split) Sandra Sterle (Amsterdam, Zagreb) Slaven Tolj (Dubrovnik) Curated by Ana Deviæ & Nata?a Iliæ In a broader context, the exhibition project aims to explore the phenomenon of contemporary tourism, as well as the aesthetics and iconography of travelling. During the last decades, contemporary art has been recognised as an important and unavoidable factor of tourist offer. Economy, tourism and culture are closely related parts that form the definition of national identity. Croatia belongs to the circle of countries whose external identity has been based ? more or less successfully ? on tourism. During the 1960s, Croatia initiated large investments in the tourist infrastructure and offer. During the 1990s, the identity of tourist country has failed and acquired slightly paradoxical air. Not only high level of risk, war damages and economic crisis, but also the strong centralisation, has been imposing unfavourable economic terms for further initiatives. The phenomenon of travelling, and various advertising strategies that go with it, is being explored from various perspectives. Travelling as a process, a transition, a state in-between; it is multi-layered, we see it as a symbolic and private experience, but also as something banal, as consumption and mass entertainment. Art works question this theme from different positions. 2001: MSE-exhibition project of Galleria Neon (Bologna), cureted by Gino Gianuzzi ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate to unsubscribe, write to <syndicate-request@aec.at> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe your@email.adress