Imre Lepsényi: Collective Ornamentation

Imre Lepsényi: Collective Ornamentation

Imre Lepsényi

COLLECTIVE ORNAMENTATION

Opening event: 2 October 2014, 6 pm
Venue: Kassák Museum

Opening address by: Zsolt. K. Horváth, historian and lecturer

The exhibition will be open until 1 March, 2015.

Ornamentation is an assembly of visual elements, mostly characteristic in themselves but grouped into a repetitive scheme, and takes effect on “reading” through a rhythm of identical or disparate impressions (Sutermeister, 1944). Ödön Lechner recognized the community-building potential of ornamentation and aimed to create a Hungarian national idiom (Lechner, 1906), while Lajos Kozma stated that “true ornamentation has its own collective character in every age” (Kozma, 1928). The Third Reich exploited the collective potential of ornamentation in building up its totalitarian system, saturating private and public spaces with Nazi symbols and creating “ornamentation of violence”. Siegfried Kracauer claimed that for the working class, which had lost its character in capitalist mass production, the mass-ornamentation of a dance troupe’s geometrical-rhythmical movements embodied the collective identity (Kracauer, 1926). The global advertising and design idiom adapts systems of local symbols, sifting and rewriting them to build its own global target publics.

How is ornamentation to be read? What collective language does it generate? What effect does it have on the community, the national consciousness, the masses, the individual? What power does it have to shape consciousness and society? The exhibition explores these and other questions, as it considers the various contemporary and historical approaches to ornamentation.


Exhibition Concept and Design:
Imre Lepsényi

Coordination: Judit Csatlós, Katalin Szőke

Consultation: Dorottya Domanovszky, Eszter Őze, Edit Sasvári, Tünde Varga, Árpád Végh

Contributors: Attila Batári, Ágnes Ferenczi, Thurnayné Zorka Mijátovits , Barbara Szabó, Bottyán Vass

Translation: Reuben Fowkes

Thanks to: Dóra Balla
and the students of the MOME:
Katalin Bártfai, Dóra Béres, Judit Borsi, Enikő Déri, Nóra Demeczky, Réka Holló Szabó, Lilla Tóth

Special thanks to: Mariann Simon, Márton Szentpéteri,
Élet és Irodalom, Polányi Mihály Szabadelvű Filozófiai Társaság, Studio MK27 (São Paulo, Brazília)

Supported by:
The Municipality of Óbuda-Békásmegyer