After the Fair . 2009
+ Georg Kargl Fine Arts
In his installations, videos and collages the Croatian artist David Maljkovic deals with the controversial history of his native country by exploring the modernist remnants of socialist Croatia as a part of Ex Yugoslavia and their echoes on the present, as well as their future possibilities. Reaching into the past, the artist turns to examples in which the ideas of universal modernist progress are interconnected with a specific understanding of socialism as a potentially radical, experimental, modernist concept.
Maljkovic’s first solo exhibition in Vienna was based on the research material about the EXAT 51 group and it refers to the Yugoslavian Pavilion at Vienna Fair, 1949. The Pavilion was designed by Vjenceslav Richter, Ivan Picelj and Aleksandar Srnec, all of them later became members of EXAT 51, short for Experimental atelier. The group was based in Zagreb and proposed to abolish the borders between high art and applied art, which apart from art also covered design, set design and exhibition pavilions for fairgrounds. In then dominate socialist realism surroundings they were trying to obtain legitimacy for abstract art and experimental and creative approaches to the work.
After the Fair puts in focus the Yugoslavian Pavilion at the International Vienna Fair and recalls absent images of the pavilion and the absence of an euphoric projection of a happier future which should be built after the recent historic trauma.
Georg Kargl Fine Arts
+ Georg Kargl Fine Arts
In his installations, videos and collages the Croatian artist David Maljkovic deals with the controversial history of his native country by exploring the modernist remnants of socialist Croatia as a part of Ex Yugoslavia and their echoes on the present, as well as their future possibilities. Reaching into the past, the artist turns to examples in which the ideas of universal modernist progress are interconnected with a specific understanding of socialism as a potentially radical, experimental, modernist concept.
Maljkovic’s first solo exhibition in Vienna was based on the research material about the EXAT 51 group and it refers to the Yugoslavian Pavilion at Vienna Fair, 1949. The Pavilion was designed by Vjenceslav Richter, Ivan Picelj and Aleksandar Srnec, all of them later became members of EXAT 51, short for Experimental atelier. The group was based in Zagreb and proposed to abolish the borders between high art and applied art, which apart from art also covered design, set design and exhibition pavilions for fairgrounds. In then dominate socialist realism surroundings they were trying to obtain legitimacy for abstract art and experimental and creative approaches to the work.
After the Fair puts in focus the Yugoslavian Pavilion at the International Vienna Fair and recalls absent images of the pavilion and the absence of an euphoric projection of a happier future which should be built after the recent historic trauma.
Georg Kargl Fine Arts
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