The year 1989 marked the end of one era and the beginning of another―the period of postcommunist transformation. Similar processes were taking place in other former Eastern Bloc countries that were declaring free elections, reclaiming full sovereignty, building democracy, and completely changing their economies in favor of free market capitalism. The several historic months in the latter half of 1989 came to be known as the “Autumn of Nations” and ushered in the total liberation of East-Central Europe from Soviet domination. Less than two years later, the Soviet Union itself collapsed, signaling the end of the Cold War in Europe. The new era brought not only political and economic changes, but also cultural ones which would lead to reclaiming individual liberties and other civil rights, as well as to the rebuilding of national identities within the European community which could now, finally, encompass the entire continent. Culture became a moving force for change, as censorship was abolished, monuments to communist heroes were removed, and streets renamed.
The radical cultural changes reverberated in the art of the period, its ideology, and the system of institutional sponsorship that promoted the three approaches most popular with artists. Many of them engaged in the changes directly, creating works that either commented on current events or proposed what they believed to be the right direction for the transformation to take. Others, although preferring to observe from a distance, highlighted the diverse contexts and historical antecedents generated by the cultural identities of countries, regions, or even artistic centers, in which the changes were rooted. The third contribution of contemporary art was its role in shaping how we remember the communist period, by on the one hand questioning the past, and on the other accenting the persistence of the traces it left behind, thereby inviting reflection on its negative as well as its positive ramifications. The art created in these circumstances and that related directly to the post-1989 transition, democracy, and a free market economy can be united under the name “art of the transformation” and it is the subject of this publication.
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Andrzej Szczerski is a historian and art critic, assistant professor in the Art History Institute of the Jagiellonian University, and the research deputy director of the National Museum in Krakow in 2016–2018. He is the author of numerous publications on nineteenth- and twentieth-century art as well as contemporary art, including Four Modernities: Texts About Polish Art and Architecture in the Twentieth Century (2015). He is curator of numerous exhibitions, including Modernizations 1918–1939. The Future Perfect in the Museum of Art in Lodz (2010), The Power of Fantasy. Modern and Contemporary Art from Poland in BOZAR Centre for Fine Arts in Brussels (2011) Lviv, 24th June 1937. City, architecture, modernism in Museum of Architecture in Wrocław (2016/2017), and #Heritage in National Museum in Krakow (2017/2018).
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Softcover. Zustand: Poor. Sichtbare Flecken. The year 1989 marked the end of one era and the beginning of another--theperiod of post-communist transformation. Similar processes were taking placein other former Eastern Bloc countries that were declaring free elections,reclaiming full sovereignty, building democracy, and completely changing theireconomies in favor of free-market capitalism. The several historic months inthe latter half of 1989 came to be known as the "Autumn of Nations" andushered in the total liberation of East-Central Europe from Soviet domination.Less than two years later, the Soviet Union itself collapsed, signaling theend of the Cold War in Europe. The new era brought not only political andeconomic changes, but also cultural ones which would lead to reclaimingindividual liberties and other civil rights, as well as to the rebuilding ofnational identities within the European community which could now, finally,encompass the entire continent. Culture became a moving force for change, ascensorship was abolished, monuments to communist heroes were removed, andstreets renamed. The radical cultural changes reverberated in the art of theperiod, its ideology, and the system of institutional sponsorship thatpromoted the three approaches most popular with artists. Many of them engagedin the changes directly, creating works that either commented on currentevents or proposed what they believed to be the right direction for thetransformation to take. Others, although preferring to observe from adistance, highlighted the diverse contexts and historical antecedentsgenerated by the cultural identities of countries, regions, or even artisticcenters, in which the changes were rooted. The third contribution ofcontemporary art was its role in shaping how we remember the communist period,by on the one hand questioning the past, and on the other accenting thepersistence of the traces it left behind, thereby inviting reflection on itsnegative as well as its positive ramifications. The art created in thesecircumstances and that related directly to the post-1989 transition,democracy, and a free-market economy can be united under the name "art of thetransformation" and it is the subject of this publication. Andrzej Szczerskiis a historian and art critic, assistant professor in the Art HistoryInstitute of the Jagiellonian University, and the research deputy director ofthe National Museum in Krakow in 2016-2018. The author of numerouspublications on the art of 19th and 20th century as well as on contemporaryart. Artikel-Nr. 79573d2d-ea6a-4f09-8cf2-aaa6f1f4d91d
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