Category: Exhibitions

Peter Macapia
BORROWORROB: In Search of Symmetry
Peter Macapia, Palestinian / Israeli Currency
Peter Macapia, Palestinian / Israeli Currency

March 05 – 27, 2014
Opening of the exhibition on March 05, 2014 at 7 pm

HR

Home of the Croatian Artists
Barrel Gallery, Ring Gallery, PM Gallery
Trg žrtava fašizma 16
10000 Zagreb

Working hours:
Wednesday – Friday 11 am – 7 pm
Saturday and Sunday 10 am – 6 pm
Closed on Mondays, Tuesdays and holidays.

Exhibiting: Peter Macapia, Vito Acconci, Paolo Cirio, Einat Amir, Tonči Antunović, Ivan Argote, Fayçal Baghriche, Mladen Stilinović, Ana Hušman, Luciana Lamothe, Peter Rostovsky, Mary Jeys
Projections:
Ante Babaja, Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton

Borroworrob: In many ways every artistic work is posed in relation to another force. This activity is already spatial. A question borrows space from the space that it questions, but this also robs the space it questions of its own space, sometimes a lot, sometimes just a little – doubling it, turning it inside out – returning symmetry to asymmetry. For this exhibition, Macapia brings together various questions concerning space, including economics, engaged urban research, and history.

In the Barrel Gallery Peter Macapia will present his installation, made in collaboration with students from the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb: Jelena Mavrić, Georgette Ponte and Ivona Stražičić. Along with the installation will be a projection of Ante Babaja‘s classic film from 1958, Nesporazum.
PM Gallery now functions as Treasury and Mint, which exhibits and produces world currencies on the geopolitics of space as part of an international call for submissions as well as currency projects by Peter Macapia, Paolo Cirio, Mladen Stilinović, Peter Rostovsky, Mary Jeys and others.
The Ring Gallery presents an exhibition of experimental urban videos by artists from North Africa, Latin America, USA, the Middle East, and Europe including Fayçal Baghriche, Ana Hušman, Einat Amir, Ivan Argote, Luciana Lamothe, Peter Macapia, Tonči Antunović.
It is our great pleasure to announce the premier of The City Inside Me by Vito Acconci, in collaboration with Peter Macapia, especially for this exhibition.

The aim of this project is to engage the audience in questions regarding not only institutions as places but also those forces which define space as space, as a function of other forces, including those that constitute HDLU as many different kinds of institutions, the space between artists and audiences, and the space between them and global art economies, and between global art economies and the doors of the museum and back again . . .

In conjunction with the exhibition Borroworrob, please see the conference Doubling Space. Also in conjunction with the exhibition is the open invitation for the design and exhibition of currency as space: http://borroworrob.org/.

Peter Macapia is a New York based artist, architect, and theorist. He is a native of Vashon Island in the Pacific Northwest of the US. He is the director and founder of labDORA. Macapia’s art and architecture focus on the geopolitics of public space and forms of distributions, structural engineering, algorithmic computation, and the geometry and topology of matter/energy relations. He has exhibited and performed at The Storefront for Art and Architecture, as well as internationally at Art Miami/Basel with solo shows in New York, Hong Kong, London, and Los Angeles. He has taught architectural design, history and theory at Columbia University and Sci‐Arc, as well as ESA Paris, TUS Tokyo, and TU Delft. Macapia studied at RISD and Harvard earning his Bachelor’s and Masters’ degree, and received his PhD from Columbia where he was the recipient of the Presidential Fellowship. He is currently professor at Pratt GAUD.

The exhibition, conference, and currency as space competition is conceived and organized by Macapia with Conference Organizer Danica Selem, and Producer Tonči Antunović, in collaboration with Gaella Gottwald, Director of the HDLU and Sara Čičić, Curator.

For more information contact press@borroworrob.info or galerija@hdlu.hr.

Borroworrob is made possible with the generous support of FACE Croatia, City Office for Education, Culture and Sport Zagreb, Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia, EPSON, The Sheraton and Urban Stay Zagreb Agency.

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Open Call for Papers

http://borroworrob.info/

Saturday, March 8, Zagreb, Croatia

HR

Conference Keynote Speakers

Vito Acconci, Artist, Designer
Franklin Boyd, Art & Finance Professor; Attorney, Entrepreneur, Collector

Session 1: Doubling Space
Keynote : Ana Hušman, Artis
Sonja Leboš, Artist
Bojan Mucko, Artist, Philosopher, Ethnologist
Selected Presentations: TBA

Session 2: Space as Asset
Keynote: Paolo Cirio, Artist Activist
Zlatan Krajina, Theorist, Goldsmith’s
Iva Marčetić, Architect
Tomislav Tomašević and Teodor Celakoski, Founders Right to the City and Green Action
Selected Presentations: TBA

In conjunction with the exhibition Borroworrob: In Search of Symmetry, Peter Macapia and HDLU are hosting a conference and an open call for papers or performances on the city, currency, and space. The conference is divided into two sessions according to the following themes:
1) Doubling Space: How does one double, repeat, and fold space in the city? How does one expand and reproduce it?
2) Space as Asset: How will art engage emerging and current global economic flows, and how will that engagement effect the city and the logic of space locally and internationally?

Doubling Space
In many ways, contemporary art practices double and fold the space of the city back into itself. This practice has important historical precedents, one of the first of which was Manet’s Bar at the Folies-Bergerè (1882) in which issues of class, gender, and spectacle are raised to the surface of a new visibility concurrently through the transformation of painting as a social, commercial, and formal enterprise. What are some of the important contemporary gestures in which space is doubled, folded, and repeated in the urban context through artistic or political practices and what are their effects? How do these practices constitute forms of spatial redistribution and new forms of visibility? What are the historical, economic, social, and political forces of which they are the product? What histories do they seek to establish? To what extent are they distinct from or contribute to global influences reshaping the urban environment? Authors are encouraged to address these questions from the perspective of their  own practices, those of others, as well as from critical, historical, contemporary, geopolitical, socio-economic, anthropological, or other perspectives.

Allora

Allora i Calzadilla, Chalk, 1998-2002, Lima ; Francis Alÿs, Sometimes Making Something Leads to Nothing, 1997, Mexico City.

Space as Asset
On a global level, the financialization of art has created robust markets that continue to outperform many other markets, even during times of financial crisis, and quite possibly as a result of crisis. From this perspective art operates globally as a form of currency. But there are other forces organizing art practices that are creating new spaces and new economic relations in which “practice” is spatially redistributed. Already within the recent history of advanced practices groups such as WHW (What, How, and for Whom?) have participated in some of the more groundbreaking tendencies like The Otolith Group, Slavs and Tatars, in which a collective redistributes identity and agency among a group rather than the agenda of a single artist or concept. Similarly, in other instances “economy” is spatially redistributed. Artists like Paolo Cirio use hacking as a means of introducing activism into artistic and aesthetic contexts, reselling assets of other assets and exposing hidden wealth functions of yet further hidden economies. In yet other examples, quasi-institutional practices like E-flux created a time bank in which goods and services are redistributed through a social network and where exchange requires interactions and thus the creation of space.

As art becomes increasingly developed as a global form of investment, and simultaneously, as the global art fair circuit is geographically expanding every year, mining local cultures and for regional trends, critical contemporary artistic practices are continually questioning art as commodity, as asset, and as object. But they are increasingly reshaping the spatial practices and redistributing economic logics that define art as a cultural value. How are these challenges being explored today in Zagreb, regionally in the Balkans, and in what way do the historical forces that have shaped the region point to, away from, or against many of these global systems? What are the spatial assets that art seeks to redistribute, how are they redistributed, and for whom? Contributors are invited to reflect on this theme from the perspective of their own practice, the practice of others, and from historical and philosophical, political, economic, geographical, architectural, psychoanalytic, anthropological, and other points of view.

Christies

Christie’s Auction Advertisement for Urs Fischer, Untitled (Lamp/Bear), Installed in plaza of Seagram Building: Slavs and Tatars, PrayWay, 2012.

Submission Guidelines
Please submit in English the following in a single page pdf document of no larger than 1 mb:
1) Title of Presentation.
2) Name of author/presenter/or group, email address, and phone number.
3) Abstract of up to 200 words
4) Bio of up to 100 words
5) If you have a website, please include the url.
6) You may include up to one extra page for an image.

For contributors wishing to participate in the session Doubling Space, please send documents to doubling@borroworrob.info
For contributors wishing to participate in the session Space as Asset, please send documents to asset@borroworrob.info

Deadline for Abstracts: February 21, 2014. Selected Presentations will be notified February 23rd.

For contributors wishing to submit a proposal for a slightly different topic or counter-topic, but one still related to the two themes, please send to neither@borroworrob.info
Conference Inquiries: info@borroworrob.info
Press Inquiries: press@borroworrob.info
HDLU Venue: galerija@hdlu.hr

Website for Conference: http://borroworrob.info
The conference is organized by Peter Macapia/labDORA, with Danica Selem and Tonči Antunović for the exhibition Borrroworrob: In Search of Symmetry and in conjunction with the HDLU, http://borroworrob.org/exhibition

Borroworrob is made possible with the generous support of FACE Croatia, City Office for Education, Culture and Sport Zagreb, Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia, EPSON, Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb, Pozor, AkzoNobel – Dulux, The Sheraton and Urban Stay Zagreb Agency.

Expanded Themes:

Doubling Space

In 1969, Vito Acconci documented a piece in which he followed unknown subjects through the city and wrote down the details of his following on note cards. He did this until they entered a “private” space. Through a very simple act, he doubled the space of the city, folded it, and changed it according to a simple formula. In 2001 Sanja Ivekovic recreated a statue of Luxemburg’s Gëlle Fra as a pregnant “Rosa Luxembourg”, repeating the symbol and the monument folding history back into itself through the space of the city. Susan Lacy’s “Between the Door and Street,” invited feminists to discuss women’s issues on the stoops of a block in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn. Thomas Hirschorn installed the Gramsci Monument in a low-income housing project in the Bronx of New York, which operated as a social local hub for lectures, poetry, newspaper publications, a Gramsci Museum, and a radio station.
Each of these practices constitute different spaces, interventions, scenarios. They rearrange what is always already an experience of the city, of its history, of our relationships, but now have to confront it in an explicitly different way. Through this repetition space becomes a question for the viewer rather than an assumption. In many ways also, this is a particular bind already outlined in Walter Benjamin’s “Author as Producer” – what is the thinnest area between a political content and an aesthetic technique, where do they fold and double up? More contemporary practices, such as Elmgren and Dragset’s When a Country Falls in Love with Itself (2008), introduce a specific problem where narcissism is introduced into the global audience as the irony of their own (global) desires. By contrast, early social political projects, such as Mierle Ukele’s The Social Mirror (1983) taken on the audience of the parade in which irony cannot play such a specific role and the difference between the two critical approaches becomes more pronounced.

Space as Asset

Art spatializes money, deferring or incurring taxes, distributing dividends in art funds, circulating investments, multiplying banking and financial services, encouraging global trade and tourism through the expanding function of fairs, the consolidation of top tier contemporary artists in the auctions, and the simultaneous global rise in art education. Simultaneously, money spatializes art, sends it into storage, puts it on show in a corporate board room, distributes it among collectors participating in funds, moves it from one fair to the next, creates new audiences, and social spaces, turns it into spectacle and distributes it as a radical form of knowledge but which has commodifiable properties. Many practices over the last decade are experiments in economics and financing as a social experiment. These practices introduce obviously counter forces to major market trends, whether real estate development or speculation in the art market. While money and currency are thus not entirely new as critical subjects of inquiry, it is becoming clear that today’s practices (and problems) are dealing no longer with money as an obvious object or system. Indeed, the nature of money as a form of exchange (Marx) and its institutional history (Foucault) point to two of the most consistent, but slightly contradictory understandings. And yet, the evasive nature of exchange value and the critical and historical understanding of money as a means of maintaining asymmetry in power relations seems in fact consistent. From this point of view, one wonders how current and future trends in the definition and use of currency will impact our understanding of spatial relations.

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Art & Design Competition and Exhibition:
Currency as Space

HDLU Treasury and Mint, Zagreb, Croatia                                Tijuana Border, Mexico, U.S.

HDLU Treasury and Mint, Zagreb, Croatia                                                                     Tijuana Border, Mexico, U.S.

HR

Open call:  The exhibition BORROWORROB: In Search of Symmetry, in conjunction with the HDLU Treasury and Mint is holding an open call exhibition for the design of currency.  Entrants are encouraged to design a paper currency or alternative for the geopolitics of space.  50 projects will be exhibited at the HDLU, 10 projects will be selected by an international panel for publication and commentary and receive an award. Deadline March 1st, 2014http://borroworrob.org/

In what way can your currency be used for two different spaces?  Could each side represent a different value or function?  Could each side be used only in a specific location or space? What spatial distributions occur through the functions of your currency?

Currency:   Currency is a space and at the same time a medium which distributes and spatializes things, people, money, and services in varying ways, with varying intensities, geographically and psychologically. The objects to which it was once tied (gold), has changed and will change yet again.  Currency and space have quasi-fluid and quasi-stable functions.  But a mechanism of exchange is not the same thing as the forces which have assembled it. How does one analyze those forces?

Exchange: What if those forces were never about equalizing relationships, mediating flow of goods and services, cancelling debts and promises, but rather a form of exchange in which something hidden is exchanged for something apparent, like a dream, as two sides of surface that never intersect? What if spatialization were the primary function of currency?
Space: Space is not homogeneous, it is composed of forces.  There is a difference between entering space and leaving space, between acquiring space and losing it. Space is asymmetrical.

 Asymmetry:  The difference between what it takes to earn money and what it takes to spend it is also asymmetrical.  The relationship between currency and space is not new, but its ability to distribute people, things, and relations are not always the same from place to place or from one historical moment to the next.  So the question operating in this Open Call is how does currency spatializes people, their things, their relations? And how might that asymmetry be folded, doubled, inverted, and transformed into other functions?

Economic questions are not new as a form of artistic practice that shuttles between political and social research.  But the variations of protest which many artists are drawn and which articulate economic, social, and political asymmetries, are simultaneously articulated as spatial conflicts which seek legitimacy and symmetry in relation to other forces in which space is opened and closed, bordered, claimed and distributed, tracked and counted, occupied and dispersed.

The HDLU Treasury and Mint will exhibit selected submissions during March 2014 in the PM Gallery.  Submissions may be in the form of paper currency, installation or performance.

Open Call:  Currency for the conflict of space
Registration:
Please register a name and email by February 21st at treasury@borroworrob.org
*If multiple authors, please include all author names and just one email.
Registered participants will receive a serial number unique to their currency.
Submission:
Opening Date for Submissions:  January 15, 2014.
Submission Deadline:  March 1st, 2014.

Technical Requirements and Submission Guidelines:
1. Paper Currency
A4 PDF with the front and back of the proposed currency design on one side of the A4.
2. Alternative Currency
Entrants can suggest other media for currency, installation or performance.  Please describe or illustrate the currency on one side of an A4 sheet and the committee will install (or perform) the described currency or install the A4 sheet.  Please format the directions or explanation in two columns of similar width and height on one side of the A4 sheet.  Please include up to one additional page of directions for installation or performance.
3. Use of Currency
On one additional sheet, please describe in 100 words how the currency is to be used, what kind of space, and the spatial/geographical limits of its use.
4.  Identification
Please identify in the lower left corner of each sheet the serial number that has been assigned to the entrant (or team).

Eligibility: Anyone is eligible to enter
Fee: None

Deadlines:
Submission Deadline: March 1, 2014
Submission Process: Upload one pdf (no larger than 4 mb) to mint@borroworrob.org
Exhibition information contact:  mint@borroworrob.org
Press:  press@borroworrob.org
Projects selected for the exhibition will be also be shown along with projects by artists Mladen Stilinović, Paolo Cirio, Peter Macapia, Peter Rostovsky, and others.
. . .
conflict of space
return of space
borrowing of space
spatializing of space
division of space
substitution of space
use of space
closure of space
opening of space
rearrangement of space
folding of space
creation of space
end of space
beginning of space
donation of space
hoarding of space
trade free zones
discretization of space (women’s bathroom/men’s bathroom)
. . .
Current Panel of Selection Committee and Respondents
Vito Acconci
Paolo Cirio
Dejan Kršić
Peter Macapia
Brett Scott
Srdjan Jovanovic Weiss

Borroworrob is made possible with the generous support of FACE Croatia, City Office for Education, Culture and Sport Zagreb, Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia, EPSON, Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb, Pozor, AkzoNobel – Dulux, The Sheraton and Urban Stay Zagreb Agency.

sponsors1a

BOOK PROMOTION
Zlatko Kopljar K19

January 31, 2014 at 6 pm.

Barrel Gallery
Trg žrtava fašizma 16
10000 Zagreb

HR

We invite you to join us on Friday, January 31, 2014 at the promotion of a book about Zlatko Kopljar’s installation K19, in Barrel Gallery, at 6 pm.
At the promotion will speak Žarko Paić, Ph.D.

The book brings essays by Žarko Paić, Ph.D. and Israeli Curator Ory Dessau and rich photographic documentation of Zlatko Kopljar’s installation.

In an essay written for new work of Zlatko Kopljar, K-19, Žarko Paić, in the context of Adorno, Badiou and Lyotard, ask a question: Can contemporary art provide a possibility for man’s redemptive reversal? How and when does it become legitimate to open the possibilities of facing the question of boundaries between the sublime and the evil if just turning history into a museum issue at the time of techno-science visualizes everything that took place as artifact and information in databases? The seal on the procedures of truth is put by a third party. The utterance does not include a naïve illusion about yielding the history to neutral historiographical science. It would make even less sense to expect that the event would be interpreted in the awareness of the contemporaries as self-evident and hence non-problematic, without opposite interpretations. Thus the seal is not put just by the time. The struggle for the truth of the time imprints it into the soft tissue of history. Direct and indirect heirs both of the executioners and their victims face it. In this schism between worlds the contemporary event art sets its works into public space to make a discourse on an emerging community at all possible. The art of setting artifacts into public space is by no means just an installation of traces and archiving memory against oblivion. This is about something much more authentic. Truth, bringing guilt to awareness, and forgiveness create some room for the freedom of the new beginning.
How do we face the boundary of sublimity and evil today, without making this challenge just a cheap political and ideological means for other purposes or a mere aesthetic effect of de-realization of irreducible ‘nature’ of that about which we might not be able to say anything more? A credible answer to this question is offered by contemporary artist Zlatko Kopljar in his project-installation K-19. This is also probably one of his most radical performances. The question of guilt is not anymore directed at someone outside of the territory of the long-gone power of the nation-state. It is decisively posed to the contemporaries.
K19 was produced with the support of Serb National Council, Jewish Community Zagreb, Roma Community, Jasenovac Memorial Site, Ministry of Culture of the Republic Croatia and City Office for Education, Culture and Sports (City of Zagreb).

ZLATKO KOPLJAR
K19

17.01. – 07.02.2014.

Opening on Friday, January 17th 2014 at 6 pm in the Barrel Gallery, Trg žrtava fašizma 16, 10000 Zagreb.

Home of the Croatian Visual Artists
Trg žrtava fašizma 16
10000 Zagreb

HR

In an essay written for new work of Zlatko Kopljar, K-19, Žarko Paić, in the context of Adorno, Badiou and Lyotard, ask a question: Can contemporary art provide a possibility for man’s redemptive reversal? How and when does it become legitimate to open the possibilities of facing the question of boundaries between the sublime and the evil if just turning history into a museum issue at the time of techno-science visualizes everything that took place as artifact and information in databases? The seal on the procedures of truth is put by a third party. The utterance does not include a naïve illusion about yielding the history to neutral historiographical science. It would make even less sense to expect that the event would be interpreted in the awareness of the contemporaries as self-evident and hence non-problematic, without opposite interpretations. Thus the seal is not put just by the time. The struggle for the truth of the time imprints it into the soft tissue of history. Direct and indirect heirs both of the executioners and their victims face it. In this schism between worlds the contemporary event art sets its works into public space to make a discourse on an emerging community at all possible. The art of setting artifacts into public space is by no means just an installation of traces and archiving memory against oblivion. This is about something much more authentic. Truth, bringing guilt to awareness, and forgiveness create some room for the freedom of the new beginning.
How do we face the boundary of sublimity and evil today, without making this challenge just a cheap political and ideological means for other purposes or a mere aesthetic effect of de-realization of irreducible ‘nature’ of that about which we might not be able to say anything more? A credible answer to this question is offered by contemporary artist Zlatko Kopljar in his project-installation K-19. This is also probably one of his most radical performances. The question of guilt is not anymore directed at someone outside of the territory of the long-gone power of the nation-state. It is decisively posed to the contemporaries.

K19 was produced with the support of Serb National Council, Jewish Community Zagreb, Roma Community, Jasenovac Memorial Site, Ministry of Culture of the Republic Croatia and City Office for Education, Culture and Sports (City of Zagreb).

PAUL2

14.1. – 26.1.2014.

PAUL

Opening of the exhibition will be on January 14th 2014 at 8 pm.

Home of Croatian Visual Artists

Trg žrtava fašizma 16, 10000 Zagreb

Working Hours:
Wednesday – Friday 11 am – 7 pm
Saturday and Sunday 10 am – 6 pm
Closed on Monday, Tuesday and holiday.

ARTISTS

Ana Elizabet

Sandra Fockenberger

Paul Horn

Hund&Horn

Ursula Hübner

Alfred Lenz

Moritz M. Polansky

—-

DAILY STRUGGLE exhibits works that deal with problems that people face in everyday life.

It is less concerned with the “struggle to survive” or the big questions, such as the deeper meaning of all things or long term career strategies, and more with the sum of small events or difficulties we try to overcome daily, such as: “How will I get out of bed? Why is the clutch sticking? How will I take out the trash without ripping the bag?”

These actions can take place on an individual level; we see both people and things in actual situations, which are far from perfect. It seems that both objects and persons involved in this follow an unwritten command or dynamic, with no outwardly visible obligation or necessity.

At the exhibition, these actions can be materialised in such way that the products of companies and retailers that are severely hit by the economic downturn can find their users.

It transpires that attempted improvised semi-solutions and failures can be more human and rewarding than the routine.

PAUL4

DAILY STRUGGLE zeigt Arbeiten, die sich mit Problemen beschäftigen, mit denen Menschen im Alltag konfrontiert sind.

Dabei geht es weniger um den „Kampf ums Überleben“ oder um die großen Fragen, die man sich im Laufe des Lebens stellt, wie die Frage nach dem tieferen Sinn hinter allen Dingen oder nach der langfristigen Karrierestrategie. Es geht mehr um die Summe aller kleinen Ereignisse und Schwierigkeiten, die man von Tag zu Tag zu lösen hat; z.B.:  wie schaffe ich es aus dem Bett? Warum klemmt die Kupplung? Wie bringe ich den Müll runter ohne dass der Sack zerreisst?

Diese Verrichtungen können auf individueller Ebene stattfinden, und man sieht Dinge und Menschen in Situationen, die man alles andere als perfekt nennen könnte. Oder die Objekte und Personen, die darin verwickelt sind, scheinen einem ungeschriebenen Gebot oder einer Dynamik zu folgen, ohne von außen sichtbare Verpflichtung oder Notwendigkeit dazu.

Diese Verrichtungen können sich in der Ausstellung aber auch dahingehend materialisieren, dass Produkte von Firmen oder Gewerben Verwendung finden, die von den wirtschaftlichen Umbrüchen stark gebeutelt wurden.

Es zeigt sich, dass Versuche, improvisierte Zwischenlösungen und Misserfolge manchmal menschlicher und bereichernder sind als perfekte Routine.

 

p grozaj za pozivnicuPETRA GROZAJ
Moments in Time

Opening of the exhibition on December 3rd 2013 at 7 pm
3.12. – 15.12.2013.

Barrel Gallery

Trg žrtava fašizma 16
10000 Zagreb

Working hours:

Wednesday – Friday  11 am – 7 pm
Saturday and Sunday 10 am  – 6 pm
Closed on Monday, Tuesday and holiday.

Moments in Time

From its beginnings at the Academy of Fine Arts, Petra Grozaj’s painting has undoubtedly borne a strong self-referential and introspective mark which has always gone back much deeper than the classical intimate repertoire of themes and motifs. Self-analysis, presented through a systematically elaborated idea of ​​the so-called painting journal/diary in pictures, occurred through the motif of the face of the author, in which her emotional, psychological and existential situation could very delicately be traced. The specific – often cold – coloring of the paintings spoke in support of the process of inner purification of clusters of the outside world and experience, suggesting at times an isolated, solitary atmosphere. However, her own face, at which the artist was staring so closely, we recognized as a signal of the establishment of identity, which nobody can deny, just as we are surprised by everything that is sometimes hidden in us under perfectly controlled facial features.
The thematic shift that occurred with the new cycle of paintings will not greatly surprise the careful experts of the oeuvre of this talented artist. If in the current paintings Petra Grozaj partly metaphorically rejected other people’s energy, restlessness and daily frequency of contamination, she is now focused on a very specific kind of impact to which we are exposed through childhood, in the process of growing up and later throughout life. Recently masks have appeared in the works of several contemporary Croatian artists, for example Matko Vekić and Pavle Pavlović, carrying a certain amount of social criticism of contemporary alienated and predatory society. They indicate the loss and deletion of a human identity, of a tired people who are looking for some other fictitious identities outside the triangle of job-fridge-TV, or are simply assigned to different subcultural phenomena. Petra Grozaj’s paintings, in this context, do not speak of social decadence and the civilizational decline of human beings, but are still facing individual emotional and psychological processes.

Iva Körbler

Petra Grozaj graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts and from the School for Applied Arts and Design in Zagreb. She is the winner of the Rector’s Award of the University of Zagreb and Academy of Fine Arts Award. She exhibited on 15 solo and 50 group exhibitions in country and abroad. She represented Croatia at the Biennale of Young Artists  BJCEM in Naples. She participated at residential programs in Venice, Naples, Paris, Berlin and Leipzig. Her works are placed in private and gallery collections. She is a member of HDLU and HZSU. She lives and works in Zagreb.
www.petragrozaj.net

Info

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Tuesday – Sunday: 9am – 12pm / 4pm – 8pm
Mondays and holidays closed.

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Wednesday - Friday: 3pm - 8pm h Saturday and Sunday: 10am - 1pm h Mondays, Tuesdays and holidays closed

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