[spectre] Open call for participation in Galery Galzenica's annual
program in 2011
galerija galzenica
galerija.galzenica at globalnet.hr
Tue Jun 1 10:31:25 CEST 2010
It seems that the traditional division between fine and applied arts is
still significant. This flexible yet constant dividing line is
consistently being drawn even today, when most of the methods we have
used so far to make this division are not considered efficient anymore.
For example, recognizing different modelling procedures is not
sufficient to determine the artistic status of a certain object or
product. This also applies to the nature of social activism organized
around a well-shaped aesthetic object or event, since political struggle
more and more frequently takes place in the cultural sphere.
Furthermore, it has never been more difficult to label an object or a
phenomenon as art based only on its intertextuality, since the
institution of art has become ever more complex, progressively implying
a greater number of cultural practices.
Following the change in production, the difference between functional
and non-functional objects is not as simple as it was at the turn of the
20th century, when, in the wake of the first industrial revolution, an
organized struggle was started by artists who actively wanted to
participate in making social decisions. Moreover, it has not just become
more difficult to determine the line between design and fine arts, but
it also seems – as Hal Foster claims in his book „Design and Crime“ –
that in the recent, so-called post-industrial revolution, almost
everything is done according to design principles. Foster claims that
this omnipresence of design in contemporary society is the symbol of the
triumph of industrial culture which has profited out of the emancipatory
projects of avant-garde art.
Foster refers to two pioneers of Viennese modernism, Adolf Loos and Karl
Kraus, in order to emphasize the necessary distinction between design
and art. Paraphrasing Kraus, he claims that a designer transforms art
(an urn) into a functional object (chamber pot), while functional
modernists transform functional object (chamber pot) into art (urn).
Both cases represent totalitarian practices that do not allow for any
critical thinking. Foster therefore concludes that, although autonomous
art is a modernist illusion, we still need the „freedom space” which is
to be found somewhere between the two extremes.
Following this line of thought, we invite you to participate with your
works, proposals and curatorial concepts in the process of creating
Gallery Galženica's program for 2011. Please send your on-line
applications to galzenica at gmail.com by July 1st, 2010.
Based on the received proposals the curators of the gallery (Klaudio
Štefančić, Sanja Horvatinčić and Nina Pisk) will make the program for
2011 which will be announced by July 15th, 2010.
--
Pučko otvoreno učilište Velika Gorica
GALERIJA GALŽENICA
Trg Stjepana Radića 5
HR - 10410 Velika Gorica
tel:+385 1 6221 122 / fax: 6226 740
www.galerijagalzenica.info
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