sound Jan Vosýnek 24 results

Jan Vosýnek

Once upon a time, in an exhausted era in which nothing could apparently happen. Every exhibition is a small battle in the heat of the culture war. Individual skirmishes both consolidate and undermine constellations of opinions. Their rhythm and harmony is the heartbeat of a warring community. The culture war is both portend and sublimation. It is easy to escape its roar.
Markéta Adamcová's exhibition delves into the themes of mortality, generational trauma, and corporeal vulnerability. Her work highlights the importance of understanding history and family constellations as key factors in understanding our current state and behavior.
The May lecture from the Land/Scape series featured New York landscape architect Michelle Delk from Snøhetta and Swiss landscape architect Thomas Kissling from VOGT Landscape Architects. The topics were inspirational places for contemporary life, the connections between people and their surroundings, and water in the landscape.
Edit András mainly follows engaged, socially sensitive and critical works of Hungarian art. She is interested in the changing social position of art and the ways in which it adapts to or resists the current situation. She looks at how post-socialist culture deals with its own past, the gendered aspects of Hungarian art, the relationship between culture and power, and how easily cultural and historical issues can be exploited politically.
In their designs, 6a deals with the reuse of already existing elements or what is at hand on site. However, it is not only their aim to reuse old buildings or their materials, but to also recycle the stories that support the emergence of a new authorial approach.
The lecture from the new series Constructions introduces Swiss structural engineer and professor of structural design at ETH Zurich Joseph Schwarz. He speaks about his projects in collaboration with architect Christian Kerez and others.
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