Through
Sunday, January 3, 2016
Transmissions: Art in Eastern Europe and Latin America, 1960–1980 focuses on parallels and connections among
artists active in Latin America and Eastern Europe in the 1960s and 1970s. During
these decades, which flanked the widespread student protests of 1968, artists
working in distinct political and economic contexts, from Prague to Buenos
Aires, developed cross-cultural networks to circulate their artworks and ideas.
Whether created out of a desire to transcend the borders established after
World War II or in response to local forms of state and military repression,
these networks functioned largely independently of traditional institutional
and market forces.
Drawn
from The Museum of Modern Art’s collection, Transmissions brings
together landmark works by Eastern European artists including Geta Brặtescu,
Tomislav Gotovac, Ion Grigorescu, Sanja Iveković, Dóra Maurer, and the anti-art
collectives Gorgona, OHO, Aktual, and Fluxus East, as well as Latin American
artists such as Beatriz González, Antonio Dias, Lea Lublin, and Ana Mendieta.
Particular attention is paid to the group of Argentine artists clustered around
the influential Instituto Torcuato Di Tella, including Oscar Bony, David
Lamelas, and Marta Minujín, who confronted the aesthetic and political
implications of mass media communication—including film, television, and the
telex—during a vibrant, experimental period of technological innovation and
political tension. The featured artists circumvented the political status quo
through unorthodox and ephemeral art forms. By utilizing or referring to mass
media and communication technologies, many of these artists explored novel ways
of bringing art into daily life to reach a wider public and to influence
society.
Featuring
series of works and major installations, several of which are on view for the
first time, Transmissions highlights multiple points of
contact, often initiated and sustained through collective actions and personal
exchanges between artists. Many of the recent acquisitions in the exhibition
were the result of research initiated through C-MAP(Contemporary
and Modern Art Perspectives), MoMA's cross-departmental initiative aimed at
expanding curatorial expertise in a global context. Challenging established
art-historical narratives in the West and frameworks dictated by the Cold War,
the works included suggest counter-geographies, alternative models of
solidarity, and correspondences linking art practices in different parts of the
world.
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