press release only in german

Let’s Talk About Modernity

30.10.2019 - 10.11.2019

artists
Anna Baumgart, Yuryi Biley, Jenny Brockmann, Luke Jaszcz, Karol Komorowski, Karina Marusińska, Jos McKain, Open Group, Oleg Perkovsky, Yurij Savter, Maya Schweizer and Clemens von Wedemeyer, Kama Sokolnicka, Elena Subach and Viacheslav Poliakov

curators
Antoni Burzyński, Paulina Olszewska

The exhibition Let’s Talk About Modernity – 24H Extended is the event from the series „24 H“. This series has started three years ago, in 2017 and until now has taken place in various cities such as: Warsaw, Wrocław, Gdańsk, Nürnberg, Lublin and Poznań.

The primary idea of the series concentrate on a short artistic action, which are organized in venues not necessary suited to present art. Many of them were in process before transition, another were just after it, starting a new chapter in their life.

In all the exhibitions the focus was put on going out from traditional and classical exhibition rooms: from museums or galleries, and confront the artworks with new surrounding, which often became an unusual background for the works, opening them for a new way of interpretation.

Another important aspect of all the 24H events was a connection between two cities: between this, in which the exhibition was organized and another, foreign one. Because of its international and vibrant art scene, Berlin has been chosen as a partner city. It was an opportunity for artists to show their works often for the first time in a totally new context of the city they didn’t know well and artists they have just met.

The artists invited come from Lviv but also from three other cities: Berlin, Warsaw and Wroclaw. Apart of the Lviv artists of course, for many others it will be the first time to show their work in this city and even first time in Ukraine.

The exhibition relates, as it has been already mentioned in the title - Let’s Talk About Modernity - to the Avantgarde and idea of Modernism in Europe, and its first beginning in the 20th century. The history of Lviv’s Avantgarde gives exhibition an interesting background and brings more attention to this part of the European story, which usually stays unmentioned.