MONOCULTURE – ARTEFACTS
Ensemble
As with a number of exhibitions M HKA has organised in recent years exploring questions we feel to be relevant for society and culture at large, Monoculture – A Recent History is trans-disciplinary. Along with its core focus on visual art, we also include various historical artefacts into a dialogue. Most of the artefacts, including rare first-edition publications and paraphernalia, were acquired by the museum specifically for the exhibition. Consequently, the artefacts were preserved as part of the museum archive, with the intention of providing open access for researchers.
M HKA in no way endorses the extremist ideologies, historical acts of intolerance and sensitive images or texts that were shown in the exhibition. As a museum for art and visual culture, we consider it important to use and contextualise this material, bringing it in dialogue with contemporary art and discourse, in order to ask relevant questions about society and culture at large.
Items
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L. Zamenhof, "Unua Libro"
L. Zamenhof, "Unua Libro", 1904. Book.
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Het geheim van document ...
Het geheim van document 217, s.d. Leaflet.
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Voor verdraagzaamheid ver...
Voor verdraagzaamheid verbroedering vaderlandsliefde vrijheid vrede gaan wij naar de officiële School . Leaflet, 46,5 x 30,5 cm .
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Dankzij de PVV gisteren d...
Dankzij de PVV gisteren de school Vrede morgen de taalvrede . Leaflet, 63 x 37,5 cm.
Actors
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Matti Braun
Matti Braun is interested in the relationships between different cultures such as the connection between early 20th Century Indian art histor
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Joseph Beuys
Joseph Beuys: controversial war artist German artist Joseph Heinrich Beuys (Krefeld, 1921 - Düsseldorf, 1986) grew up as a child with unu
Ensembles
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MONOCULTURE – Universalis...
The Family of Man and Murmurs of Earth: The Voyager Interstellar Record The Family of Man was a photography exhibition curated by Edward
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MONOCULTURE – Soviet Nati...
The culture of nationalities, which was developing in the USSR under the concept of “national in form and socialist in content”, was consider
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MONOCULTURE – Négritude b...
Négritude was conceived as an emancipatory cultural movement, initiated in the Interwar period by francophone intellectuals of the African di
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MONOCULTURE – Key Exhibit...
These two exhibitions, which took place in New York three years apart, are often regarded together, as both were heavily orientated towards t
