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  • Behnaz Farahi, Nail Leach (eds.)

    Interactive Design. Towards a Responsive Environment

  • Natasha Stagg

    Artless. Stories 2019-2023

  • Alison Place (Ed)

    Feminist Designer. On the Personal and the Political in…

  • Slanted

    Slanted 42. Books

  • Graeme Thomson & Silvia Maglioni

    b for the birds by Graeme Thomson & Silvia Maglioni

  • Gabriela Burkhalter (Hg)

    The Playground Project

  • LIQUIFER Systems Group, Jennifer…

    Liquifer. Living beyond Earth. Architecture for Extreme…

  • Fabian Hörmann (Ed.)

    The Real Deal. Post-Fossil Construction for Game Changers

  • Elizabeth A. Povinelli

    Geontologien. Requiem auf den Spätliberalismus

  • Simon Baier, Markus Klammer (Hg.)

    Aesthetics of Equivalence. Art in Capitalism

  • Anke Haarmann, Alice Lagaay, Tom…

    Specology. Zu einer ästhetischen Forschung

  • bell hooks

    Die Welt verändern lernen. Bildung als Praxis der Freiheit

  • Regina Bittner (Editor), JJ Adibrata,…

    Decolonising Design Education

  • Regina Bittner, Katja Klaus, Catherine…

    The New Designer - Design as a Profession

  • Rowan Coupland, Anastasiia Zhuravel (…

    Re:imagine Your City. Rethinking Urban Paradigms

  • Desiree Heiss, Ines Kaag, Manuel Raeder…

    BLESS. Celebrating 25 Years of Always Stress with BLESS N°…

  • Werner Sobek

    non nobis – über das Bauen in der Zukunft Band 2

  • Félix Guattari

    Schizoanalytische Kartografien

  • J. Logan Smilges

    Crip Negativity

  • Sabine von Fischer

    Architektur kann mehr

  • Damon Murray, Stephen Sorrell, Roberto…

    Brutalist Italy. Concrete Architecture from the Alps to the…

  • Carson Chan (ed)

    Emerging Ecologies. Architecture and the Rise of…

  • Kotte, Schulz, Weber, Witt, Brants (Hg.)

    Inklusion gestalten

  • Peter Arlt

    PRAKTISCHES STADT ABC. Lexikon + Übungen

  • Christine Schranz (Ed.)

    Commons in Design

  • Arch+ Zeitschrift für Architektur und…

    Arch+ 253. The Great Repair. Praktiken der Reparatur / A…

  • dérive

    dérive N° 92/93, Urban Commons (Okt-Dez 2023). Zeitschrift…

  • Deborah Enzmann

    Emojisierung. Eine historische und semiotische Studie zu…

  • Nina Möntmann

    Decentring the Museum: Contemporary Art Institutions and…

  • Hans Ibelings

    Modern Architecture: A Planetary Warming History

  • Monique Wittig

    Das straighte Denken

  • Amber Husain

    Meat Love. An Ideology of the Flesh

  • Moritz Gleich, Christa Kamleithner (Hg.)

    Medium unter Medien. Architektur und die Produktion…

  • Ursula Böckler, Julia Lazarus &…

    Radical Film, Art and Digital Media for Societies in Turmoil

  • Kuukuwa Manful, Emmanuel Ofori-Sarpong…

    Building African Futures. 10 Manifestos for Transformative…

  • Fareed Armaly

    The (re)Orient

  • Valerio Calavetta, Peter Hoffmann

    Sortenrein Bauen - Methode, Material, Konstruktion

  • Umut Yıldırım (ed)

    War-torn Ecologies, An-Archic Fragments. Reflections from…

  • Chang Wen-Hsuan

    Xsport On Paper. Samplings of Publishing Practices from the…

  • Rich Pell

    This is not an Artifact. Selections from the Center of…

  • Armen Avanessian

    Flüchtigkeitsmanagement

  • Florian Strob, Karoline Lemke, Uli…

    Ludwig Hilberseimer: Die neue Stadt. Prinzipien der Planung

  • Jae Kyung Kim, Anna Schanowski (eds)

    How to Book in Berlin

  • Keith Tan Kay Hin, Nurul Alia Ahamad (…

    Kedah: A History In Drawings

  • Suffian Shahabuddin

    61X Appeal to Read Between the Sheets

  • Camelia Kusumo, Lee Sze-Ee

    Kaki Lima Stories.

  • Clarissa Lim Kye Lee (ed)

    Small Practices : In Conversation with Malaysian and…

  • Nazmi Anuar

    Background, Frame, Platform

  • Louis Rogers (Hg)

    Upper Lawn, Solar Pavilion. Alison & Peter Smithson

  • Bojana Kunst

    Das Leben der Kunst. Transversale Linien der Sorge

  • Jule Govrin

    Begehrenswert. Erotisches Kapital und Authentizität als Ware

  • Isabell Otto

    TikTok (Digitale Bildkulturen)

  • Eran Schaerf

    Gesammeltes Deutsch

  • El Croquis 222. David Chipperfield (2015 - 2023) Selected…

  • Tom Holert, Doreen Mende (Hg)

    Navigation Beyond Vision. e-flux journal

  • Nils Bubandt, Astrid Oberborbeck…

    Rubber Boots Methods for the Anthropocene: Doing Fieldwork…

  • Antonio Castore, Federico Dal Bo (eds.)

    Untying the Mother Tongue

  • Carsten Lisecki

    Carsten Lisecki. Urbane Handlungsspielräume

  • Elizabeth Duval

    Nach Trans. Sex, Gender und die Linke

  • Lydia Zinovieva-Annibal

    Thirty-Three Monsters

  • Oliver Elser, Anna-Maria Mayerhofer,…

    Protestarchitektur. Barrikaden, Camps, raumgreifende…

  • Laura Gardner, Daphne Mohajer va…

    Radical Fashion Exercises. A Workbook of Modes and Methods

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 403. Typeface design for the voice of the world: The…

  • Lorenzo De Chiffre, Benni Eder, Theresa…

    Hollein Calling. Architectural Dialogues

  • Masure, Anthony

    Manifestes 5. Artificial Design: Creation Versus Machine…

  • Ahmed Abdullah

    A Strange Celestial Road: My Time in the Sun Ra Arkestra

  • Mike Laufenberg, Ben Trott (Hg)

    Queer Studies. Schlüsseltexte

  • Josef Albers (Autor), Heinz Liesbrock (…

    Josef Albers. Interaction of Color. Grundlegung einer…

  • Paperside Editorial Culture

    Bookshop Guide. Independent Publishing Culture Spots

  • Sven Lütticken

    Objections. Forms of Abstraction, Volume 1

  • Christoph Brunner, Grit Marti Lange,…

    Technopolitiken der Sorge

  • Jean-Louis Cohen

    Building a new New World. Amerikanizm in Russian…

  • Gerda Breuer

    HerStories in Graphic Design

  • Tanja C. Vollmer, Andres Lepik (Hg.)

    Das Kranke(n)haus. Wie Architektur heilen hilft

  • Marc Bonner

    Offene-Welt-Strukturen. Architektur, Stadt- und…

  • Matthew Beaumont

    The Walker. Die Stadt, die Moderne und ihre Fußgänger

  • Harald Kisiedu and George E. Lewis (Hg.)

    Composing While Black

  • Dynamische Akustische Forschung

    Walking in Cinematic Close-Ups

  • Alec Leach

    The World Is On Fire But We’re Still Buying Shoes

  • Eckhardt Ribbeck

    Stadtläufer. Reiseerinnerungen 1970 - 2010

  • Yves Dreier, Eik Frenzel (Hg.)

    Social Loft. Auf der Suche nach neuen Wohnformen / En quete…

  • Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau (Hg)

    Doors of Learning. Microcosms of a Future South Africa.…

  • Dorothee Richter

    Curating: Politics of Display, Politics of Site, Politics…

  • Ciarán Finlayson

    Perpetual Slavery. Ciarán Finlayson

  • Marie-France Rafael

    Raphaela Vogel. Outside Form

  • Irma Leinauer

    Magistrale der Moderne. Das Wohngebiet an der Karl-Marx-…

  • Moisés Puente (Hg)

    2G 89. BAST

  • Kenya Hara (Ed.)

    Cleaning

  • Graphicabulary - MAKERMAKER

    Closing Ceremony. Hilton Seoul 1983 - 2022

  • Sunny Kerr (ed.)

    Drift. Art and Dark Matter

  • Helen Hester, Nick Srnicek

    After Work: A History of the Home and the Fight for Free…

  • Claudia Kromrei

    Postmodern Non-Residential Berlin

  • Hanne Eide, Krisitian Wikborg Wiese,…

    Formafantasma: Oltre Terra. Why Wool Matters

  • Moises Puent (Ed.)

    Flores & Prats. Drawing without Erasing and Other Essays

  • Akwugo Emejulu

    Fugitive Feminism

  • Gerrie van Noord, Paul O'Neill,…

    Kathrin Böhm. Art on the Scale of Life

  • Philipp Dietachmair, Pascal Gielen,…

    Sensing Earth. Cultural Quests across a Heated Globe

  • Bas Hendrikx (Ed.)

    Queer Exhibition Histories

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