This article analyses the development of Conceptual Art in Bratislava during the communist period, with specific emphasis on the practices produced throughout the so-called ‘Normalisation’ (1968–1989). The text starts by introducing the functioning mechanisms of the Czechoslovakian artistic scene of the time. It then moves on to analyse the work of Július Koller, Rudolf Sikora and Ĺubomír Ďurček. It is argued that, despite the difficult conditions for art production present in Bratislava during Normalisation years, Conceptual Art served its precursors as an escape valve for their political convictions, which they manifested through the use of puns, parody, irony, metaphors and the design of elaborate cosmological fictions through utopian an...
Previously in the University eprints HAIRST pilot service at http://eprints.st-andrews.ac.uk/archive...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by MIT Press in ARTMargins on 25/03/2020, ava...
CZECH SURREALISM AND CZECH NEW WAVE REALISM: THE IMPORTANCE OF OBJECTS AbstractThis article examines...
The aim of this paper is to analyse the development of Conceptual Art in Bratislava during the commu...
This article discusses photographic approaches that emerged in the Eastern Bloc and in Western Europ...
This thesis studies the development of art photography practices in Czechoslovakia throughout the No...
This article analyzes the interaction between art and practices of everyday life in communist Czecho...
The article carries out a philosophical and cultural analysis of the creative works by Ukrainian art...
This essay considers a little-known international surrealist exhibition, the only one held behind th...
Nikolai Chernyshevskii (1828–89), a major nineteenth-century writer and thinker, continues to play i...
This paper presents a comparison of Slovak and Czech dissidents, the origin of the so-called “silent...
This dissertation explores the utopian and metaphysical aspirations found in the pockets of collecti...
The article aims to describe the nonconformist body of work by Vincas Kisarauskas and to answer the ...
This article focuses on book works by Latvian artists during the late-Soviet period, and also offer...
Soviet-era Communism was a project of emergence that failed to realise its Utopian ambition. Neverth...
Previously in the University eprints HAIRST pilot service at http://eprints.st-andrews.ac.uk/archive...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by MIT Press in ARTMargins on 25/03/2020, ava...
CZECH SURREALISM AND CZECH NEW WAVE REALISM: THE IMPORTANCE OF OBJECTS AbstractThis article examines...
The aim of this paper is to analyse the development of Conceptual Art in Bratislava during the commu...
This article discusses photographic approaches that emerged in the Eastern Bloc and in Western Europ...
This thesis studies the development of art photography practices in Czechoslovakia throughout the No...
This article analyzes the interaction between art and practices of everyday life in communist Czecho...
The article carries out a philosophical and cultural analysis of the creative works by Ukrainian art...
This essay considers a little-known international surrealist exhibition, the only one held behind th...
Nikolai Chernyshevskii (1828–89), a major nineteenth-century writer and thinker, continues to play i...
This paper presents a comparison of Slovak and Czech dissidents, the origin of the so-called “silent...
This dissertation explores the utopian and metaphysical aspirations found in the pockets of collecti...
The article aims to describe the nonconformist body of work by Vincas Kisarauskas and to answer the ...
This article focuses on book works by Latvian artists during the late-Soviet period, and also offer...
Soviet-era Communism was a project of emergence that failed to realise its Utopian ambition. Neverth...
Previously in the University eprints HAIRST pilot service at http://eprints.st-andrews.ac.uk/archive...
This is an accepted manuscript of an article published by MIT Press in ARTMargins on 25/03/2020, ava...
CZECH SURREALISM AND CZECH NEW WAVE REALISM: THE IMPORTANCE OF OBJECTS AbstractThis article examines...