Programs

The Czech Visual Art Foundation Mánes

„Legal doesn’t always have to be legitimate“ 

A relevant episode of our critical programme deals with the state of The Czech Visual Art Foundation and with recent (and still in progress) initiatives of art community aiming to find a meaningful way out of the current alarming situation of not only the above mentioned institution.
The building SVU Mánes in Prague has embodied unfortunate socially-political events and processes. It was established in the 1930s to serve to a wide spectrum of artists and artistic activities but it has been currently treated in a completely unprecedented way resulting from unclear intentions of a very limited and impervious group of people.
The documentary tries to clarify the history of the Visual Artists Union Mánes and the Czech Visual Art Fund with stress primarily on privatization and transformation period in the 1990s. At the same time it also documents activities of artists and theoreticians united in the initiative Mánes for Artists who are not indifferent to a completely illegitimate way of treating the cultural heritage.
The documentary shows the art community struggle for its rights but it might also be regarded as a case study of hasty changes that occurred in the Czech society and politics during the 1990s and affected our culture and society for a long time.

placePrague
tags
directingJanek Rous
castPetr Siegl, Rostislav Koryčánek, Achab Haidler, Blanka Jiráčková, Johana Lomová, Pavel Sterec, Tomáš Novotný, Isabela Grosseová, Jiří Ptáček, Alexey Klyuykov, Ivan Mečl, Barbora Kleinhamplová, Štěpánka Šimlová, Josef Novák, Tereza Stejskalová, Vít Havránek
cameraJiří Havlíček, Giulio Zannol, Janek Rous
soundRoman Štětina
editingJanek Rous
interviewTereza Jindrová, Janek Rous
translationAdéla Dörnerová
playlistsCritical series
categoryPrograms
published29. 11. 2013
languageČesky / English
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The Czech Visual Art Foundation Mánes
It's obvious that the issue of the environment and ecology in art is increasingly becoming a consciously political decision that affects what art we create, how we teach it, how we talk about it, or how we present it. Artwork is intertwined with cultural activity, which is linked to activism and vice versa. The context, material used and financial resources are increasingly accentuated.
In the focus of the group’s activity, public and urban spaces are regarded as open exhibition places containing many different media that can be used for artistic self-expression. Their works are best interpreted within the network of urban life, public spaces and omnipresent, governing signs, reflecting on the very issue of big city existence and uncovering “hidden” phenomena.