SocialEast Seminar on
FOREIGN EXPERIENCE IN POST-89 ART
Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest
Thursday 7 May 2009
http://www.socialeast.org
What attracted foreign artists and curators to the capitals of Central and Eastern Europe in the wake of the political changes of 1989 and how have they contributed to local art scenes and national art discourses? Are we moving from a model of national artistic identities to a post-national understanding of contemporary art? What parallels can be drawn with the experience of political exiles returning home and with the reconnection of national minorities and diasporas after the fall of communism?
Programme
11.00 Registration
11.15 Welcome: Maja and Reuben Fowkes (Translocal)
11:20 Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez (Curator, Paris/Ljubljana)
The Experience of an East European curator in the international art scene. A confessional first-person narration
11.40 Nada Prlja (Artist, Macedonia/UK)
On Being an International Artist
12.00 Diana McCarty (Media activist, Berlin)
Jet Set, Net Set, Easy Jet Set
12.20 Discussion
12.30 Lunch break
1.30 Maja and Reuben Fowkes (Translocal)
Ways of Belonging: Foreign Artists in Budapest since 1989
1.50 Szabolcs Kisspal (Artist, Budapest)
Timezones and Rituals
2.10 Minithon of interventions by foreign artists living in Budapest: EIKE, Katarina Sević, Claudia Martins, Alexander Schikowski, Catherine Burki and David Wilkinson
2.40 Discussion
2.50 Coffee break
3.10 Amy Bryzgel (University of Aberdeen)
Reconsidering the Avant-Garde: Afrika, the Russian Dog, and Marilyn Monroe
3.30 Lena Prents (Curator, Berlin)
Foreign Experience Against the Slipping Down Into the Intellectual Provincialism
3.50 Oleksiy Radynski (National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy)
Beyond Soros Realism
4.10 Discussion
4.20 End of programme in Ludwig Museum
5-7pm Workshop
Municipal Gallery – Museum Kiscell
7.00-10pm Pan-European Picnic
Municipal Gallery – Museum Kiscell
The SocialEast Forum is conceived as a platform for innovative, transnational research on the art and visual culture of Eastern Europe. Based on active collaboration with institutes of art history across Europe and the involvement of prominent academics, curators and artists, SocialEast is an internationally-recognised generator of groundbreaking research into the art history of Eastern Europe during the Cold War. The SocialEast Forum was initiated by Dr. Reuben Fowkes at Manchester Metropolitan University in 2006 and documentation of the seven preceding seminars can be found on http://www.socialeast.org.
Organised in partnership with:
Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest