Artpool, founded in 1979 by György Galántai and Julia Klaniczay was an attempt to create an alternative art institute, one that would make room for the new trends in art. They established Artpool at a time when art forms out of keeping with the official cultural policy were denied access to the public. Subsequent to the political changes of 1989, Artpool, which already had an international reputation, was officially recognized and in 1992 the Artpool Art Research Center opened to the public with funding from the Budapest Municipal Council.
The Artpool Art Research Centers Agenda
1. Organizing exhibitions
and art events
- The presentation of new trends
in art, and of new artistic tools and resources (Intermedia,
Network, Internet, performance, installation, artists bookwork,
sound poetry, etc.)
- The presentation of possible
antecedents and links (actions, happenings, fluxus, mail
art, experimental film, video, etc.)
- Organizing,
and providing with the essential technological background,
projects that might generate fresh ideas.
- Cooperating
with other cultural and art institutions, initiating joint
projects.
2. Education
- Lectures
on the history of art, with special reference to the current
research being done at Artpool; special classes for university
students (by appointment).
- Cooperation with university
faculties, including the practical training for university
students.
- Publishing anthologies about current topics
in art as educational aids.
3. Public documentation,
archives, library, periodical collections, sound and video
archives (reading room service)
- Regularly enlarging
the collection by research and collecting.
Artpool also
manages several unique private collections which are stored
on its premises, and is responsible for making them available
to the public.
4. Research
- Art
research, covering the period from the end of the 1950s,
is focused on discovering new sources, on preparing handbooks
and research aids, and on initiating research in the less-known
genres of contemporary art. Artpool supports research with
scholarships, and with the translation into Hungarian of
theoretical works and works of reference, and / or their
publication.
The Artpool archive and library house primarily documents relating to the Hungarian avant-garde art movements of the 70s and 80s, as well as sources on the new international art trends of the past 30 years.
Special collections for research at Artpool are: Fluxus, performance, sound poetry, visual poetry, artists bookwork, mail art, artists stamps, artists postcards, artists periodicals, copy art, computer art, video art, the Hungarian non-authorized art of the 60s, 70s, and 80s (including alternative art scenes and groups, contemporary music, underground art magazines, etc.). A sound, a video, and a slide archive as well as access to internet are also available to researchers
Art events at Artpool from 1992 to 1995
1992 (approximately 25 exhibitions
and programs)
- Presentations on the conceptual
background of some as yet lesser-known art forms: Computer
Stamp Images; The Slide as Medium; Architectural Visions;
Fax and Electrographics; Fluxus Flags, an event of the Budapest
Autumn Festival; etc.
- A historical overview of some
of the most significant of the avant-garde exhibitions of
the 70s: the Mirror exhibition in the Balatonboglr Chapel
Studio in 1973; Texts, the first Hungarian visual poetry
exhibition (likewise in 1973); the In the Spirit of Marcel
Duchamp symposium held at Etvs University, Budapest in 1978
to commemorate Duchamps 100th birthday.
1993
(approximately 20 exhibitions and programs)
- On the Fluxus movement, in the form of one-man shows
and group exhibitions, meetings, art events, and performances
with the participation of well-known Fluxus artists such
as Geoffrey Hendricks, Dick Higgins, George Maciunas, Jackson
MacLow, Yoko Ono, Ben Vautier, Miklos Erdely, Tamas St.
Auby, Endre Tot, etc.
- Lectures related to the exhibitions
were given by art historians Laszlo Beke and Eva Korner,
the German theoretician Rene Block, artist Gyorgy Galantai,
et al.
- The presentation of new trends in art: Art
Communication Projects of the 80s, Electronic Communication
Happening between Budapest and Vienna through Fax and Video
Phone, etc.
1994 (20 exhibitions,
lectures, shows)
- Based on the results of research
done on the Fluxus, exhibition of the works of some outstanding
Hungarian artists of the 70s and 80s, with a special emphasis
on Miklos Erdely, whose manuscripts, video, and sound documents
had finally became available.
- In the course of a
series of lectures entitled "onsszeszerelo delutanok" (Self-Assembling
Afternoons), Miklos Erdelys friends, colleagues, and followers
recalled their memories of him, discussed their former ideas
and plans, and interpreted Erdelys contributions.
-
During the Budapest Autumn Festival, a three-night Polyphonix
Sound Poetry Festival a genre akin to Fluxus and performance
with the participation of significant artists from outside
Hungary: Bernard Heidsieck, Julien Blaine, Ernst Jandl,
et al.
1995
- Lectures,
video presentations and discussions with the participation
of the artists involved on the antecedents and history of
performance. Lectures by Laszlo Beke, F. Laszlo Foldenyi,
Peter Gyorgy, Endre Szkarosi, and others.
- A festival
called Video-Expedition in the Performance-World, presenting
the work of more than 300 performance artists from 20 countries.
- As part of the international Horizontal Radio project
organized by Ars Electronica (Linz, Austria), several hours
of Artpool Radio broadcast on 23 radio stations throughout
the world.
- Artpool is creating a Home Page of information,
documents and projects for access via the Internet.
(dash@caesar.elte.hu)
Budapest VI., Liszt Ferenc tr 10., I. 1.
tel.: (+36-1) 268 01 14 fax: (+36-1) 121 08 33
e-mail: artpool@artpool.hu
Artpools World Wide Web site: http://www.artpool.hu
postal address: H-1277 Budapest 23, Pf. 52.
Open: from 2 to 6 p.m. Wednesdays and Fridays

