The exhibition presents a selection of graphic works from Dóra Maurer’s PB series, created between 1969 and 1971. During the time these prints were made, Maurer was focused on reinterpreting and pushing the boundaries of graphic reproduction techniques. When viewed in the context of her entire oeuvre, these works show a noticeable shift towards abstraction, including only a few figurative elements with multiple meanings. Before the PBseries, her works from the Pompeii Cycle and the Evening Scenes series still retained a narrative quality, recounting her travels to Italy and Greece. In these earlier works, figurative representation was important, even though she depicted these experiences through the lens of her own subjective reality. In contrast, the PB series emphasizes the technical process, focusing more on the observation and documentation of the process rather than the subject of the image itself. Following this period, her work began to explore action graphics, photography, and experimentation with materials and mediums. The PB series — realized between these two periods — can be interpreted as a point when she abandoned narrativity.
The title of the series, “P,” represents “persona” (the person), and “B,” represents “berg” (the mountain). The artworks labelled with PB, a combination of the two signs, refer to the symbiosis of the two through their formal language. To better understand these works, it is helpful to start with a broader interpretation of these terms, thinking in terms of the relationship between nature and humanity.
The work titled Biafra does not bear the PB label and is not officially part of the series, however, it fits in with the pieces in the series in terms of time, technique and form. What sets it apart from the works exhibited here, and from Maurer’s graphics in general, is that it is in color. Maurer rarely used color in her graphics, as she explained in her book Rézmetszet, rézkarc:
“In retrospect, it is noticeable: I never felt the need for colors in printed graphics. I still don’t feel the need today. I printed in black, more precisely, with variations of black. I mixed yellow, blue, or red (brown) into the ink, ‘modulated’ the black, ‘modulated’ the black, which influenced the overall tone of the print. The colours of the inks are very strong and direct. I am convinced that the rich scale of black, white, and grays functions as potential, inherent colors that unfold in the viewer’s imagination. There is no need to say the colour outright. Colors and color tensions can be conveyed not only through tones but also through the way tones appear: variations in linear, dotted, or planar etched surfaces, and by choosing the materials and acids used for etching.”
Boglárka Tóth