Difference between revisions of "Soros Centers for Contemporary Art"

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* Željka Tonković, Sanja Sekelj, [[Media:Tonkovic Zeljka Sekelj Sanja Annual Exhibitions of the Soros Center for Contemporary Art Zagreb as a Place of Networking.pdf|"Annual Exhibitions of the Soros Center for Contemporary Art Zagreb as a Place of Networking / Godišnje izložbe Soros centra za suvremenu umjetnost Zagreb kao mjesto umrežavanja"]], ''Zivot umjetnosti'' 99, Jan 2016, pp 80-95. {{en}}/{{cr}}
 
* Željka Tonković, Sanja Sekelj, [[Media:Tonkovic Zeljka Sekelj Sanja Annual Exhibitions of the Soros Center for Contemporary Art Zagreb as a Place of Networking.pdf|"Annual Exhibitions of the Soros Center for Contemporary Art Zagreb as a Place of Networking / Godišnje izložbe Soros centra za suvremenu umjetnost Zagreb kao mjesto umrežavanja"]], ''Zivot umjetnosti'' 99, Jan 2016, pp 80-95. {{en}}/{{cr}}
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* Amila Puzić, [https://doi.org/10.17685/Peristil.59.11 "Izložba kao socijalna intervencija – godišnje izložbe SCCA-Sarajevo: ''Meeting Point'' (1997.), ''Beyond the Mirror'' (1998.), ''Under Construction'' (1999.)"] [Exhibition as Social Intervention: Annual SCCA-Sarajevo Exhibitions: “Meeting Point” (1997), “Beyond the Mirror” (1998), “Under Construction” (1999)], ''Peristil'' 59:1, 2016, pp 137-145. {{cr}}
  
 
* Izabel Galliera, "Antipolitics: Exhibitions at the Soros Centres for Contemporary Art", ch 5 in Galliera, ''[https://monoskop.org/log/?p=20821 Socially Engaged Art After Socialism: Art and Civil Society in Central and Eastern Europe]'', I.B. Tauris, 2017, pp 81-111.
 
* Izabel Galliera, "Antipolitics: Exhibitions at the Soros Centres for Contemporary Art", ch 5 in Galliera, ''[https://monoskop.org/log/?p=20821 Socially Engaged Art After Socialism: Art and Civil Society in Central and Eastern Europe]'', I.B. Tauris, 2017, pp 81-111.

Revision as of 21:30, 8 August 2023

Ole Häntzschel, SCCA Network, 2022, PDF. [1]
Group photograph taken at lunch on the roof of the Peggy Guggenheim Museum during the official opening of the SCCA network, at the 45th Venice Biennale. Venice, Italy, 1993. Upper row, left to right: Branka Stipancic (SCCA Zagreb); Jānis Borgs (SCCA Riga); Bill McAlister (former director of the London Institute of Contemporary Arts, advisor to the network); unidentified; George Soros; Jim McLain (OSF New York); Anda Rottenberg (SCCA Warsaw); Anna Rakowska (SCCA Warsaw); Călin Dan (SCCA Bucharest); Andrea Szekeres (SCCA Budapest); Liliana Stepanćić (SCCA Ljubljana); Marta Kuzma (SCCA Kyiv); Ludvik Hlaváček (SCCA Prague); Joseph Backstein (Board member SCCA Moscow); unidentified; Raminta Jurénaité (SCCA Vilnius); Katalin Néray (Chair of the Board SCCA Budapest); Sirije Helme (SCCA Tallinn). Lower row, left to right: Suzanne Mészöly (SCCA Budapest and Director of SCCA network); Karmen Basic (OSI Croatia); Amy Rudersdorf (assistant to Suzanne Mészöly); Ada Krnáčová-Gutleber (SCCA Bratislava).

The SCCA (Soros Centers for Contemporary Art) was an autonomous regional program of the Open Society Institute (OSI). The network was established in Eastern Europe during the early nineties by the American philanthropist, stock investor, and political activist George Soros. The SCCA was an institutional mechanism of the post-socialist transition, and its primary role was the modernization of the artistic discourse in the former socialist countries and the republics of the former USSR.

The Soros centers sprouted from a small programme called Soros Foundation Fine Arts Documentation Center which was established in 1985 in the Budapest Műcsarnok (Kunsthalle), as part of a cooperation between the Műcsarnok and Soros Foundation Hungary. In the early nineties, under the directorship of Suzanne Mészöly, this program was renamed “Soros Center for Contemporary Art” and gradually implemented in other Eastern European countries.

In 1992, in addition to the already existent SCCA Budapest, the OSI opened five more offices in Bratislava [2], Moscow, Prague, Tallinn and Warsaw; in 1993, there were established offices in Bucharest, Riga, Vilnius, Kiev, Ljubljana [3] [4], Zagreb [5] and Sofia. From 1994 to 1999 more centers were opened in St. Petersburg, Belgrade (1994), Skopje, Chișinău (1996), Sarajevo (1996), Odessa (1996), Almaty (1997) increasing their number to 19. (Source) Centers were planned but never realised for Lviv, Minsk, Novosibirsk, Tirana and South Africa.(Source, [6])

"The Soros Centers for Contemporary Art (SCCA) Network supports the development and the international exposure of contemporary art in Eastern and Central Europe, the countries of the former Soviet Union, and Central Eurasia as a vital element of an open society. Each SCCA stimulates its country’s contemporary art community by providing artists, arts professionals and organizations with opportunities to develop projects, participate in contemporary art exhibitions, access information, and develop contacts locally and internationally. The SCCA network links all of the SCCA offices, facilitates communication and information exchange between them, offers educational opportunities and professional training network-wide, and promotes artistic collaboration throughout the region."
--- "SCCA Network" (brochure) published by Open Society Institute Budapest, 1998.

Documents

  • Larisa Muravska, Assessment / Mapping Activities of the Soros Centers for Contemporary Arts, Budapest: Open Society Institute, 6 May 2002. Internal document.

Publications (selection)

  • Soros Foundations, Soros Centers for Contemporary Arts, 1993. Newsletter printed for the SCCA launch in Venice.
  • 01010101, ed. Călin Dan, Bucharest: SCCA, 1994. Catalogue.
  • PlatformaSCCA, 4 nos., eds. Barbara Borčić, Urša Jurman, et al., Ljubljana: SCCA-Ljubljana, Jun 2000-Sep 2005. (Slovenian)/(English)
  • Sorosovo Centrum současného umění - Praha, 1993-1998 / Soros Center for Contemporary Arts - Prague, 1993-1998, Prague: Nadace pro současné umění, 2000, 127 pp. Catalogue. [14] (Czech)/(English)

On SCCA

Books, catalogues

Book chapters, papers, theses, articles, interviews

  • Béla Nóvé, Tény/Soros. A magyar Soros Alapítvány első 10 éve, 1984-1994, Budapest: Balassi, 1999, 606 pp. A thoroughly documented monograph about the first ten years of the Hungarian Soros Foundation. [17] [18] (Hungarian)
  • Anne-Marie Rocco, L'incroyable histoire de George Soros: milliardaire spéculateur et mécène, Mesnil-sur-l’Estrée: Assouline, 1999. (French)
  • Anthony Gardner, "Networking with Soros", in Gardner, Politically Unbecoming: Critiques of “Democracy” and Postsocialist Art from Europe, University of New South Wales (PhD dissertation), 2008, pp 163-171; rev. in Gardner, Politically Unbecoming: Postsocialist Art against Democracy, MIT Press, 2015.
  • Jānis Borgs, "Sorosa laiks / The Soros Era", in Deviņdesmitie: laikmetīgā māksla Latvijā / Nineties: Contemporary Art in Latvia, ed. Ieva Astahovska, Riga: Laikmetīgās mākslas centrs, 2010, pp 42-59. [27] (Latvian)/(English)
  • Petra Hanáková, "Hlavajovej Sorosovo centrum súčasného umenia", in Hanáková, Ženy-inštitúcie? K dejinám umeleckej prevádzky devätdesiatych rokov, Bratislava: Slovart, and Bratislava: Vysoká škola výtvarného umenia, 2010, pp 155-185. Reviews: Koklesová (Pravda), Kukurová (Romboid), Gatialová (SME). (Slovak)
  • Pavlína Morganová, "Učili jsme se za pochodu. Někdo Něco, časopis Výtvarné umění, Sorosovo centrum. Rozhovor s Ludvíkem Hlaváčkem" / "We Learned as We Went. Někdo Něco (Someone Something), Výtvarné umění (Fine Art) magazine, Soros Center. Interview with Ludvík Hlaváček", in Mezi první a druhou moderností 1985-2012 / Between the First and Second Modernity 1985-2012, eds. Jiří Ševčík and Edith Jeřábková, Prague: VVP AVU, 2011, pp 211-230. (Czech)/(English)
  • Aleksandar Savanović, "'Soros realizam'", in Savanović, George Soros – “Otvoreno društvo” kao ideja, ideologija i politička praksa, Banja Luka: University of Banja Luka, 2014, pp 139-145. (Bosnian)
  • Lioudmila Voropai, "Soros Centers for Contemporary Art: Intentionen und Rezeptionen", in Voropai, Medienkunst als Nebenprodukt. Studien zur institutionellen Genealogie neuer künstlerischer Medien, Formen und Praktiken, transcript, 2017, pp 227-236. [28] (German)
  • Anders Härm, "On the Genealogy of 'Soros Realism': The '‘Making of' International Eastern European Art (1989–2004)", Kunstiteaduslikke Uurimusi 27:4, 2018, pp 7-30. [29] [30]

Exhibitions about SCCA

Links

  • i_CAN. In 1999 and 2000, following the restructuring of the Soros Foundations, all Soros Centers for Contemporary Arts started to become independent and have transformed into non-governmental organisations under the membership of the new association i_CAN (International Contemporary Art Network) based in Amsterdam.