Direkt zum Inhalt

Warenkorb

  • Ben Green

    The Smart Enough City: Putting Technology in Its Place to…

  • Make_Shift (Hg.)

    Make City. Stadt anders machen. A Compendium of Urban…

  • Lizzie O'Shea

    Future Histories: What Ada Lovelace, Tom Paine, and the…

  • Alex Bykov, Ievgeniia Gubkina

    Soviet Modernism. Brutalism. Post-Modernism

  • Yuk Hui

    Recursivity and Contingency

  • David Bennewith, Sereina Rothenberger (…

    Questions? Looking for answers in the middle of somewhere

  • Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, Deborah…

    In welcher Welt leben?: Ein Versuch über die Angst vor dem…

  • Alina Popa, Florin Flueras

    Unsorcery

  • Goodman, Heys, Ikoniadou (Eds.)

    AUDINT. Unsound : Undead

  • Tabea Nixdorff.

    Fehler lesen. Korrektur als Textproduktion

  • Silvia Federici

    Re-enchanting the World: Feminism and the Politics of the…

  • Daniel McClean

    Artist, Authorship & Legacy. A Reader

  • Christian Bjone

    Almost Nothing. 100 Artists Comment on the Work of Mies van…

  • André Cadere

    Geschichte einer Arbeit/ Unordnung herstellen

  • Kirsten Maar

    Entwürfe und Gefüge. William Forsythes choreographische…

  • James Bridle

    New Dark Age: Technology and the End of the Future

  • David Rothenberg

    Nightingales in Berlin: Searching for the Perfect Sound

  • Sabine von Fischer

    Das akustische Argument. Wissenschaft und Hörerfahrung in…

  • K. Klaus, R. Bittner (Hg.)

    Gestaltungsproben: Gespräche zum Bauhausunterricht

  • Fröhlich, Fröhlich, Borges, Lippok (Hg.)

    Plans & Images. An Archive of Projects on Typology in…

  • Daniel Martin Feige

    Zur Dialektik des Social Design (Studienhefte…

  • Ursula Böckler

    Die Photos der "Magical Misery Tour" mit Martin…

  • Michael Scheer / Gesellschaft für…

    Stadtwirte. Von Sozialraumfarmern und Inklusionswirten

  • re:form e. V. (Hg.)

    Re:Eden. Neue Blicke auf die älteste Reformsiedlung…

  • Alice Maude-Roxby, Stefanie Seibold

    Censored Realities / Changing New York

  • Nathan Jurgenson

    The Social Photo: On Photography and Social Media

  • Randy Deutsch

    Superusers: Design Technology Specialists and the Future of…

  • John Latham

    John Latham. The N-U Niddrie Heart

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 385. Focusing on Locality in Design Practices of the…

  • Anna Harding (Hg.)

    Artists in the City. SPACE in '68 and beyond

  • Damon Krukowski

    Ways of Hearing (SFX: Needle Drop)

  • Sophie Wolfrum, Alban Janson

    Die Stadt als Architektur

  • Heinz Peter Knes

    Der weltrevolutionäre Prozess seit Karl Marx und Friedrich…

  • Paulo Tavares

    Des-Habitat (revista das artes no Brasil)

  • Richard Butsch

    Screen Culture: A Global History

  • Hanne Loreck in Zusammenarbeit mit Jana…

    Visualität und Abstraktion. Eine Aktualisierung des Figur-…

  • TwoPoints.net (Ed.)

    On the Road to Variable: The Flexible Future of Typography

  • Angelika Schnell

    Aldo Rossis Konstruktion des Wirklichen: Eine…

  • Suely Rolnik

    Zombie Anthropophagie: Zur neoliberalen Subjektivität

  • Ulysses Voelker

    Ordnung in der Gestaltung: Grafische Raster in Theorie und…

  • Seth Price

    How to Disappear in America

  • Paolo Cirio

    Sociality. The Coloring Book of Technology for Social…

  • Beatriz Colomina

    X-Ray Architecture

  • Ross E. Exo Adams

    Circulation and Urbanization

  • Bruno Flierl

    Haus Stadt Mensch. Über Architektur und Gesellschaft.…

  • Jon Savage

    This Searing Light, the Sun and Everything Else: Joy…

  • Smiljan Radic

    Every So Often a Talking Dog Appears and other essays

  • Vince Aletti

    The Disco Files 1973-78: New York's Underground, Week…

  • Sharon Francis

    Bubbletecture: Inflatable Architecture and Design

  • Grace Lees-Maffei , Nicolas P. Maffei

    Reading Graphic Design in Cultural Context

  • Moisei Ginzburg

    Style and Epoch. Issues in Modern Architecture

  • Michalis Pichler

    Publishing Manifestos: An International Anthology from…

  • Vier5

    Modern typefaces

  • Reinaart Vanhoe

    Also-Space, From Hot to Something Else : How Indonesian Art…

  • Dehlia Hannah (Ed.)

    A Year Without a Winter

  • A. Maccone, A. Martinelli

    The City at the End of the Underground

  • Andreas Müller, Lydia Kähny, Sophie…

    Re-reading the Manual of Travelling Exhibitions

  • Dora García (Ed.)

    On Reconciliation / Über Versöhnung

  • Bodo Mrozek

    Jugend – Pop – Kultur: Eine transnationale Geschichte

  • Franziska Bollerey

    Setting the Stage for Modernity. Trendsetter der Moderne:…

  • Sou Fujimoto, Noriko Takiguchi

    Sincere by Design: The Architecture of Sou Fujimoto

  • Dario Scodeller (Ed.)

    The Design of the Castiglioni Brothers. Research…

  • Loreck, Klier, Lindeborg (Hg.)

    (Mit) Pflanzen kartografieren - Mapping (with) Plants

  • Klanten, Niebius, Marinai (Hg.)

    Ricardo Bofill. Visions of Architecture

  • Cinzia Arruzza, Tithi Bhattacharya,…

    Feminism for the 99%. A Manifesto

  • Raquel Rolnik

    Urban Warfare. Housing under the Empire of Finance

  • Alexander Eisenschmidt

    The Good Metropolis: From Urban Formlessness to…

  • Marion von Osten, Grant Watson (Hg.)

    Bauhaus Imaginista. Die globale Rezeption bis heute

  • Davide Giannella, Massimo Torrigiani (…

    Salento Moderno. An Inventory of Private Houses in Southern…

  • Deboleena Roy

    Molecular Feminisms: Biology, Becomings, and Life in the Lab

  • Peter Rehberg

    Hipster Porn: Queere Männlichkeiten, affektive Sexualitäten…

  • Daniel Falb

    Geospekulationen: Metaphysik für die Erde im Anthropozän

  • Kathy Battista

    New York, New Wave: The Legacy of Feminist Artists in…

  • Martina Nußbaumer, Peter Stuiber

    Wo Dinge wohnen: Das Phänomen Selfstorage

  • Jörg Friedrich (Hg.)

    Refugees Welcome: Konzepte für eine menschenwürdige…

  • Katrin von Maltzahn, Mona Schieren (Hg)

    RE:BUNKER. Erinnerungskulturen, Analogien, Technoide…

  • Theodore Spyropoulos

    Adaptive Ecologies. Correlated Systems of Living

  • Kathryn Yusoff

    A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None

  • Franco ‘Bifo’ Berardi

    The Second Coming

  • Lisson Gallery London

    John Latham Films 1960 - 1971

  • Luca Lo Pinto, Olaf Nicolai

    La Boule de Voyante: A Narration Performed in 10 Episodes

  • Allan Kaprow

    Rates of Exchange

  • Deoksun Park, Julie Martin

    E.A.T. (Experiments In Art And Technology). Open-ended

  • Teal Triggs, Leslie Atzmon

    The Graphic Design Reader

  • Jeff Weber

    An Attempt At A Personal Epistemology

  • Andreas Lechner

    Entwurf einer architektonischen Gebäudelehre

  • Otto, Barnstone, Rossler (Hg.)

    Bauhaus Bodies: Gender, Sexuality, and Body Culture in…

  • Maria Lorena Lehman

    Adaptive Sensory Environments: An Introduction

  • Kees Christiaanse

    Kees Christiaanse Textbook. Collected Texts on the Built…

  • T. Flierl, P. Oswalt

    Hannes Meyer und das Bauhaus. Im Streit der Deutungen

  • Peter Chadwick, Ben Weaver (Eds.)

    The Town of Tomorrow: 50 years of Thamesmead

  • M. Miessen, Z. Ritts (Hg)

    Para-Platforms On the Spatial Politics of Right-Wing…

  • Robin Waart

    Part One

  • Juliana Huxtable

    Mucus in My Pineal Gland

  • Architizer (Ed.)

    Architizer: The World's Best Architecture

  • Jinyoun Na (Ed.)

    Brick, Brick What Do You Want To Be?

  • Dirk Van Den Heuvel (Ed.)

    Jaap Bakema And The Open Society

  • A. Suominen, T. Pusa (Hg)

    Feminism and Queer in Art Education

Socialism and Modernity. Art, Culture, Politics 1950 – 1974

The book Socialism and Modernity: Art, Culture, Politics 1950 – 1974, published on the occasion of the exhibition which was under the same name held at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Zagreb (Dec 2, 2011 - Feb 5, 2012), has been conceived as an extension of a perennial research project. This is why this voluminous edition (containing 415 large format pages) offers comprehensive theoretical explanations and systematic research overviews by five authors who gave their personal views on the post-war modernist culture. The edition also contains an extensive bibliography, photo documentation of the exhibition, and other supplementary materials. The authors share the presupposition that this period of Croatian past should not be analyzed from a local, limited point of view, or from the perspective of current political interests, because that kind of approach leads to falsifying history and undermining the value of Croatian own cultural heritage. The authorial team of the exhibition/book analyse the period of modernism in a broader context of Yugoslavian post-war artistic and cultural environment, providing thus the evidence of a dense network of interrelated events, and offering a platform for future discussions about the problems of historization, periodization and contextualization of the modernist heritage.
Tvrtko Jakovina's text „Historical Success of Schizophrenic State: Modernization in Yugoslavia 1945 – 1974“ offers a clear overview which summarizes key historical events, political decisions and meetings, the dynamics of Cold War events as well as their consequences on culture and arts. As if in an exciting crime novel, the article reveals various historical events which influenced cultural „superstructure“ and the artistic expression of the time. Jakovina analyses cultural workers’ “decisive no to the dictate of the socialist realism”. While the ambitious 1965 reforms changed the economy, they also contributed to the flourishing of science and arts. The author concludes with a reminder of how American analysts of the time stated that a small country like Yugoslavia had taken the best from three different worlds – the Socialist, the Western, and the Unaligned – which enabled it to assert itself on the global political map.
Sandra Križić Roban’s article “Modernity in Architecture, Urban Planning and Interior Decoration after the Second World War” investigates ways in which the Zeitgeist and the ideas of progress were reflected in urban planning and residential design. The author claims that in the field of architecture the human character of the socialist culture marked recapitulation of the positive cultural and historical legacy, critical analysis of national and international production, and the definition of methodology as the primary precondition of creation. A balance between function, construction and shape was required, while the idea of movement and development – which was to be expressed through the socialist architecture – had to reflect reality and the potential of all working people. The focal point of this development was the modernist city.
Ljiljana Kolešnik’s text “Conflicting Visions of Modernity and the Post-War Modern Art” analyzes the most dynamic and complex episode in the recent history, which resulted – thanks to the overall optimism of the post-war modernisation and the relentless belief in science and technology – in a modern urban (post)industrial society of the second half of the 20th century. The author claims that the process of the reconstruction of modernism on Croatian art scene ended in mid-50s by reconstructing expressive means of modern art, overcoming the initial resistance towards the abstraction, and by establishing an important relationship of mutual trust between art critique and art itself. This is what made the art scene so interesting and dynamic. In the analyzed period there are several landmark events, some of the most important ones being the exhibition Salon 54 at the Fine Arts Gallery in Rijeka, as well as the activities of groups EXAT 51, Gorgona, New Tendencies movement, and works of many individual artists.
Dejan Kršić’s article “Graphic Design and Visual Communications 1950 – 1975” opens numerous polemical questions about the unsystematicism of the history of Croatian design, while entering sensitive issues of its superficiality, inconsistency, and discontinuity. The author emphasises the fact that – seen within the Yugoslavian framework – social realism had its specificities, meaning it was more a question of institutional organization, or even personal fight for power in the cultural arena, than a question of form. Being engaged with representative state projects, artists were not modernists because they were members of the Socialist Party, but because they were leftists, antifascists, socialists, even communists. However, along with the economic growth, both theory and praxis of design become infused by the economic propaganda and marketing, which changes and complicates their relationships.
Dean Duda in his text “Socialist Popular Culture and (Ambivalent) Modernity” polemically remarks on the theory and the problem of periodization of popular culture. He concludes that in the field of popular culture there are three dominant elements: 1. city as its stage; 2. newspaper kiosk as the realized metaphor of its supply, distribution and wide availability; 3. television as the new medium whose regulated programmed performance fulfils the role of the “popular educator”. The author claims that socialist popular culture is not an exclusive archive, or a nostalgic oasis, which, after its alleged removal from the course of history, can be presented in an unconflicted manner. It is the popular perception which makes the period seem more naive, trivial or simple.
Each article in the book contains detailed bibliography which will serve as a valuable source for further research on the period “when socialism was young”.


Ljiljana Kolešnik (Ed.)
Socialism and Modernity. Art, Culture, Politics 1950 – 1974
MSU; Institute of Art History, Zagreb, 2013, 9789537615437