Category: Events

HDLU – Croatian Association of Fine Artists announces
the ANNUAL OPEN CALL FOR EXHIBITING in 2024
within the program of Bačva Gallery, Prsten Gallery, PM Gallery
Meštrović pavilion, Trg žrtava fašizma 16, Zagreb

 

The rights to participate in the call have all the artists and experts in the field of fine arts.

 

THE APPLICATION CAN INCLUDE:

  • exhibition proposals
  • educational projects
  • international programs, inter-institutional and regional collaborations

 

APPLICATIONS SHALL BE SUBMITTED BY COMPLETING THE APPLICATION FORM AND SUBMITTING OF REQUIRED DOCUMENTS. All the fields in the application form which are marked with * are mandatory. Application, which is not fully completed or does not contain the required documents, will not be considered.

 

REQUIRED ATTACHMENTS TO THE APPLICATION:

  1. required examples of the artworks / exhibition / project
  • images/sketches of the work in JPG format up to 700kb per image
  • digital Video in DVD PAL or mp4 format (if applicable)
  • sound works in mp3 format (if applicable) etc.

provide materials as much as possible for better insight into the project

  1. CV (please download CV-FORM HERE, fill it out and upload it to the on-line application form)
  • project applicant’s CV
  • artist(s)’ CV (if different from the applicant)
  1. spatial plan
  • on the gallery blue print (if applicable)
  1. for international projects and collaborations
  • list of countries and institutions engaged with the project
  • confirmation letter from the international institutions

 

SUBMISSION OF APPLICATION:

 

How to apply

Applications should be submitted through on-line application form only.

 

Application deadline

June 25, 2023, 23:59

Applications received after the deadline will not be considered.

 

Contact for all issues related to the galleries and / or application form (Mon-Fri, 10am – 3.30pm):

 

  • PM and Prsten Gallery: Martina Miholić, martina.hdlu@gmail.com, +385 997326127
  • Bačva Gallery: Nika Šimičić, nika.hdlu@gmail.com, 0989828989
  • For international and/or educational projects: Miran Jurić, miran.juric@hdlu.hr

 

APPLICATIONS THAT DO NOT CONTAIN THE REQUIRED FIELDS FILLED OR DO NOT HAVE THE REQUIRED DOCUMENTS WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED.

 

COMMUNICATION:

During the selection process, process of applying for funds and final realization of the program, HDLU will communicate only with the project applicant according to the contacts listed in the application form.

 

COPYRIGHTS:

HDLU reserves the right to use the selected applications for promotional material of the yearly program in all types of media, catalogues, invites, web and Facebook pages of HDLU.

 

SUBMISSION CONFIRMATION:

Please contact us in case if you don’t receive submission confirmation e-mail from galerije.hdlu@gmail.com within two working days from the submission.

 

ATTACHMENTS:

APPLICATION FORM FOR EXHIBITING IN 2024

CV FORM

FLOOR PLANS OF THE GALLERY SPACES: Bačva Gallery, PM Gallery, Prsten Gallery

VISUALIZATION OF GALLERY SPACE (Home of HDLU)

IMPORTANT NOTICE

Meštrović Pavilion, the Home of Croatian Fine Artists, will open its doors on June 1, 2023, for the Dance de Luxe exhibition, which will turn the Bačva gallery into a “beach” – Zagreb’s refuge from the summer heat, offering a program for all ages.

Internationally recognized Olaf Nicolai (DE) and Dubrovnik artist Mariana Pende (HR) exhibit a collaborative site-specific installation – built especially and only for the Meštrović Pavilion in Zagreb.

Dance de Luxe refers to Danče beach, the only beach in the center of the well-known tourist mecca of Dubrovnik, which, due to its slightly hidden location, known only to local citizens and their closest friends, has remained outside the huge tourist frenzy that characterizes Dubrovnik in the summer. Branko Franceschi, the curator of the exhibition, says that over the years “Danče has become a kind of center for the locals, where generations of citizens hang out and exchange the latest gossip or the verbal history of their town. It is the place where you make or break lifelong friendships, meet or lose your lovers, or simply enjoy life with your family and relatives. Collaborative art project Dance de Lux, mimicking hedonism of the infamous disco era in its title, celebrates Danče’s outdoor social lifestyle and intends to recreate it in the interior of the Bačva Gallery, the most spectacular exhibition space in downtown Zagreb.”

As noted by artist Olaf Nicolai: ” Designed by Ivan Meštrović (1883 -1962) and inaugurated in 1938, the Pavilion is not only an architecturally imposing building – it is also an urbanist statement. It is one of those architectures that create places that cannot be passed through unnoticed – everything is a creative setting that assigns things and people their spots. In his miniatures on urban features from the period in which Meštrović Pavilion was created, the German cultural historian Siegfried Kracauer noted a second, more informal architecture alongside this architecture of planned setting. He speaks of places that come into being slowly through the most diverse undertakings, that change again and again, transforming themselves – and thus resemble rather living landscapes. One such place is one of the oldest bathing beaches in Dubrovnik, Danče, after which a small republic was named.

On his part, Nicolai interprets and translates the complex and organically developed topography of Danče beach for which he says that whoever visits it finds themselves in an area that looks like a large playground made of stone, with a variety of small buildings of variable functions that have been spontaneously created and still seem to be changing. In the exhibition, this informal place meets Meštrović’s monumental pavilion, becoming its guest and a kind of “body snatcher”.

However, the structures and built palimpsests of Danče are not simply transferred to the pavilion. Rather, visitors enter an architectural “blueprint” on and in which they can walk: a plan for the unplanned, a paradox. They encounter both sculptural elements and drawings that are proposals for possible buildings. The space of the pavilion is crossed with another architectural experience and transforms into a place of the imagination of its visitors.

Pende is on the other hand, further developing her experimentations with materials such as graphite, textile, Plexiglas in vivid colours, chromed metal, and, for this occasion, dried sea sponges, creating vertical elements. In fact, her objects of various sizes, shapes, colours, materials, and their combinations, represent temporary structures that are seasonally and daily built by Danče’s concessioners and beachgoers. Exploring usage of the everyday materials in the production of her sculptures and thus contributing continuation of the neo-avant-guard aesthetics, Mariana Pende opens a completely new reference to the local community’s economy when she recycles graphite remnants taken from a once successful TUP factory, transforming material into a fabric made of a completely new, at the same time, artificial and organic material. This recently closed graphite factory was the last active industrial facility in Dubrovnik. Its closure left the city completely dependent on tourism income.

“Dance de Luxe installation continues the history of artist’s made community-minded spaces intended to enrich alienated lives of city dwellers, such as Karin Schneider’s Pomerio Vernicular Children Playground produced in 2008 in Rijeka, Marko Pogačnik litopuncture stone circle on the lake Jarun in Zagreb, or Milena Lah’s monumental marble stairs entitled Poetic Spaces providing scenography for poetry recitals in Maksimir Park since 1981, also in Zagreb. Dance de Luxe, alongside its main programming, thus gives a new life and sense of purpose to already existing public installations created by the previous generations of artists.” – as said by Branko Franceschi, curator of the exhibition and director of the National Museum of Modern Art, partner of the exhibition, on the occasion of the exhibition announcement.

All the information about the exhibition and side program can be found on the exhibition website: dancedeluxe.hr

The exhibition is open from June 1 until August 27 in the Bačva Gallery of the Meštrović pavilion.

LEA VIDAKOVIĆ
Family Portrait
Prsten Gallery
May 17 –  June 11, 2023

 

Exhibition opening: May 17, 2023 at 7 pm in PM Gallery

The exhibition is included in the program of Animafest (June 5 – June 10)

Internationally acclaimed visual artist and animator Lea Vidaković has created her work Family Portrait in two ways in terms of presentation. In the first case, it is an animated film intended primarily for viewing in standard movie theatres and projection rooms, and in the second, it is a gallery installation composed of synchronized projections and artefacts (dolls and miniature models) arranged in the space, with which the animated material was realized. Therefore, the gallery presentation of Family Portrait – which is the subject here –confronts visitors with two compatible or complementary realities: a two-dimensional virtual and a three-dimensional physical one. In fact, the project was developed as a kind of work in progress, which Lea gradually revealed by intermittently exhibiting some of its parts. The exhibition at the Meštrović Pavilion of the Croatian Society of Fine Artists marked the end of this process, and all interested parties can finally experience Family Portrait in its entirety. Unlike the film, in which the artist treats the basic narrative line linearly, that is, successively, by means of gallery projections – seven of them – she affirms the principle of simultaneity and fragments the entire plot into the same number of spatially conditioned segments. Why spatially conditioned? Namely, the action of Lea’s puppet animation takes place in a large family house in which there are seven rooms of different purposes, with each projection thematizing the events in one of them. Lea is a master of creating specific narratives, whose predominantly dark moods are sometimes imbued with restrained humour or irony. The protagonists of Family Portrait do not express their existentially intonated anxiety in an overtly pathetic or dramatic way; they primarily emanate apathy, the cause of which lies in mostly suppressed but fatally persistent tensions. According to her own words, when creating the basic plot of Family Portrait, Lea was inspired by a quote from the Japanese Buddhist thinker and peace activist Daisaku Ikeda, according to which every family has its own specific circumstances and problems that only it can truly understand. The artist lucidly brings all the recipients of the gallery version of this work from the potential position of uninterested, uninformed and indifferent passers-by into an active voyeur position from which they will be able to immerse themselves in – as Ikeda would say – the circumstances and problems of one family, fictitious but by no means unrealistically atypical. And thanks to the projections that treat the place of action fragmentarily and its temporal sequence integrally, various forms of immersion are possible, that is, according to individual perceptual judgement. We, therefore, enter the plot through a character or a room that we choose ourselves.

As one of the hallmarks of Lea’s creativity, it is certainly worth highlighting her exquisite sense for the virtuoso performance of meticulously chosen details. Let us mention just a few examples, such as indicating the reflections in the mirror, the recognizability of landscape motifs in room paintings, or the readability of the newspaper headlines, from which we can conclude that the action takes place approximately one month before the outbreak of World War I. As for the content itself, Lea humorously evokes the process of transformation from an everyday and predictable rut to a state of unrest caused by a sudden but also mass family visit. The disruption that ensues is symbolically foreshadowed by the vibrations caused by the vehicle in which the guests arrive, to continue through suppressed expressions of confusion, intolerance, and even minor human weaknesses. The household chores performed by the maid take on the character of unnatural forcedness, the animals add an additional dose of restlessness, and the new vibrations caused by the somewhat grotesque sexual intercourse also carry a certain symbolic charge.

In short, in Lea’s interpretation, anxiety, i.e., indications of a potential impending collapse, manifests itself through ordinary, non-explicit dramatic actions or moods. Perhaps it is not an exaggeration to state that Family Portrait has something of the poetics that Raymond Carver expresses in his prose. Of course, with full preservation of the artist’s original authenticity and awareness, and therefore recognizability.

VANJA BABIĆ

 

Lea Vidaković is a multimedia artist working in the field of animated installations and extended media, using the technique of stop-animation and puppet film. Her research in the field of animated film is based on the theme of fragmented and other alternative types of narratives for animated installations and extended media. She graduated from the Graphic Arts Department at the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb, completed animation studies at HVO in Norway, and master’s studies in audio-visual art at the Royal Academy of Arts KASK in Belgium. In 2020, she earned her PhD in animation from the School of Art, Design and Media at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. She has exhibited at numerous group and solo exhibitions in Croatia, Italy, France, Singapore, Serbia, Switzerland, Egypt, Portugal, Norway, Montenegro, Belgium and Austria, and her films have been screened at 200+ animated film festivals worldwide. She has participated in several scientific conferences and art residencies in Austria, France, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Iceland. She has won several art and film awards. She is a member of the Croatian Association of Fine Artists (HDLU), Union of Associations of Fine Artists of Vojvodina (SULUV), Society of Animation Studies (SAS) and Centre for Research in Applied Communication, Culture, and New Technologies (CICANT). She is a professor of animation and photography in animation at the Lusophone University in Lisbon. She lives and works in Zagreb and Lisbon.

 

 

ALEX BRAJKOVIĆ
EARTHLINES
Galerija Karas
25.4. – 16.5.2023.

On Tuesday, 25.4.2023. Alex Brajković opens his solo exhibition entitled Earthlines, at 7 pm in Karas Gallery (Ulica kralja Zvonimira 58).

In his foreword, Davor Sanvincenti emphasizes:
Human progress and ecology do not share the same nature. Today, the human factor has been introduced into the ecological continuum through the conditions of resource exploitation conditioned by geo-economic and geopolitical dynamics. This happens on its own terms and does not privilege us above the way we think about life. The internal mechanisms of ecology are based on the dimensions beyond our human values, ethics, and vision. They are rooted in the ontological sphere with their own rules, where humans are not the sole relevant aspect, even at a time when our catastrophic actions endanger planetary collapse.

Preface

Biography:
Alex Brajković (b. 1992) is a multimedia artist from Poreč with a master’s degree in Live Electronics (Conservatorium Van Amsterdam). He works in the field of immersive multimedia installations in public spaces, digital art, multi-instrumental electroacoustic solo performances, electronic production, programming and complex interactive visual systems. In his previous work, he has created a number of site-specific works in the field of art installations and multimedia (“Dispersions” STRP Festival, Netherlands, 14th Triennial of Croatian Sculpture, “Drumming 0.3” Device_art festival, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, “Stillness” Museum of Fine Art in Split, “Generative Contemplation” for Cycling74, Meijijingu Gaien 3D mapping festival, Tokyo). He has won the “Kožarić Digital” award for the work “Generative Contemplation – Cellular Automata” awarded by the Museum of Contemporary Art in Zagreb in 2022. He is the founder of the multimedia studio – Immersive Studio.

The exhibition will be open during the period from 25.4. to 16.5.2023.

___

The Karas Art Hub platform was designed for the purpose of developing different approaches to the presentation, experience and processing of works of art displayed to the public in Zagreb’s Karas Gallery, which are presented to the public with digital content on the gallery’s web platform, including 360° shots of installations and video miniatures.

http://karasarthub.eu

Organizer: HDLU

With the support of: Ministry of Culture and Media of the Republic of Croatia, City of Zagreb

15 DANA – 20 years
PM Gallery, Home of HDLU (Meštrović Pavilion)
April 13-May 5, 2023
Curators: Vanja Babić and Leila Topić

The opening of the exhibition 15 DANA – 20 years will be on Thursday, April 13, 2023 at 7pm., in the PM gallery, Home of HDLU (Meštrović Pavilion).

 

With the exhibition 15 DANA – 20 years, we mark twenty years since the editorial tandem Tomislav Brlek/Bruno Kragić took over the editing of the magazine 15 dana, published by the Public Open University Zagreb (POUZ), a press of cult status that is at the same time one of the oldest continuously published domestic magazine (since 1957) for literature and culture in general. Undoubtedly, the duo’s valuable editorial innovation is the concept according to which each subsequent issue of the magazine – including both its front cover and back cover – will be illustrated with the works of one or more prominent contemporary domestic artists, with the mandatory publication of an introductory text about his/her work and an appropriate interview. Such an innovatively designed approach provided additional visual compactness or roundness to each issue of 15 dana, without encroaching on the exceptionality and recognition achieved during the previous decades.

Artists: Barbara Blasin, Jasenka Bulj, Duje Jurić, Željko Kipke, Luka Kušević, Zoltan Novak, Ivan Picelj, Ivan Posavec, Nika Radić, Dubravka Rakoci, Milisav Mio Vesović, Zlatan Vrkljan, Danijel Žeželj

 

Opening hours of the exhibition:

Tuesday – Sunday 11 am to 7 pm
closed on Mondays and holidays.

The exhibition remains open until May 5, 2023.

How to Look at Natures? – Art and the Capitalocene
13.04. . 05.05. 2023
Prsten Gallery
Curators: Ivana Filip, Suzama Marjanić

Exhibition opening: Thursday, April 13, 2023 at 7pm

Artists: Maša Bajc, Alex Brajković, Nikolina Butorac, Tanja Dabo, Charlotte Dumas, Darko Fritz, Igor Grubić, Nenad Jalšovec, Lisa Jevbratt, Gustafsson & Haapoja, Olga F. Koroleva, Zvjezdana Jembrih, Alen Novoselec, Erez Nevi Pana, Olly & Suzi, Kira O’Reilly, Ivana Ožetski, Ana Ratković Sobota, Davor Sanvincenti, Nives Sertić, Pinar Yoldas, Vjeran Vukašinović, Otchuda Say.

The exhibition programme How to See Natures? – Art and the Capitalocene documents visual practice, and its responses to possible green initiatives that can detect the consequences of the Anthropocene and Capitalocene, which treat Nature only as a resource. Perhaps it suffices to remind us of the fact that merely a hundred years ago all our food was organic, and today we buy it in specialized stores of neoliberal market capital. Or that the original economic system was based on the gift economy, and not on market predation that leads to global Geocide and apocalyptic climate changes that threaten the sixth extinction, as warned by Elizabeth Kolbert, for example.

The works exhibited in this collective green exhibition talk about relationships with Others (non-humans), those whose voice is different from the human one, such as all the Natures – Animals, Plants, Twigs, Sun, Seas, Oceans, Waters, Paths, Forests, Flowers, Stones, all those that are neglected and vulnerable in the anthropocentric image of supposed progress. The idea behind the exhibition is to show all that makes a human being a fascinating and inexhaustible source of discoveries and creations, which is created in co-creation with Others.

How to Look at Natures – Art and the Capitalocene

BRAD DOWNEY
I AM YOU, YOU ARE ME
Bačva Gallery, Home of HDLU (Meštrović pavilion)
April 13 – May 5, 2023

The opening of the exhibition by BRAD DOWNEY, I AM YOU, YOU ARE ME will be on Thursday, April 13 at 7 pm, in Bačva Gallery, Home of HDLU (Meštrović pavilion).

In the exhibition I AM YOU, YOU ARE ME, Downey presents a work on ‘forced collaborations’ with other artists, manipulating their works to update and extend their discourse, synchronising them in the contemporary status of art. Downey’s work forces us to rethink the subject, space, time, and language, dissolving the subject in interaction, measuring space in potential actions rather than centimetres, disintegrating the timeline of art history, and manipulating language to test the understanding of art. His work challenges the determination of Arthur Danto that art is the history of art, and instead suggests that art is the understanding of art.

Downey’s art embodies Deleuze’s idea of the power of the virtual to transform the actual, subverting and transforming the everyday to create new possibilities for thought and action. He invites viewers to question the meaning and purpose of the spaces they occupy, and consider alternative ways of imagining and inhabiting those spaces. At the heart of Downey’s art is a desire to create a dialogue between the urban environment and its inhabitants, encouraging viewers to rethink their relationship to their surroundings and imagine alternative futures.

Forced-to-collaborate artists:

  1. 1. Dieter Roth

“He is the artist from whom I learned the most, discovering new dimensions”

  1. 2.            Robert Smithson

“Feel the place, more place than artwork”

  1. 3.            Banksy

“It’s a restored piece”

  1. 4.           Luke Tuymans

“It’s a complicated work about broken plates and fractured identities”

  1. 5.            Jože Plečnik

“Plečnik is Ljubljana’s architect his work is as transcendent as Brâncuși’s”

  1. 6.            Alexander Brener

“He was jailed in 1997 for painting a green dollar sign on Kazimir Malevich’s painting Suprematisme

  1. 7.            Roman Signer

“It’s about slow cancellation”

  1. 8.            Maxi

“He’s the sculptor who I commissioned to make the Melania monument”

 

ABOUT THE ARTIST

The Artist Brad Downey is an American artist based in Berlin whose art challenges conventional ideas of public space and urban environment, inviting viewers to rethink their relationship to their surroundings. He often repurposes everyday objects in unexpected and sometimes humorous ways, expressing the subversive potential of everyday life. Downey aims to create a dialogue between the urban environment and its inhabitants with emphasis on difference and multiplicity. His work opens up new possibilities for thought and action, inviting us to imagine alternative futures for ourselves and our world. Brad Downey’s art explores becoming more than being, and in this way restructures and challenges basic conventions such as identity and time.

PREFACE

 

EXHIBITION WORKING HOURS:

Tuesday – Sunday: 11am – 7pm
Mondays and holidays closed.

Exhibition will be opened until May 5, 2023

HDLU