Date: Sun, 02 Jun 2019 11:08:58 +0200
Subject: CFP: Multiplying Modernity (Kosice, 6-7 Dec 19)
From: Julia Secklehner
Date: Jun 2, 2019
Subject: CFP: Multiplying Modernity (Kosice, 6-7 Dec 19)

East Slovak Gallery, Košice, Slovakia, December 6 – 07, 2019
Deadline: Jul 1, 2019

CRAACE workshop:

Multiplying Modernity
Vernacular modernisms, nostalgia and the avant-garde

In the decades before 1918 there was a vibrant debate over the nature of ‘national art’ in Central Europe. For many this was embodied in folk art and culture. By 1914, this idea was increasingly challenged by avant-garde interests in the metropolis. After the War, however, a return to folk art and regionalism was revisited and gained increasing importance in the decades leading up the Second World War. Within a broad artistic landscape, folk art and culture was used to search for a fundamental essence of human culture, as in the case of the Hungarian painters Lajos Vajda and Dezső Korniss; to create a ‘national-style’ with reinterpretations of folk art, as in 1920s Czechoslovakia; and to seek renewal outside a lost imperial capital like in Austria.

Merged with modern culture, reinterpretations of folk art developed as manifold ‘vernacular modernisms’ which emphasised the importance of local tradition in the post-imperial environment. Which ideals formed the core of these ‘vernacular modernisms’? What was the relationship between ‘vernacular modernism’ and the avant-garde? How did regional and cosmopolitan approaches to art and architecture overlap and influence each other?

As part of the ERC-funded project Continuity / Rupture? Art and Architecture in Central Europe 1918-1939 (https://craace.com) this workshop re-examines the place the avant-garde is granted in art history by looking at a broader artistic landscape that to a large extent engaged in folk art and culture. Considering intersections and overlaps between the avant-garde, ‘moderate’, and ‘reactionary’ developments in modern art and architecture, it challenges traditional hierarchies and assesses the role that a renewed attention to folk art played in the formation of a multi-faceted artistic environment across Central Europe.

Proposals (300 words) are invited for 30-minute papers that examine topics such as:
– Folk art as a resource for Central European Modernism after 1918
– Regionalism in interwar art and architecture
– Folk art and identity politics in interwar modernism
– The fragmentation of Central European cultural centres after 1918
– The emancipation of regional galleries and museums
– The relationship between regional and central artistic networks
– Reactionary modernism vs. renewal through folk culture

Discussants will be confirmed shortly.

The deadline for submission of proposals is 1 July 2019. Submissions should be sent to: craace1918@outlook.com

Reference / Quellennachweis:
CFP: Multiplying Modernity (Košice, 6-7 Dec 19). In: ArtHist.net, Jun 2, 2019. <https://arthist.net/archive/20968>.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *