INFO

Géza Perneczky
Identification Program
Early conceptual artists' books 1970–71

Janaura 25 – February 23, 2018

Curated by Patrick urwyler

Photos: Norbet Juhász

TEXT

Perneczky’s second solo exhibition at Chimera-Project Gallery continuous the gallery’s endeavor of researching and presenting Perneczky’s manifold oeuvre in Hungary and abroad. The exhibition is realized on the occasion of a recent publication by the Getty Research Institute, “Promote Tolerate Ban: Cold War Hungary” (Isotta Poggi & Cristina Cuevas-Wolf, February 2018). In his contributing essay “In the Underground Between East and West” Perneczky describes his personal story in the general artistic context of the years 1970–1972 in Hungary and abroad.

The focus of our exhibition is on the very early years of Perneczky’s oeuvre: on the time right before his well known “Concepts like Commentary” (1971) series together with the “Art Bubbles” (1972) and the beginning of his engagement with Rubber Stamp and Mail Art. 1970–71 were crucial years with radical changes not only concerning the artist’s practice but his life as a whole. It was in late 1970 when Perneczky emigrated to Cologne in former West Germany, where he lives until today. By presenting two associated artworks of this period – “5 Books” (1970, Budapest) and “Identification Program” (1971, Cologne) – the exhibition examines Perneczky’s early artistic development and its impact on his oeuvre.

Perneczky’s “5 Books” are conceptual artists’ books and were inspired by the catalog of Harald Szeemann’s legendary exhibition “Live in your Head – When Attitudes become Form” at Kunsthalle Bern 1969. Perneczky witnessed the show in the same year on a study trip to Krefeld at the Museum Haus Lange. For Perneczky the exhibition catalog in the form of a simple file seemed to be a independent work of art by its own, it already contained all important ideas and concepts that lead to the realization of the works shown in the actual exhibition. According to Perneczky the term dematerialized art was already in the air. Soon after this encounter and back in Budapest it was not difficult for Perneczky to create artworks for which the modest form of a handmade booklet sufficed. With his arrival in Cologne, Perneczky planned to create a “sixth book” as a supplement. But the resulting “Identification Program” broke with the original series and became entirely different in form and content. The series was based on 6 photographs with text distributed as offset brochures. It was all about capturing elemental phenomena (the shape of clouds, or the waves on the surface of the water), etc. represented by photography. The content of “Identification Program” was much more systematic and serious than the colorful, handmade “5 Books” with their amusing irony and political connotation.

From today’s perspective both works had an important impact on Perneczky’s later artistic practice. The “5 books” and its assembled conceptual artworks in A4 size, can be directly related to Perneczky’s bigger work group, the Rubber Stamp series. Both share a fluxus inspired idea of small conceptual paper works produced with inexpensive techniques and self-distribution. “Identification program” also relates to these qualities especially when it comes to the distribution, but the usage of photography, executed as a coherent conceptual series might be the first example of Perneczky’s conceptual photography series as we know it today.

The exhibition in Chimera-Project Gallery will travel internationally with a first stop at SODA Gallery in Bratislava. It is a part of the exchange between SODA and Chimera-Project, both galleries actively engaged in the elaboration of the neo-avantgarde heritage.
The series will be rounded up with a book presentation of the Getty publication together with Géza Perneczky in later spring 2018 in Budapest. Both events will be announced soon.