Difference between revisions of "Croatia"
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==Video art== | ==Video art== | ||
; Artists | ; Artists | ||
− | * 1970s (incl. video installations): [[Sanja Iveković]], [[Dalibor Martinis]], [[Goran Trbuljak]] | + | * 1970s (incl. video installations): [[Sanja Iveković]], [[Dalibor Martinis]], [[Goran Trbuljak]], [[Zeljko Kipke]], [[Breda Beban]], [[Hrvoje Horvatic]] |
− | * [[Ivan Faktor]] | + | * solitary video artists: [[Ivan Ladislav Galeta]] (Zagreb), [[Ivan Faktor]] (Osijek), [[Mladen Stilinovic]] (Zagreb) |
; Exhibitions | ; Exhibitions |
Revision as of 17:23, 19 August 2011
Contents
Cities
Zagreb, Rijeka, Split, Čakovec, Dubrovnik, Kalebova Luka, Karlovac, Krizevci, Labin, Osijek, Ražanj, Zadar.
Predecessors
- Zenit avant-garde magazine (published in Zagreb, 1921-1923, later in Belgrade, 1923-1926. Initiated by Ljubomir Micić, introduced constructivism, futurism and Dadaism to Croatia and Serbia.
- Books
- Jadranka Vinterhalter (ed.), Prodori avangarde u hrvatskoj umjetnosti prve polovice 20.stoljeca / Flashes od avant-garde in the croatian art of the first half of the 20th century. Zagreb: MSU, 2007. [1]
- Resources
- Avantgarde Museum, [2]
Artist groups
Arts and engineering groups and collectives in CEE#Croatia
Experimental film
Vladimir Petek, Ivan Martinac, Mihovil Pansini, Tomislav Gotovac
Scene in Split in 1960s: Martinac, Kursar, Nakic, Zafranovic, Pivcevic, Ante Verzotti.
- Venues
Kino-klub Split amateur club, Multi-Media Center of Student center Zagreb (*1976)
- Festivals
- Genre Film Festival (GEFF) (1963, 1965, 1967, 1970)
- Exhibitions
- This Is All Film! Experimental Film in Yugoslavia 1951-1991, 2010-2011, Museum of Modern Art Ljubljana
- Literature
- Hvorje Turkovic, "Croatian Avant-Garde Scene", Zagreb, 1993. [3]
Video art
- Artists
- 1970s (incl. video installations): Sanja Iveković, Dalibor Martinis, Goran Trbuljak, Zeljko Kipke, Breda Beban, Hrvoje Horvatic
- solitary video artists: Ivan Ladislav Galeta (Zagreb), Ivan Faktor (Osijek), Mladen Stilinovic (Zagreb)
- Exhibitions
- Insert - Retrospective of Croatian Video Art, Sep - Oct 2005, MSU Zagreb, [4]. Mar - Apr 2006, MMSU Rijeka, [5].
- Literature
- Tihomir Milovac (ed.): Insert / Retrospective of Croatian Video Art, MSU: Zagreb, 2008. The publication is a follow-up of the museum’s 2005 retrospective and presents the works of some one hundred video artists on 360 pages with 466 reproductions, in Croatian and English. Authors: Tihomir Milovac, Silva Kalčić, Antonija Majača, Branko Franceschi. [6]
More artists
- Vojin Bakić
- Vlado Kristl
- Miroslav Šutej
- Juraj Dobrović
- Koloman Novak
- Fedora Orebić
- Ante Vulin
- Vilko Žiljak
- Tomislav Mikulić
- Braco Dimitrijević
Past events
- Tactical Media Camp on the island of Vis.
Media
Articles
- Dubravka Djuric and Misko Suvakovic (eds.), Impossible Histories: Historic Avant-Gardes, Neo-Avant-Gardes, and Post-Avant-Gardes in Yugoslavia, 1918-1991, MIT Press, 2003. [8]
- Andrew J Horton, "Avant-garde Film and Video in Croatia" Central European Review (November 1998) [9] (English)
- Klaudio Štefanović, "New Media Art in Croatia", 2007 [10], (Croatian)
- Darko Fritz, "Media Arts in Croatia" [11] [12]
- Ana Peraica, "HR - A remark on art & technology research in regard to the place of origin taken as the state, place of living, as well as only a domain" [13]
- Heiko Daxl, "FILM- UND VIDEOKUNST IN KROATIEN. FRAGMENTARISCHE ABRISSE. EINER GESCHICHTE UND STANDORTBESTIMMUNG", August 1993, (German), [14]
Countries avant-garde, modernism, experimental art, media culture, social practice |
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Albania, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Central and Eastern Europe, Chile, China, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Egypt, Estonia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iran, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kosova, Latvia, Lebanon, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Morocco, Netherlands, North Macedonia, Norway, Pakistan, Peru, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Spain, Slovenia, Slovakia, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, United Kingdom, United States |