Sanja Ivekovic Trokut / triangle, 1979 © Kontakt. The Art Collection of Erste Group and Erste Foundation
Sanja Ivekovic Trokut / triangle, 1979 © Kontakt. The Art Collection of Erste Group and Erste Foundation 
TITLE_NAME :
CITY THEATRE

29/09/2017 - 27/10/2017

VINTAGE 
Magyar utca 26 
 
H-1053 Budapest

www.vintage.hu   

 
Stano Filko & Alex Mlynarcik, Sanja Ivekovic, Julius Koller, Kwiekulik, Maurer Dora, Mladen Stilinovic

On weekdays, the socialist man works, unwinds, and relaxes—as labor movement slogans tell us. During weekends, they relax a bit more. On holidays, they are happy, albeit knowing that the grand objective still demands lots of work; yet they are delighted to be part of the collective construction of socialism. During the week, they go to work and deal with mundane issues; they stand in queues just as proudly as they march in parades, fully aware of the purpose of their work. They use public spaces according to their intended function; on the streets they commute, they sit on benches instead of sprawling on the asphalt, they drink beer (with limits) where beer is sold, and most importantly, they avoid scandals. Everything follows the script—in theory. Also working in this ideal city setting—behind which socialism’s construction slowly decomposes—are artists. It is this very behind-the-scene reality that they point out. They do not avoid scandals, as scandals refer to the truth, and the truth is scandalous.

The neo-avant-garde art of the 1960s and the 1970s broadened the possibilities of artistic expression radically. Artists considered traditional approaches unfit for capturing the reality behind the language and the daily life defined by the socialist dictatorship. Through public art actions, they addressed social norms in a critical way, also extending this reflective thinking to life in general.

Through the positions of artists from the region, the exhibition introduces examples of the directions and the possibilities of neo-avant-garde public art. Documentations of the reactions to official marches, like urban interventions, performances, and spontaneous social and artistic events, are put on display in venues within walking distance of each other; the exhibition also includes action photos and urban minimal actions that were more modest, nearly invisible, owing to political austerity.

The following venues of the exhibition:
Csendes társ (magyar u. 18.)
Kisterem (képíró utca 5)
Trapéz (henszlmann imre utca 3.)
Curator: péter szörényi
Assistant curator: viktória popovics

Supported by: cseh centrum, erste stiftung, linea collection

The exhibition is a coproduction of csendes társ, kisterem gallery, trapéz gallery, vintage galéria as a part of off-biennale budapest 2017.