Reports

Thank You for Accepting Our Participation

The title of the exhibition can be the sentence pronounced out of resistance to both kinds of oppression – outer and inner. This sentence being originally a slip we consider to be a beneficial reflection in such situation, in which one asks himself a question, why the normalisation remained in existence for such a long time, or more precisely, what is its heritage we have to learn to live with.
The exhibition combines the works of classics in their typical genres (statue, object, installation, photography) and the works of middle and younger generation of artists mainly with their videos.

artistsIlona Németh, Roman Babjak, Vladimír Havrilla, Michal Moravčík, Ján Mančuška, Jozef Jankovič, Jiří Surůvka, Ľubomír Ďurček, Zbyněk Baladrán, Martin Zet, St. Auby Tamás, Jiří Kovanda, Tomáš Rafa, Tomáš Svoboda, Stano Filko, Pode Bal
curatorsKatarína Gatialová, Fedor Blaščák
placeKunsthalle
tags
castFedor Blaščák
cameraMatej Opálený
soundMatej Opálený
editingJana Kapelová
interviewMatej Opálený
translationMichaela Wickleinová
categoryReports
published5. 4. 2014
languageČesky / English
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Thank You for Accepting Our Participation
We can loosely understand the term intermezzo as a planned activity or pause deliberately "inserted" into life or work and associated, for example, with the need for rest, the necessity of transformation, a change of direction, and an escape from the rut of everyday life, everyday life, overcoming feelings of unfulfillment, the desire to help, move forward in life, or get involved in something new.
The lecture by the internationally known Ukrainian artist Nikita Kadan at the Academy of Fine Arts was introduced and accompanied by a debate with the Russianist and semiotician Tomáš Glanc. Kadan lives and works in Kiev. He works with various media, including installation, sculpture, painting and collage.
How do we speak the law? The enactment of the legal is a social construct brought about before the law and after its fictions. As socialised ghosts, our collective minds register each other’s codes, through methodical patterns of self-elevating humans.