Luchezar Boyadjiev on Fri, 15 May 1998 16:42:26 +0100 |
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Syndicate: BULGARIAAVANTGARDE show |
"BULGARIAAVANTGARDE. Contending Forces 2" in Munich Kunstlerwerkstatt LothringerStrasse, April 29 - June 1, 1998 Concept: Haralampi G. Oroschakoff. Curator: Iara Boubnova Artists: Tania Abadjieva, Luchezar Boyadjiev, Dr. Galentin Gatev, Pravdoliub Ivanov, Rassim Krastev, Kiril Prashkov, Kalin Serapionov, Nedko Solakov Organised jointly by the Kulturreferat der Landeshauptstadt Munchen and the Institute of Contemporary Art - Sofia, "Bulgariaavantgarde" is the second leg of the "Kraftemessen" ("Contending Forces") concept about Eastern artistic positions in the Western world. The concept is invented by the Berlin based artist Haralampi G. Oroschakoff who was born in Sofia, Bulgaria in an old Russian family. The first leg in June-July 1995 included three exhibitions of Moscow Conceptualist art - "The Damaged Utopia" (curator Margarita Tupitsyn), "Privatizations" (curator Boris Groys) and "Conjugations" (curator Victor Misiano), several side shows and a conference. The second leg - "Bulgariaavangarde" is curated by Iara Boubnova, Director of ICA-Sofia, and includes the works of eight contemporary artists representative of the new Bulgarian art from the last several years - from the already familiar to the Western art audiences Nedko Solakov and Luchezar Boyadjiev, to the up-and-coming Pravdoliub Ivanov, Dr. Galentin Gatev and Kiril Prashkov, and the very young Kalin Serapionov, Tania Abadjieva and Rassim Krastev. The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue/book of 240 pages - "Bulgariaavantgarde?, published by Salon Verlag, Cologne-Sofia which includes extensive visual information and textual interpretations on the Bulgarian cultural context. In her catalogue essay titled "Other-centricity", Iara Boubnova writes: "Our integration (contending forces) was from its very beginning a process of making one?s own way as an individual effort rather then as a collective action. And this is reflected in the present show: all participating artists share in the ambition to contend forces through materialised artistic reflection on the current cultural situation and the individual?s position there rather then through a declaration, a manifesto or a representative gesture." Bulgaria was recently "transferred" from the group of the "small" to the group of the "medium-sized" countries due to the 30% increase of independent states in Europe. Its cultural history with its unique experiences of existence under some foreign domination, "presents" artists and intellectuals with the phenomenon of the "other-centric" culture. This neo-logical expression is well suited to a certain specific intuition for differences and absences, which comes from the constant "catching up" to somebody else through the choice of yet newer and newer models. The other-centric culture is the "friendly" type of culture and is pointedly dialogical. It doesn?t develop fanatical egocentricity and is capable of assimilating what?s "foreign" to it with ease, while confusing its "upper" and "lower" levels. It often represents itself through the demonstration of its own shortages and is self-ironical by necessity. Behind the component "other" there is also the "what?", the "how?", the "when?" and the "where?". The idea to discuss any kind of "avant-garde" in art at the end of the 20th century is a risky one. For the obvious reason that the "avant-garde" now is always already an institution?. However, depending on the circumstances, it is possible to signify as "avant-garde" any type of contemporary art which is challenging accepted notions of art and which has developed against strong opposition from oppressive state (or art world) apparatuses. This is exactly the case with contemporary Bulgarian art. It developed in the late 1980-ies and matured in the early 1990-ies. Its current state of existence is motivated by concerns which are shared by most contemporary art/artists in the world - a desire to communicate a particular human condition in the most direct and profound manner possible while using various means of expression (ranging from drawings to video and computer art, usually integrated in installations), as well as, while drawing on various intellectual, spiritual, cultural, etc. traditions, not restricted only to Bulgaria. However, while the genesis of contemporary ("avant-garde") Bulgarian art could be traced back to the Totalitarian past of the country its artistic and cultural originality comes from the unique position occupied by the country and its culture between the East and the West of Europe. Compared to the art of the so called "Moscow Conceptual School", the art of the Bulgarian artists (Nedko Solakov, Luchezar Boyadjiev, etc.) is just as total (see, for instance, Ilya Kabakov and his "total installations") but far less didactically conceptual. The artists in "Bulgariaavantgarde" are interested in individual statements which are oriented towards the future and not the past while trying to make sense of the unique human condition of the artist living in a particular group of people, in a particular time and place. The major concern of the artists is always the desire to communicate their art to people who have different experiences and who are placed outside of the immediate surroundings of the country.