The majority of young artists working in Eastern Europe in
the 1980s was – apart from the rejection of canonized conventions
– also inspired by a desire to confront the totalitarian
system.
In most cases, unofficial art in these states
only existed as an isolated phenomenon that was denied
publicity, as an activity of groups either different from or,
more often, similar to one another.
Such was the situation especially in Romania, where at the
time of dictatorship the young generation that opposed the
officially approved art could mostly work underground.
Yet, despite their isolated state and the detrimental geopolitical
divisions, at the beginning of the decade here, too, a novel,
postmodern sensitiveness reared its head with respect to
both content and style, peculiarly merging with other late
(post)avant-garde type of artistic phenomena.
Romania soon sported several workshops, all of them named
“Atelier 35”: these sprouted one after another and became
the hotbeds of progressive and alternative art, collecting
young artists with a penchant for experimentation and action.
Rural Atelier 35 centers – in Oradea, Timisoara, Cluj-Napoca,
Sfântu Gheorge, Târgu Mures, Baia Mare, Sibiu, and Arad –
enjoyed a somewhat greater freedom than organizations in
the capital under direct governmental supervision.
One of the most significant groups was Atelier 35 of Oradea,
originating in the local youth art club and established in
1984, the members of which in the first part of the decade
focused on Actionism, Arte Povera, experimental film and
photography, mail art and the Fluxus attitude, and later
on new painting, object art, installations and video art.
The attempts at renewing the language and means of art
dovetailed harmoniously with the expression of subjective
content. Although direct political action was not a feature
of the group’s mainstream, they were creditable representatives
of an alternative that could be termed “aesthetic
resistance”.
By the mid-1990s, as a result of the pluralization of Romanian
society, most of the earlier art groups – including the
Oradea Atelier 35 – were dissolved. Many of the former
members left Oradea, but prior intellectual connections
and experimental attitudes subsist.
In addition to presenting the most characteristic artworks of
the ’80s and ’90s, the present exhibition in Modem also displays
a selection of works created in recent years. Furthermore,
the Debrecen show provides an overview of artistic
trends in Oradea over the two decades with the help of old
posters as well as archived photographs, recordings.
Experiment and Community
Atelier 35 of Oradea 1981–1995
08. April 2011. – 19. June
MegnyitóOpening: April 7, 2011, 6:00 pm