[spectre] Fwd: CONF: Repositioning the Postwar Avant-Garde in the East (Dresden/online, 12-13 Jun 25)
Andreas Broeckmann
ab at mikro.in-berlin.de
Thu May 15 15:22:00 CEST 2025
From: Isabel Wünsche
Date: May 14, 2025
Subject: CONF: Repositioning the Postwar Avant-Garde in the East
(Dresden/online, 12-13 Jun 25)
Archiv der Avantgarden – Egidio Marzona, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen
Dresden, Jun 12–13, 2025
Registration deadline: Jun 2, 2025
The second symposium of the ‘Decolonizing the Avant-Garde’ project
focuses on post-1945 avant-garde and non-conformist artistic practices
in Eastern Europe, Central Asia, and Japan. The view of the avant-garde
that emerged during the Cold War is largely West-centric—attempts to
decolonize the post-1945 avant-garde accordingly have tended to focus
mainly on its relation to the colonizing and colonialist West. Before
and during the Cold War, however, the West was, of course, not the only
colonizing and colonialist power. In an attempt to 'former' the West
(much like the ‘formering’ the Eastern Europe after the fall of the
Berlin Wall, when many began to refer to the ‘former Eastern Bloc’),
this symposium focuses on avant-garde practitioners across races and
ethnicities who worked within Eastern and Central-Eastern Europe—before,
behind, and after the Iron Curtain—as well as within Japan.
Two main issues will be explored at this conference: 1) We will chart
how avant-garde artists in these regions critically regarded the West,
that is the acclaimed center of postwar avant-gardism: What (other)
notions or theories of the avant-garde were in circulation here? What
decentering practices did avant-garde artists develop? Did the
avant-garde in these regions position itself differently than that in
the West?
2) We seek to question the mainly Western (art-historical) discourse
of decolonization itself: Does that discourse and the power structures
it aims to expose do justice, for example, to the complexities of
artists holding ties to Soviet colonies outside the West? Did colonial
and colonizing practices play a similar or different role in the
avant-garde's history here? To what extent should the critical apparatus
of decolonization be revised accordingly? To answer these questions, the
symposium will also pay attention to Japan and to how its
Program
Thursday, June 12, 2025
10:00 Registration (Blockhaus, Café 451°)
11:00-11:30 Welcome + Opening
Rudolf Fischer and Przemysław Strożek (Archiv der Avantgarden – Egidio
Marzona (ADA), Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden), Sascha Bru (KU
Leuven), Isabel Wünsche (Constructor University Bremen)
Session 1: Avant-garde Theories and Networks: Eastern Europe and the
Global South
Moderated by Kerstin Schankweiler, TU Dresden
11:30-12:00
Przemysław Strożek, ADA, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden
Theories of the Avant-Garde in Eastern Europe and its Reception in the
Global South, 1950s-1970s
12:00-12:30
Rado Ištok, National Gallery Prague
The Long Anti-Fascist Struggle in the Work of Czechoslovak Artists
12:30-13:00
Simone Wille, University of Innsbruck
A Czechoslovak-Indian Connection in Filmmaking: Radical and Innocent Puppets
13:00-14:30 Lunch Break
Session 2: Avant-garde Networks: Eastern Europe and the Near East, North
and South America
Moderated by Doreen Mende, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden
14:30-15:00
Adrienn Kácsor, Bauhaus-Universität Weimar Baghdad-Budapest: Fragile
Cold War Alliances
15:00-15:30
Jasmina Čubrilo and Ana Ereš, University of Belgrade
“Strategic Essentialism” as Positioning Tactic of Conceptual Art in
Yugoslavia
15:30-16:00 Exhibition Tour, Przemysław Strożek
16:00-16:30 Coffee Break
16:30-18:00 Roundtable Discussion on Subversive Avant-garde Practices in
the Eastern Bloc with Zuzana Bartošová & Lucia Gregorová-Stach, Slovak
National Gallery, Bratislava; Sabine Hänsgen, independent scholar,
Bochum; Miško Šuvaković, University of Belgrade
Moderated by Sascha Bru
Friday, June 13, 2025
Session 3: Attempts of Decentering Moscow and Decolonialization in the
Soviet Union
Moderated by Isabel Wünsche
10:00-10:30
Angela Harutyunyan, Berlin University of the Arts
A Spatial Utopia: The Perestroika Avant-gardes and the Limits of
Decolonial Interpretations
10:30-11:00
Irina Riznychok, Constructor University Bremen
Conceptual Art behind the Iron Curtain: Neo-Avant-Garde Practices of the
Sverdlovsk Uktus School in the 1960-1970s
11:00-11:30 Coffee Break
11:30-12:00
Ketevan S. Kintsurashvili, Tbilisi, Georgia
Abstract Art as Political Art in Soviet Georgia
12:00-12:30
Shirin Melikova, Azerbaijan National Museum of Art, Baku
Nonconformist Art Practices in Azerbaijan: The Absheron School
12:30-14:00 Lunch Break
Session 4: The Postwar Avant-garde in Central Asia and
Decolonialization in the Soviet Union
Moderated by Sascha Bru
14:00-14:30
Harsha Ram, University of California, Berkeley
Decolonizing the Russian Avant-garde: A Kazakh Poet’s Eurasian Polemic
14:30-15:00
Mira Kozhanova, University of Bamberg and Daria Kostina, independent
researcher, Almaty
Lost in the Margins: Migrant Artists in Kazakhstan, 1940s–1960s
15:00-15:30
Maria Redaelli, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice
Broadening the Concept of the Russian Avant-Garde: The Formation of the
Avanguardia Orientalis and the Savitsky Museum Collection
15:30-16:00 Coffee Break
Session 5: The Postwar Avant-garde in Asia and Decolonizing Japan
Moderated by Przemysław Strożek
16:00-16:30
Yeon Shim Chung, Hongik University, Seoul
Constructing the “Avant-Garde” in Korean Art and Writings from the late
1950s to the 1980s
16:30-17:00
Midori Yoshimoto, New Jersey City University
Reconsidering Japanese Women Artists and the Avant-Garde
17:00 Concluding Discussion
Registration is free but mandatory. If you would like to attend the
symposium in person, please write to Przemysław Strożek
(Przemyslaw.Strozek [@] skd.museum) before June 2. Seats are limited, so
first come first serve. Online attendance is possible as well. For this
please write to the same email before June 9.
Reference / Quellennachweis:
CONF: Repositioning the Postwar Avant-Garde in the East (Dresden/online,
12-13 Jun 25). In: ArtHist.net, May 14, 2025.
<https://arthist.net/archive/49238>.
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