[spectre]
exh. Akumulatory 2 Gallery, 1972-1990, at Zecheta Gallery, Warsaw
Andreas Broeckmann
broeckmann at leuphana.de
Thu Oct 4 08:43:53 CEST 2012
"Beyond Corrupted Eye: Akumulatory 2 Gallery, 1972-1990"
A major group exhibition at Zacheta National Gallery of Art in Warsaw,
runs through November 18, 2012.
http://www.zacheta.art.pl/en/article/view/928/beyond-corrupted-eye-akumulatory-2-gallery-1972-1990
This exhibition is an attempt to present the history of a gallery that
for eighteen years of its operations remained a non-commercial space for
presenting the work of artists from all over the world. The exhibitions
and discussions initiated there and a critical discourse pursued in both
theory and practice situate it among the most significant actors on the
then map of artistic geography. Functioning in defiance of geopolitical
divisions, the Akumulatory 2 Gallery was a place where the public was
able to become familiar with art from the East and West, with artists
from Eastern and Western Europe, the United States and Canada, from
South America and Asia.
The gallery’s origins date back to the NET idea, formulated in 1971 by
Jarosław Kozłowski and Andrzej Kostołowski, and a subsequent manifesto
mailed to some three hundred and fifty artists and art critics in Poland
and internationally, inviting collaboration and a free exchange of
artistic facts. Despite official reprisals, the idea of an
anti-institutional, non-controllable NET was continued and developed at
the Akumulatory 2 Gallery in Poznań, founded by Kozłowski in 1972.
Functioning until 1990, the gallery was a space where various artistic
ideas and philosophies intersected, where various forms and modes of
art’s functioning were presented and discussed. The gallery showed
artists associated with conceptual art, minimal art, land art, mail art,
concrete poetry, Fluxus, as well practices combining the visual arts
with music.
From 1972 to 1990 the Akumulatory 2 Gallery presented a total of one
hundred and ninety five events, from exhibitions, through performances,
actions and music projects, to lectures. The gallery functioned as a
quasi-institution, lacking institutional support and often changing
venues. Run, and largely financed, by Jarosław Kozłowski, it was a space
that was put at the disposal of the invited artists without obliging
them to adhere to any predefined agenda.
The documentary material presented at the Zachęta and in the
accompanying publication offers an insight into artistic practices
pursued outside the official, entrenched art system, beyond the axes of
the centre/periphery divisions, into a vast area of artistic strategies
developed at a small, alternative gallery collaborating with artists
from all over the world despite functioning in the oppressive conditions
of a communist state.
The titular ‘incorruptible eye’ refers to both vision and visibility. On
the one hand, to vision that refuses to surrender to ideological
pressures and commercial temptations and, on the other, to a blurring of
distinctions between the visible and that which is expelled from the
field of vision. Visibility resisting aesthetic or political preferences
is but one way of reading the history of the Akumulatory 2. The
documentation collected in the exhibition and catalogue, largely
published for the first time, will facilitate a much more comprehensive
reading of this history.
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