Past, Continuous focuses on the relationship between the official culture of the socialist era and the contemporary artworks reflecting upon that. We attempted to pose the questions as to how this rather despised but robust legacy could be treated. We also wanted to see on what to do what to do with the ideologically contaminated cultural heritage of this period. Together with the question of how to regard the artworks of the socialist realist* '50s and those of the Kádár era that are both stemming from similar ideas but representing dissimilar ways of expression. When observing the relations of art and propaganda, one certainly recognizes the bizarre anomaly of mass production and overexploitation of symbols, which, along with gestures, and other well-known socialist realist formulæ of pathos, got devoid of meaning, annihilated themselves by obsessive repetition.

We considered it important to make a conscious decision when choosing the location. The quest was not only to find an emblematic building of the era but also to find a meaningful site connected to the artistic life of the time. The interior of Fészek Artists' Club, founded in 1901, was transformed during the Kádár regime in a way that created a peculiar symbiosis of the bourgeois milieu and socialist modernism. Fészek played a special role at this time by working as a transitional zone on the borders of different cultural policies. The exhibition sections are linked by a particular installation adjusted to the properties of Fészek. This installation is made of plastic yarn from one of the closed textile factories once booming and dominating the socialist market. The leading thread meandering in the rooms and places evokes the material culture of the recent past fond of plastic, and transforms the whole space of the exhibition. By involving people from diverse arts and disciplines and completing the exhibition with related events, our aim is to foster an environment that helps conceive and raise questions otherwise remaining implicit. The exhibition is designed to make visible our ongoing processing of these recent times in a way that can contribute to the reinterpretation of this ambivalent heritage.
Past, Continuous
Published:

Past, Continuous

Past, Continuous focuses on the relationship between the official culture of the socialist era and the contemporary artworks reflecting upon that Read More

Published: