Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 916248
Rethinking the Monument. Dialogical and Anti- monumental Strategies of Yugoslav Memorial Practices
Rethinking the Monument. Dialogical and Anti- monumental Strategies of Yugoslav Memorial Practices // International scientific conference: Modernist Sculpture and Culture: Historiographical Approaches and Critical Analyses CONFERENCE PROGRAMME AND BOOK OF ABSTRACTS / Prančević, Dalibor (ur.).
Split: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Split, 2017. str. 47-48 (predavanje, nije recenziran, sažetak, znanstveni)
CROSBI ID: 916248 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
Rethinking the Monument. Dialogical and Anti- monumental Strategies of Yugoslav Memorial Practices
Autori
Horvatinčić, Sanja
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Sažeci sa skupova, sažetak, znanstveni
Izvornik
International scientific conference: Modernist Sculpture and Culture: Historiographical Approaches and Critical Analyses CONFERENCE PROGRAMME AND BOOK OF ABSTRACTS
/ Prančević, Dalibor - Split : Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Split, 2017, 47-48
Skup
International scientific conference: Modernist Sculpture and Culture: Historiographical Approaches and Critical Analyses
Mjesto i datum
Split, Hrvatska, 26-27.10
Vrsta sudjelovanja
Predavanje
Vrsta recenzije
Nije recenziran
Ključne riječi
WWII memorials, WWII monuments, counter-monument, SFRY, anti-monumentalism
Sažetak
The term “counter monument”, coined by James E. Young in the early 1990s, has become one of the central theoretical concepts in the field of memory studies. Beside the fact that the term has often been uncritically adopted by art historians in order to explain and “label” formal and conceptual innovations that occurred in the field of memorial practices in the wake of the post-modern shift, its negative prefix and thus constructed, binary semantic field of “monument” can also be understood as a product of the West-oriented narrative of the history of modern art. This is especially the case with twentieth-century monumental sculpture/architecture, burdened with overt ideological/political functions. Although the term “counter monument” originated from the need to address specific socio-political circumstances of the 1980s in Western Germany, it soon came to be understood as the breakthrough in the history of twentieth-century memorial practices, which limited the recognition of similar strategies which had occurred before the term was officially inaugurated in the early 1980s, especially those originating in former socialist countries, such as Yugoslavia. This is further complicated by the implicated binary relation between the term “monument” and “counter monument”, which seems to echo and perpetuate a binary ideological worldview inherited from Cold War cultural politics (East vs. West, democratic vs. totalitarian, etc.). Consequently, the official narrative (the “canon”) seems to suggest that the introduction of dialogical and anti- monumental strategies in the field of memorial practice could only have been possible within Western democracies (Western Germany, the USA). This paper will show that features recognised as characteristic of “counter monuments” (Q. Stevens, et al., “Counter-monuments: the anti- monumental and the dialogic”, Journal of Architecture, Vol 17, 2012/6) can be recognised in projects, realisations and discussions about monuments in socialist Yugoslavia already in the late 1950s/early 1960s. Although the application of such strategies did not “counter” or challenge the official WWII narratives, intense rethinking of the monument by artists and art critics resulted in radical inversions of formal and conceptual premises of the “traditional” monument.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Povijest umjetnosti, Znanost o umjetnosti
POVEZANOST RADA
Ustanove:
Institut za povijest umjetnosti, Zagreb,
Sveučilište u Splitu
Profili:
Sanja Horvatinčić
(autor)