In January 2020, the General Assembly of Budapest passed a resolution to create a “Monument to Women Raped in War,” facilitating the personal and communal processing of a long-forgotten trauma story. The monument is scheduled to be inaugurated at the end of 2023.
Since the project launch, the themes of war violence, public commemoration and memorials as well as their broader context have been presented in several events, a mock-up exhibition, a lecture series, and a publication, fostering social and professional dialogue and debate.
Since World War II, there have been numerous waves of sexual violence in global and local conflicts, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the ensuing military aggression have recently brought the brutality of war (sexual) crimes, traumatic losses, vulnerability and environmental destruction alarmingly close, while also demonstrating the power of broad social solidarity.
The urgency of offering a nuanced examination of the complex phenomenon and operation of violence is due not only to the violence experienced in a rising number of military conflict zones, but also to the inequalities in patriarchal power structures, discrimination against LGBTQI+ people, struggles for bodily autonomy, equality and reproductive health, and the rise of domestic violence.
Exposure to violence and aggression is systemic. The health, justice and (family) law systems of the partiarchal state, which subordinate and degrade women, fundamental deficiencies of the legal system, and male-centric national and memory politics are all responsible for the perpetuation of (often state-sponsored) bias against women, the schemata of violence in public consciousness, and practices of victim-blaming.
The international group exhibition at the Budapest Gallery presents experiences of violence, scripts of social behavior, and visual and political themes of violence from women’s and queer perspectives.
Works with a more abstract approach to the complex patterns of states and trap situations of abuse, fear-mongering and anxiety are juxtaposed with diary-like works recording visceral reactions to the situation in Ukraine and to pervasive violence.
Several artists deal with the enduring traumas of the region’s recent past, the Yugoslav wars.
The political-ideological manipulation of collective memory, ethnically based violence, and collective responsibility are examined in this investigative, partly archive-based research within wider contexts and relations. These include artistic representations of Polish, Irish and South American social movements and body politics activism that rewrite the strategies of solidarity and agency.
The accompanying and educational programs developed in cooperation with artists, NGOs and human rights activists, such as discussions, talks, guided tours and workshops, seek to engage different generations and people of various social backgrounds.