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"collaborations in curating, research and writing
to create translocal knowledge and experience
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agitcrit  

How Philosophers Get Curated
Art Monthly (Jan 2009)

Asks what are the reasons for the proliferation of philosophers in the world of contemporary art? Have philosophers overtaken the role of art critics in providing legitimation for the mechanisms and structures of the art world? Published in Art Monthly January 2009...(more)

Degrees of Modernity
Exindex (April 2009)

Reviews three exhibitions dealing with the phenomenon of national representation within a globalised art context. Arctic Hysteria is a show of Finnish art curated for an international audience, Mi Vida is an exhibition based on a Spanish collection of international art, while Altermodern is the 2009 edition of the British art triennial that trespasses national borders...(more)

 

 

From Post-Communism to Post-Transition:Art in Eastern Europe
The Art Book (Feb 2009)

In the first decade after the Fall of the Berlin Wall the label ‘post-communism’ appeared as the most appropriate term to refer to the overall situation in Eastern Europe and was applied in the first major survey show of the contemporary art of the region. Today, the pressures of the present outweigh the burden of the past to such an extent that contemporary art in Eastern Europe is fast moving beyond the ‘transition’ into uncharted territory...(more)

The Exclusive World of Art Power
Zivot umjetnosti: journal for contemporary art no.83

Sarah Thorton: Seven Days in the Art World Granta, London, 2008. Boris Groys: Art Power MIT, Cambridge MA, 2008

What these two recent books have in common is that they both set out to reveal the inner mechanisms and driving forces of the contemporary art world. While one author places the art world squarely within the arena of rampant liberal capitalism, the other positions it within the contradictory frame of post-communism. In one account the market reigns all powerful, while the other acknowledges the possibility of a position outside the rules of the market, represented by historical and contemporary forms of ‘propaganda art’. The author of Art Power is maverick art theorist Boris Groys, while Seven Days in the Art World was written by self-appointed anthropologist of the international art scene, Sarah Thornton, and despite the differences, they both provide provocative insights into the internal power relations of the art world...(more)

Vacuum Noise
IDEA (Summer 2009)

Vacuum Noise plunges in with the alluring question ‘has the working class gone to heaven?’, soliciting the response of leading contemporary artists to the legacy of twenty years of global capitalism in the East and South. The exhibition, curated by Nikolett Erőss, seeks to examine the renewed visibility of the industrial worker as victim of the intensive global capitalist strategy of seeking out cheap labour anywhere in the world and the human cost of rolling factory closures. The ever-flexible Trafó Galeria space was decked out in subdued industrial grey for the occasion, with low walls used to produce cubicles that are reminiscent of the monotonous sub-divisions of factory space. The installation creates a serious and challenging setting to absorb six works that broach the massive subject of the real lives and fictional representation of workers...(more)

Venice Biennial
Time Out Budapest (July 2009)

The major exhibition at the Venice Biennial is curated by Daniel Birnbaum, an art world celebrity famous for his hard-edged philosophical approach to contemporary art, who on this occasion went for safe choices in an elegantly installed exhibition that offers few surprises. Making Worlds aims for gravity with the inclusion of the best known artists from the Sixties, here turned into the great predecessors of the younger generation of art superstars. Yoko Ono shared a life-time achievement award with John Baldassari, the American conceptual artist, whose huge banner reading ‘I will not make any more boring art’ confuses tourists on the Grand Canal...(more)

Hungary is searching for a star
Time Out Budapest (June 2009)

Romania has Mircea Cantor and Dan Perjovschi, Bulgaria Netko Solakov, while Albania boasts a trio of big names: Anri Sala, Adrian Paci and Sislej Xhafa. High up to the north east of the old Iron Curtain the Lithuanians have Deimantas Narkevicius, while Polish flags are raised with Pawel Althamer and Zofia Kulik, the Czechs have Katerina Šeda, the Slovak’s Roman Ondak, and Croatia is represented by Mladen Stilinović and Sanja Iveković. Slovenia is a special case, as 90% of their artists are world famous. But what’s up with Hungary, where is the Hungarian art star shining in the cosmos of the international art scene?...(more)

Arctic Hysteria
Timeout Budapest (Feb 2009)

After a successful run at PS1 Gallery, the influential off-shoot of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, where it was dubbed a ‘surprise sleeper’ by art critics for provoking more interest than national survey shows from small nations usually do, Arctic Hysteria has now infected Budapest.  The Finnish partner in this curatorial joint venture, Marketta Seppälä, explains that since ‘Finns are born in snow, live in snow, and die in snow’ they have a deep relationship to the natural world. The picture that emerges from this ambitious exhibition is therefore not a distillation of Finnishness, but represents instead an understanding that human culture is part of the ‘cycles of nature’.  The American co-curator of the show, Alanna Heiss, who is also the director of PS1 Gallery, introduces the concept of ‘arctic hysteria’ in more personal and anecdotal terms. Although in some ways ‘too important and too old’ to undertake a survey of young artists, thanks to a ‘complete blood transfusion’ in Helsinki some years ago she feels a special kinship with Finland, because the ‘pure Finnish blood’ coursing through her veins provides her with ‘unique insight into this mysterious and beautiful country.’...(more)

Three Colours Red
Exindex September 2008

Miklós Erhardt, Thomas Hirschhorn and Isa Rosenberger at Vienna Secession July-September 2008

‘Seeing a long way into the West’

Austrian artist Isa Rosenberger’s exhibition at Secession consists of a series of projects that reflect on the socialist past in Eastern Europe. Her socially-engaged film, A Monument for the Women’s Centre (2006) focuses on the lives of women who are former employees of a defunct DDR chemical factory and their attempt to combat the media image of East German women as victims of the transition by creating a contemporary monument. Speaking in the distanced tone of the specialist, the artist poses a series of direct questions to the women, such as ‘Why are you a double loser?’

Manifesta Reaches New Heights
Exindex (Aug 2008)



Under the auspicious motto ‘It’s happening’, Manifesta 7 boldly opened to the public this July in the mountainous Italian regions of Trentino and South Tyrol. This most diffuse edition of the European biennial takes place in four locations that are more than 100 km apart, and situated along a historic route connecting the Roman and Germanic worlds. Highest up the Alps lies Fortezza, a colossal Habsburg fortification and the only place where all the Manifesta curators undertook a joint venture. The other three venues were awarded to individual curatorial teams, Bolzano went to the Raqs Media Collective, Anselm Franke and Hila Peleg got Trento and Adam Budak was stationed in Rovereto, together they invited more than 180 artists to participate. The large number of curators, artists and venues might speak about the ambition to reconnect with the previous series of successful Manifesta shows and at the same time overshadow the last minute cancellation of Manifesta 6 in Cyprus two years ago...(more)

European Biennial in Search of a Soul
Art Monthly (Aug 2008)

The organisers of this year’s Manifesta can breathe a collective sigh of relief that the seventh edition of the European biennial of contemporary art is actually happening. After the trauma of the eleventh hour cancellation of Manifesta 6 in Cyprus due to an eruption of local sensitivities, it is somewhat of a miracle that the biennial is back from the brink. Beyond just happening, Manifesta 7, which takes place in the mountainous Italian provinces of Trentino and South Tyrol, is an attempt to return to the spiritual roots and sense of mission of the ‘Manifesta Decade’ and restore its tarnished credibility. Manifesta 7 steers well clear of politics, which is understandable given that the curatorial desire to foster peace between Turkish and Greek Cypriots in Nicosia backfired so disastrously. Consequently, the concepts of the four exhibitions that make up the Biennial, curated by Adam Budak, Anselm Franke and Hila Peleg, and the Raqs Media Collective, deal with abstract notions of regionalism, European identity and the residues of industrial culture...(more)

Gerald Raunig, Art and Revolution:
Transversal Activism in the Long Twentieth Century

Art Monthly (May 2008)

The theoretical basis for Art and Revolution comes from the distillation of the core elements of Hardt and Negri’s post-Marxist epic Empire, an essential reference point in current discussions of the revolutionary potential of contemporary art. Revolution should be understood not as a ‘one dimensional attempt to take over the state apparatus’, but rather as a triad of ‘insurrection, resistance and constituent power’. Gerald Raunig takes issue with celebrity theorist Slavoj Žižek’s mischievous campaign to rehabilitate Lenin and the tactics of the October Revolution, which throws a Bolshevik spanner in the smooth, tripartite ‘revolutionary machine’ theorised by Hardt and Negri. Art and Revolution is a considered intervention in the delicately poised debate on the relevance of post-Fordist theory to art by a Viennese philosopher who is himself a leading figure in the field...(more)

The Hidden Depths of Hungarian Art
Arrivals>Art From The New Europe (Modern Art Oxford, 2007)

Approached from the top, through the most obvious channels and institutions, Hungarian art structures can give the impression of being stuck in a time warp, oblivious to international trends, and indifferent to contemporary art. The weakness of major institutions is however more than compensated for by the activities of medium size galleries, both non-profit and commercial, and small-scale independent spaces, as well as the dynamic initiatives of artists themselves...(more)

 

 

 

 

 

Periodicals

Art Margins
2005
System of Coordinates
Kristina Leko
2004
Branding vs No Logo

Art Monthly
2009
How Philosophers Get Curated2008
Manifesta 7
Art and Revolution

Balkon
2002
Getting Personal

Blok
2004
Dream Factory Communism

Exindex
2009
Degrees of Modernity
2008
Three Colours Red
Manifesta 7
2007
Don't Complain: Venice
2006
Sensuous Resistance
Less is Beautiful

Frieze
2002
Here Tomorrow

Greenmuseum
2005
Unifed or fragmentary?

IDEA
2009
Vacuum Noise

Index
2008
Can provincialism be rehabilitated?

Praesens
2006
Principles of Sustainainability
2005
Dialogue
2004
Glocal Practices
Iski Kocsis

Radionica
2002
ARTsylumseeker

The Art Book
2009
From Post-Communism to Post-Transition

Third Text
2009
Socialist Eastern Europe
2006
Europe in the Fifties

Time Out Budapest
2009
Arctic Hysteria
Bencsik Barnabas
Tilo Schulz
Mi Vida
Twenty Years After
Hungary is Searching for a Star
Venice Biennial

Time Out Croatia
2009
MSU
2008
WHW

Umelec
2006
Indie Art and the Seventies
2005
Displaced Monuments
2002
Budapest Box

Zivot umjetnosti: journal for contemporary art
2009
The Exclusive World of Art Power

Books / Catalogues

Revolution I Love You:
1968 in Art, Politics and Philosophy

Trafó, CACT, MMU, 2008

Ground Up
Fiona Woods, 2008
Towards the Ecology of Freedom

Art and Theory After Socialism
Plymouth, 2008
Ecology of Postsocialism

Revolution is not a Garden Party
Manchester Metropolitan University, 2007

Arrivals
Modern Art Oxford, 2007
Hidden Depths of Hungarian Art

Die Planung
Katerina Sevic, 2007
The Art of Post-Ecological Subjectivities

The New Art
Rachmaninoff's, 2006
Art of Making do with Enough

InAction
SparwasserHQ, 2006
Transmit

Unframed Landscapes
Croatian Association of Contemporary Artists, 2004

Human / Nature
SCCA Zagreb, 2002

copyright 2005-9