CT / MeetFactory Gallery / Little Warsaw (HU): Fightlessness
Curator: Jaro Varga
Opening: 18. 2. 2016,
19:30
Exhibition duration: 18. 2. – 3. 4. 2016
The Hungarian art group
Little Warsaw (András Gálik and Bálint Havas) belongs to the most striking
artists of their generation, which emerged on the contemporary art scene after
the year 1989. Their work is closely connected with issues specific in the context
of former Eastern Bloc countries – analysis and re-contextualization of objects
and ideas from the past, deconstruction of common art forms, a striking
anti-establishment attitude, a critical mirror held up to modernism,
retro-avant-garde, conceptualism and neo-conceptualism, the expansion of the
borders of art and transfer of artistic discourse into a broader social
reality. From the beginning of the new millennium Little Warsaw created some
essential context- specific works (e.g. The Body of Nefertiti at the
Venice Biennial 2003, Time and Again at Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam,
2014, the Battle of The Inner Truth at the Trafó Gallery in Budapest,
2011 etc.). These works are written in the basic alphabet of the post-socialist
art. Should we like to describe a few principles to characterize the work of
the group in general terms, we might start with a thesis that Little Warsaw is
returning to the very essence of sculpture, interested in resuscitating or
reincarnating the dead sculpting mass. In almost Duchamp style they transfer
objects of the past into new realities, attaching to them new meanings and
trying to assemble yet another semiotic mosaic which too is just transient.
Edit András compares this principle to the classical story of Prometheus, reiterated
in the stories of Pygmalion or Golem, in the character of Frankenstein or in
the modern versions of the Pygmalion story, such as Pinocchio or the
Gingerbread Man. Another topic of Little Warsaw is investigation of
manifestations and mechanisms of how ideologies work on the invisible and
hard-to-recognize personal level of a human individual. This they demonstrate
in their various artworks, where they develop historical micro-narratives, e.g.
circumstances (factors) accompanying Hungarian sculptors András Beck or Jozsef
Somogyi. The art group highlights some weak points in history, which leads to
controversial questions: Who has the
right to touch history and question the established and still present forms of
past ideologies?Fightlessness is the
first solo presentation of this art group in the Czech Republic. The
prevailingly sculpture exhibition develops several parallel narratives that
have been in the center of interest of Little Warsaw, along two basic lines:
individual confrontation with the external world and with oneself (a kind of
artistic introspect).
In works referring to
the story of András Beck (Sculpture Machine, Familyspeak) Little Warsaw moves historical
artifacts to other places in order to throw them into new critical connections
and interpretations, thus disturbing their static contents and demonstrating in
broader terms the transient character of history and of monuments. Similarly,
in the work called Fighter (2014), which reinterprets a wooden statue
from the first half of the 20th century, a three-dimensional object – a statue
of a hero – was transferred into a flat transparent image made of glass. Thus
the heroic pathos of the original statue encountered its own frailty and
transience. The motif of such a transfer of shape, space and context appears
also in the couple’s most recent artworks, where they make use of design
furniture from the first half of the 20th century (Sliding, Quater 2015,
Double Locus 2014). The art group also explores the topic of the
relationship between “art production and art collection” (i.e. art versus the
art market – e.g. in the color mosaic called CMYK (or Relief after the Bauhaus artist Johannes Itten) and
of questions concerning the role of contemporary artists in society, the roots
of these issues going back to the avant-garde movements of the early 20th century.
Historiographical
interest of Little Warsaw could refer to the question presented by the curator
of Documenta 12 Roger M. Buergel: "Is modernity our antiquity?" If so,
then we should rethink our relationship to modernist forms which in themselves
have inscribed motives of ruins, decay and dilapidation. That the modernist
past is in ruins, is clearly inscribed also in the Fightlessness exhibition,
which – from a more distant perspective – could remain the historiographical or
archaeological museum installation where the works themselves (some of them
already presented in another context, time and location) recently speak through
their updated forms. And that is what Little Warsaw is after (cares
about). To prevent some art forms from
dying out in sinkhole ruins, breathe into them a new critical potential, a new
“soul”, by means of perpetual re-contextualization.
Open daily 1 – 8 pm and according to
the evening program. Voluntary admission fee.
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Contact and more information:
Jaro Varga → curator
+420 775 655 295 jaro.varga@meetfactory.cz
Šárka Maroušková → PR Manager
+420 723
706 249sarka.marouskova@meetfactory.cz
MeetFactory is supported
in 2016 by a grant from the City of Prague amounting to 10.000.000 CZK.
CT - Fightlessness - ENG.pdf