1st Edition

State Construction and Art in East Central Europe, 1918-2018

316 Pages 60 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

316 Pages 60 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

316 Pages 60 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This volume offers a comprehensive perspective on the relationship between the art scene and agencies of the state in countries of the region, throughout four consecutive yet highly diverse historical periods: from the period of state integration after World War I, through the communist era post 1945 and the time of political transformation after 1989, to the present-day globalisation (including... Read more

Introduction

Agnieszka Chmielewska, Irena Kossowska, and Marcin Lachowski

PART I: Cultural Specificity of East Central Europe

1. History Too Fast

Éva Forgács

2. Universal or National? Making Art on the European Periphery

Agnieszka Chmielewska

3. The Concept of Eastern Art and Self-Historicisation: The Slovenian Case

Nadja Gnamuš

PART II: Nation- and State-Building Processes

4. Performing Everyday Activity, Creating Eternal: Ukrainian Art on the Fronts of the First World War

Sofia Korol

5. Civil War – Communist Upheaval – Attack of the White Slaughterers? The Civil Wars of 1917-1922 in Finnish and Soviet Karelian Literature

Thekla Musäus

6. The Archipenko Brothers: Discussion about National Art

Vita Susak

PART III: Aestheticization of Politics – Ideologization of Aesthetics

7. In/Tolerance to Visual Anti-Semitism in Czechoslovakia 1918–1948

Milan Pech

8. Art History and State Reconstruction in Greece in the 1950s and Early 1960s

Lefteris Spyrou

9. Contesting Legitimacy: From the Photo Club to Fine Art Subjective Documentary―Andrejs Grants. Latvia: Changing and Unchanging Reality

Pamela M. Browne

10. "Poles Forming Their National Flag": Artistic Reflection on the Transformation of the Political System in Post-1989 Central and Eastern Europe

Piotr Majewski

PART IV: Art Exhibitions as Political Instrument

11. Western Modern Art Exhibitions in the USSR in 1930s–1950s

Katarina Lopatkina

12. "The Lenin of Soviet Art Has Not Yet Been Born": Nascent Socialist Realism in Warsaw of 1933

Irena Kossowska

13. From Hanoi and Havana to Paris and New York: Czecho-Slovak Cultural-Diplomatic Exhibitions during the Cold War

Mária Orišková

14. 1956. Old Masters and the Ephemeral Borders

Patricia García-Montón González

15. Somewhere Something

Pavlína Morganová

16.  Dreams and Nightmares: Nationalism in Art Exhibitions from Socialist Romania 1974-1989

Cristian Nae

17. Local/Global Latvian Art at the Venice Biennale

Stella Pelše

18. "Grey in Colour" - Observations on the Reconstruction of Modernity

Marcin Lachowski

PART V: Architecture as Vehicle for State Cultural Policy

19. Cities in Interbellum Lithuanian Republic (1918-1940)

Paulius Tautvydas Laurinaitis

20. About Two Gems in the Stadtkrone of Kaunas, the Provisional Capital of Interwar Lithuania

Giedrė Jankevičiūtė

21. An Elite Place for the Masses: Prague Castle and its Role in the Legitimisation of Socialist Rule in Czechoslovakia (1948–1968)

Veronika Rollová

22. One Ideology, Two Visions: Ecclesiastical Buildings and State Identity in the Socialist Capital During the Post-War Rebuilding Decades 1945-1975, East Berlin and Warsaw

Marcus van der Meulen

23. Monument Preservation during Socialism: Restorations and Reconstructions of Hungarian Roman Catholic Churches in the 1960–70s

Erzsébet Urbán

Biography

Agnieszka Chmielewska is Assistant Professor and Deputy Director of the Centre for Europe at the University of Warsaw.

Irena Kossowska is Full Professor of Art History at the Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń and the Polish Institute of World Art Studies in Warsaw.

Marcin Lachowski is Associate Professor at the Institute of Art History at the University of Warsaw.