Critics/Media:
A nacionalizmus forró téma egész Európában - Hans Knoll & Simona Beresova válaszol Gócza Anitának: artportal.hu/magazin/kortars/a-nacionalizmus-forro-tema-egesz-europaban
A Műértő 2014. októberi számában, a Tárlatvezetőben Baglyas Erika ajánlója!
Dékei Kriszta: Kipa és kapa - Unicorn is More Than Nation, in: Magyar Narancs, 2014.okt.9.,35.o.
Saskia Monshouwer: Vijf dagen Hongarije: Alles wordt zo plat en simpel, zegt Ákos Birkás, complexiteit is het enig mogelijke antwoord.
Deák Csillag-Kölüs Lajos: Epizód: Unicorn is More Than a Nation
http://centrifuga.blog.hu/2014/11/20/epizod_unicorn_is_more_than_nation
Supported by:
25.09 - 22.11.2014
Artists:
Florian Aschka (D), Ágnes Eperjesi (HU), Zsuzsi Flohr (HU), Kundy Crew (SK), Tibor Horváth (HU), Szabolcs KissPál (HU), Marek Kvetan (SK), Jarmila Mitríková & Dávid Demjanovič (SK), Csaba Nemes (HU), Tara (von Neudorf) (RO), Alexander Raevski (MD), Tomáš Rafa (SK), Gert Resinger (A), Lawrence Weiner (USA)
Curated by: Hans Knoll & Simona Bérešová
The exhibition „Unicorn is more than Nation“ deals with the virulent topic „nation“.
The artists elaborate the issue partly in a fundamental, partly in a humorous way. The exhibited works reflect different forms of the legitimation of nationalist ideologies. On the one hand its history and how it can be constructed, on the other hand the folk traditions and folklore, which have the power to appear timeless and native thanks to the preservation of the same forms. An important part of the national consciousness are symbols which comprise a sacred value, but which are ironised and demythicized by the artists. Several works challenge the ideologies, which seem to be universal and to which nationalism belongs too. Resistent movements, riots, protests and demonstrations are essential here.
The presented works are dealing with a wide scale of questions touching the topic of the „nation“ directly or indirectly. The artists belonging to different parts of Europe focus on general or international aspects as well as on issues of their own countries.
Supported by The Slovakian Institute Budapest