Banksy’s Coca-Cola Ad

bansky-coca-cola-bottle

Well, you could have guessed it wasn’t going to be a straight-forward advertisement for Coke.

I enjoy it, but it, like other advertisements it critiques, put itself in front of me without asking for my permission. Is this a type of institutional critique, or is subversion from within the corporate juggernaut even possible? Better yet, did Banksy get paid?

No, and no, and no. After a series of rabbit holes known as internet research, this is what I found about the above image, which has been floating around the internet for months. The statement is a quote from Banksy’s book (which borrowed heavily from someone else’s writing). It was then set by Karina Nurdinova, a graphic designer in Italy, who never expected it to take off. Isn’t the internet funny like that? But Nurdinova is not the only one who was this way inspired by Banksy’s work. For a laugh, see the work of French art director Christophe Pilate who turned Banksy street art into corporate ads in March of this past year.

Lecture Tonight in Budapest

ART MEETing DESIGN - DIGI small

I’ll be giving a lecture tonight on my research this year in Budapest. This is quite a sobering thought–not just because of my bad case of stage fright–but because it signals my 9-month research grant is over. Actually I’ve  already presented at the Fulbright conference and turned in my final paper, so this lecture is just for fun more than anything else. But it has been such a rewarding experience that I hate to see it end.

The past nine months I’ve been looking at representations of national identity in contemporary Hungarian art, which is a polarizing topic within Hungary and a complex matter in any nation, perhaps especially in the former Eastern Bloc. Within this still rather broad field, I focused on critical, Conceptual artworks that I argue enlarge the notion of collective identities outside of the traditional nation-state framework. From an outsider’s perspective, like mine, it has been a fascinating education into Hungarian thought and culture.

So, please, if you’re in Budapest, come join for the lecture! If you want to learn more about my project, check out the website Context and Identity in Contemporary Hungarian Art. You can go the academic route and read my essay, or go the fun &  lite route, perhaps with a few posts about meetings with artists.

Context   Identity in Contemporary Hungarian Art   Reimagining the nea

János Major at tranzit

P1090343

János Major is not a well-known artist outside of Hungary, but within Hungary there is a resurgence of interest  in his work. Not much of his work has survived, so I was excited to have a chance to see Taboo Subject, an exhibition at tranzit featuring prints of Major’s related to Jewish identity. Major deals with himself, his body and Jewish identity, in ruthless caricature. Firstly it is remarkable to do so at all given the repressive post-Holocaust, Socialist context in which he began dealing with these themes, and secondly in the freely pornographic and self-loathing manner in which he channels anti-Semitic stereotypes through his own image.

SONY DSC

I first became aware of Major through two contemporary artists’s projects: Crew Expendable by Little Warsaw and Vasarely Go Home by Andreas Fogarasi. Both touch on his oeuvre, but little has been done in terms of art historical work. Interestingly there has been a lot of recent interest, with this show and another at the University of Fine Arts this past year. It’s representative of the lack of documentation and scholarship on the Hungarian neo-avant-garde (making up for Socialism again) that he hasn’t been dealt with much before. On the other hand, he is also a difficult figure to place; he was a graphic artists who made prints more similar to Hogarth or Goya than anything else and yet he was also a conceptual artist and key figure of the avant-garde.

P1090332
The two prints above, dating from the 1970s, have one key difference: in the lower print, the text is blurred out. The text in the higher version refers too overtly to conflict in the Middle East and Jewish politics to ever have been shown. The mystery to me is where either version could have been shown in Hungary in the 1970s.

SONY DSC

In conjunction with the exhibition, Marcell Eszterhazy created an installation using the double windows of the front room to create peepholes into transparent images of typically Jewish imagery. A layer of opaque white is in front of the images over glass looking out on the street behind. Certainly Major’s works make one aware of the covert nature of dealing with Jewish topics, and this installation in which Jewish signs and symbols are screened from direct gaze perhaps refers to this. The Budapest environment in the background is not so different than when Major first began working, and an intended question of the exhibition is whether 20 years after Hungary became a democracy real discourse is yet taking place about Jewish identity.

P1090336
SONY DSC

P1090342