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Parallel Chronologies - Invisible History of Exhibitions PDF Print E-mail
Parallel Chronologies - Invisible History of Exhibitions
Exhibition
Opening: May 20, 6 p.m., 2009, Labor (V. Budapest, Kepiro u. 6.)
On view: May 21 - June 15, 2009
(Tuesday and Thursday 4 p.m. - 8 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.)

Invisible History of Exhibitions
international symposium
Location: Kretakor Bazis (IX. Budapest, Gonczy Pal u. 2.)
Date: May 21 - 22, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. tranzit. hu (www.tranzit.org) organizes an exhibition and symposium with the title Invisible History of Exhibitions, which aims at the formation of a shared knowledge and discourse on Eastern European art exhibitions from the 1960s till now.

The larger framework of the project, Art Always has its consequences is a long-term international collaborative platform, that focuses on invisible, alternative histories through genres and forms of art practices such as artist text, archives, and conceptual design, which have had restricted international visibility and accessibility so far and thus are often missing from the canonized narratives of contemporary art in Eastern Europe (www.artalways.org)

The "Invisible History of Exhibitions" project looks at the history and
the current interpretations of the exhibition, as the dominant format of
contemporary art production and presentation. "History" in this context is interpreted as constructed narratives based on events that constitute
shifts in the notions of art (art history) and the modes of its
presentation (exhibition history). While in western countries mainstream
art institution hosted curatorial group exhibitions that constitute the
landmarks in the history of exhibitions, in Eastern Europe between the
1950s-1980s progressive art events could often only happen in "second publicity", in private flats and off-site spaces outside of public art institutions so they are deeply embedded in the historical conditions of the public sphere. With this symposium we attempt to trace and introduce a different methodology to be able to include Eastern-European events in the international discourse on exhibition theory.


Parallel Chronologies. Invisible History of Exhibitions -
documentary and research exhibition

Parallel Chronologies investigates the exhibition as a cultural phenomenon and a genre on its own right focusing on the period determined by the state socialisms of the Eastern European region. The project intends to break with the usual ways how both international and local art events and publications either ignore or exoticize this field. For this aim we present a network of professional relationships, exhibitions, events, and art spaces instead of the sheer display of artworks from the period.

The exhibition contains two archives dealing with neo-avant-garde art from Belgrade and Novi Sad. The prelom kolektiv has studied several significant events of the SKC, the Student Cultural Center in Belgrade in the 70s, and kuda.org new media center has collected the most important documents of the neo-avant-garde in Novi Sad. The third section of the exhibition presents progressive art events from the 60s-70s in Hungary. The exhibition and event documentations from Hungary are structured around a research asking various Hungarian art professionals about the art events from this period they find the most significant in relation to their own practice. Instead of aiming at an objective history gained from the synthesis or reconciliation of differing individual points of views we rather would like to trace the idiosyncratic pattern of difference and accordance, the map of blind-spots and legends. The exhibition also addresses chronologies as important channels of mediating art events of an epoch. Chronologies play a defining role in transforming atomic events into histories and canons especially in the case of Eastern-European art events that happened in the second publicity during the 60s and 70s.

Invisible History of Exhibitions - international symposium

The symposium organized in parallel with the exhibition addresses crucial questions in relation to auto-histories of Eastern-European underground art, self-positioning through international exhibitions, and
reinterpretation of art history.

How can we remember, reconstruct, and recycle exhibitions in order to include them in our shared historical knowledge? How could historical research adapted to international curatorial discourses change the ever prevailing feeling of being ignored and belated of historically and geo-politically marginal art scenes? How Eastern-European art
practitioners could take advantage of - and at the same time overcome the voyeuristic western market interest in communist past fueled by both post-colonialism and globalism? How can we make sense of the shared experiences of youth movements, sub-, parallel- and counter cultures, political activism and the fundamental differences concerning the legacies of neo-avant-garde?

Themes and sessions of the symposium:
1. Revisiting exhibitions: reconstruction and re-contextualization
2. Archives - the archive as exhibition format and exhibition archives
3. East European Exhibitions as tools of identity-politics
4. Exhibition making as an emancipatory practice

Speakers:
Judit Angel (HU)
Maja and Reuben Fowkes (GB, HR)
Izabel Galliera (USA),
Reesa Greenberg (CAN),
Vit Havranek (CZ)
Yelena Kalinsky (USA/RU),
kuda.org (SRB),
Viktor Misiano (RU)
Cristian Nae (RO)
prelom kolektiv (SRB)
Natasa Petresin-Bachelez (SLO)
Isabelle Schwarz (DE)
Keiko Sei (JPN/THA)
Georg Schollhammer (AT)
Emese Suvecz - Orshi Drozdik (HU)
What How and for Whom? (HR)
Andrea Tarczali (HU)
Magdalena Ziolkowska (PL)

Introduction and moderation: Dora Hegyi, Zsuzsa Laszlo


organizer: tranzit. hu (www.tranzit.org)
contact: Agnes Szanyi, This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it , +36 70 7798132
curators of the exhibition: Dora Hegyi and Zsuzsa Laszlo, kuda.org  Novi
Sad, prelom kolektiv Belgrade
concept of the symposium: Dora Hegyi, Zsuzsa Laszlo, and Emese Suvecz

The exhibition Parallel Chronologies and the symposium Invisible History
of Exhibitions is part of the international project Art Always Has Its
Consequences co-financed by the Culture 2007 program of the European
Union.

tranzit is a contemporary art program supported by the Erste Bank Group.

supported by the National Cultural Fund, Hungary
 
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