Difference between revisions of "Bosch+Bosch"

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* Bálint Szombathy, [https://monoskop.org/images/f/f3/Nova_umjetnicka_praksa_1966-1978.pdf#page=48 "Značajniji momenti u radu grupe Bosch+Bosch"], in ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=5903 Nova umjetnička praksa, 1966-1978]'', ed. Marijan Susovski, Zagreb: Galerija suvremene umjetnosti, 1978, pp 48-50. {{sc}}
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** [https://monoskop.org/images/7/7f/The_New_Art_Practice_in_Yugoslavia_1966-1978.pdf#page=53 "Landmarks in the Work of the Group Bosch+Bosch"], in ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=5903 The New Art Practice in Yugoslavia, 1966-1978]'', ed. Marijan Susovski, Zagreb: Gallery of Contemporary Art, 1978, pp 51-53. {{en}}
 
* Emese Kürti (ed.), ''[[Media:Transregional_Discourses_The_Bosch_Bosch_Group_in_the_Yugoslav_and_the_Hungarian_Neo-Avant-garde_2016.pdf|Transregional Discourses: The Bosch+Bosch Group in the Yugoslav and the Hungarian Neo-Avant-garde]]'', Budapest: acb ResearchLab, 2016, 95 pp. [https://www.academia.edu/37333740/] [https://acbgaleria.hu/acb_researchlab/publications] {{en}}
 
* Emese Kürti (ed.), ''[[Media:Transregional_Discourses_The_Bosch_Bosch_Group_in_the_Yugoslav_and_the_Hungarian_Neo-Avant-garde_2016.pdf|Transregional Discourses: The Bosch+Bosch Group in the Yugoslav and the Hungarian Neo-Avant-garde]]'', Budapest: acb ResearchLab, 2016, 95 pp. [https://www.academia.edu/37333740/] [https://acbgaleria.hu/acb_researchlab/publications] {{en}}
  

Revision as of 10:09, 19 August 2020

Art group. 1969-1976. New Art, Neo Avantgarde, Conceptual Art, Body Art, Land Art, Performance..

Founded as art section of the Youth Forum (Tribina mladih) in Subotica (Yugoslavia), the Bosch+Bosch Group was a paradigm of multiple straying and dilemmas, yet at the same time of brave, uncompromising struggle for a different art, the struggle which characterized the art scene of the day.

Founding members: Slavko Matković, Edit Basch, István Krekovics, Zoltán Magyar, László Szalma, Bálint Szombathy, Slobodan Tomanović; in 1971, László Kerekes joined in; followed by Katalin Ladik and Attila Csernik in 1973, and Ante Vukov in 1975.

Literature
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