A Slower Dawn!

Vanishing Points 4.0

18. December 2021. – 30. January 2022.
MegnyitóOpening: December 17, 2021, 7:00 pm
MegnyitjaRemarks by: Turai Hedvig
KurátorCurator: Don Tamás
Contemporary reflections on antisemitism and Jewish identity after the fall of the Iron Curtain

The fall of socialism in Hungary and the Eastern Bloc ushered in an array of political and economic changes, but it also led to drastic social shifts. It brought to the surface numerous taboo subjects about which, under socialism, people had not been able to speak openly, neither on a personal nor on a social level. O

ne of these subjects was the issue of Jewish ancestry and Jewish identity. For many people, the (re)discovery of one’s Jewish identity began only in the 1990s. Organizations, associations, and schools were founded and many initiatives were launched as part of the institutional system that was taking shape, and religious life underwent a dramatic revival.

At the same time, the antisemitism that had been muted under the Kádár regime was becoming more and more palpable in the public discourse and in the media. The artists invited to contribute to the exhibition respond to this process in their works, and they also highlight the social and historical interconnections between the period of regime change and the present.

Launched in 2015, the Vanishing Points project series examines antisemitism and questions concerning Jewish identity in different periods of the twentieth century. The initial focus of Vanishing Points 1.0 was on sites in Budapest that were the backdrops for tragic acts of brutality following the German occupation of Hungary in the spring of 1944 and the rise to power of the Arrow Cross Party in the autumn of 1944 and winter of 1945.

In the second part of the series, the exhibiting artists explored the events of the period between 1945 and 1948. During these pivotal and decisive three years, there were numerous pogroms and cases of blood libel against Jews, as well as lynchings of Jews throughout the country, yet until recently little trace remained of these tragedies in our collective memory apart from scattered mention in the scholarly literature.

The most recent part, 3.0 of the Vanishing Points series dealt with the early Kádár era. The exhibition very deliberately challenged the still widespread view according to which there was no antisemitism in Hungary in the 1950s and 1960s.

As a logical step forward, the exhibition that is the fourth part in the series examines the issues of antisemitism and Jewish identity in the period of the regime change following the fall of the Iron Curtain.

Tamás Don