CRISIS, FLOW, AND HYBRIDITY - πάντα ῥεῖ
Originally published in Hungarian by Endre Cserna in Artmagazin, issue 151. English translation and foreword by Lili Rebeka Tóth.
From Painting to Non-Painting and Back Again
The art of László Lakner has, since the very beginning, been saturated with art historical, literary and historical references and quotations. Particularly important among them is Marcel Duchamp, who, as a painter who abandoned painting, challenged the possibilities and limitations of making pictures and the conceptual framework of painting. His faith and doubt in painting, irony and scepticism towards painting, the subtle humour, and the complex network of diverse quotations and self-references can be the point of departure for all practices in painting and non-painting that reflect on the nature of painting, especially since the 1960s.
“Though I’m a deliberate planner, I create instinctively.”
János Szirtes talks about his works from the 1980s to Barbara Kriesch.
INTERTHINKING: THE IMPACT OF HUNGARIAN ARTISTS ON CONTEMPORARY GENERATIVE ART
On October 17th, the exhibition “Interthinking” opened at the Budapest Art Factory, curated by Kate Vass Galerie. The show celebrates Hungarian cultural heritage and the impact of Hungarian artists on the international generative art scene.
Every Lighting Designer Has Their "Own Path"
The recently published book Eastern Lights presents iconic lamp collections and their Hungarian and Czechoslovakian designers from the second half of the 20th century—shedding light on works by Tamás Borsfay, Sándor Borz Kováts, Helena Frantová, Tibor Házi, Sándor Heller, Josef Hůrka, Stanislav Indra, Tibor Nádai, Ján Šuchaň, and the Opteam group, as well as bringing attention to trends that have faded into obscurity.
“The working process is a very intensive monologue to myself.” – Interview with Jósefina Alanko
The 28th STRABAG Artaward International is one of the region’s most highly endowed private art prizes. In 2023, Jósefina Alanko, a Polish-Finnish artist, received the main prize – and to our great pleasure we had the chance to talk to her about her artistic practice, the story behind the submitted artworks and how her artistic language changed over time.
“An unattainable floating whiteness, now that would have been something.”
Interview with György Jovánovics about his 1974 "Plans for a Roma Holocaust Memorial".
Stille - Exhibition by Mona Zimen and György Király
An exhibition of sculptures by Mona Zimen and paintings by György Király recently opened at the Stadtturm Galerie in Vielshofen, Bavaria, Germany.
Mysteries that everyone senses
Katalin Ladik is an internationally recognized figure of the Yugoslavian and Hungarian neo-avantgarde, and she is among the great rediscoveries of recent years. The prevailing assessment of Ladik in Hungary has shifted dramatically. Originally stigmatized as the “naked poetess,” she is now regarded as a renowned and even defining figure on the Hungarian art scene as a visual artist, poet, and radical female performer. This shift clearly illustrates a more general turn in perceptions. Several important initiatives from recent years that were intended to spread this turn in broader circles are worth mentioning, for instance the Secondary Archive, which is the most recent history of art written by women. The Archive offers a detailed overview from distinctive perspectives of the oeuvres of women artists from Central and Eastern Europe.
“What you see is what you get, reality doesn’t pretend to be anything else than what it is.”
Hans van der Meer was born in 1955 in the Netherlands and is considered the most distinctive Dutch documentary photographer of his generation. On the occasion of his exhibition titled Minor mysteries on view until 23 december at the Robert Capa Contemporary Photography Center in Budapest we were also able to meet him – so we talked about the pictures he took in Budapest in the 1980s and the time he spent in Hungary, the relationship between photographs and words, his archive, and a tiny bit about football too.
“Ballenesque is a viewpoint of the world from my psyche”
Roger Ballen was born in the United States in 1950 and now living and working in Johannesburg, South Africa for more than forty years. We talked with one of the best-known photographers of our time apropos of his exhibition in Budapest, where we discussed the path from documentary to staged photographs, his interest in psychology, the complex relations between language and photographs, and his works at this year's Biennale Arte in Venice.
From Eastern Hungary to France
In the life and oeuvre of an artist, there is often little of consistency to allow general conclusions to be drawn. The majority of artists, writers, thinkers and even scientists ebb and flow through better and worse periods. What is almost certain, however, is that the human characteristics and stages of individual artists cannot be explained with anything other than the undeniable differences in their personalities, their convictions and their private lives.
“No single piece of a meme is a masterpiece”
I lost useful hours to this meme page laying on my sofa scrolling through all the witty memes about the contemporary art market and art theory. Besides being a big fan I wanted to figure out the motivation and drive behind the two-year-long activity that created 1340 posts so far—all of them focusing on daily happenings and existential questions in the art world.
Lili Agg: The Possibility of an Island
You go down into a renovated cellar of a baroque castle in the middle of a sparsely populated village in South-West Hungary to find an unexpected exhibition of an emerging Hungarian artist. The contrasts between the extremely sizzling summer sun and the natural coolness of the basement creates tense atmosphere for Lili Agg’s installations.