Normality 1-X
Film screening accompanying the exhibitiobn "Strike" (English subtitles)

Zachęta / cinema room (entrance from Burschego street)
free entry, free tickets can be picked up starting at 5.30 pm

Hito Steyerl, Normality 1-X, 1999, 42 min. (English subtitles)

Resistance to the political change which took place in Austria in the year 2000, even when coming from members of the alleged opposition, is repeatedly dismissed as a hysterical reaction. The claim is made that this was a "normal democratic change." 

This characterization obscures the fact that the protest was directed primarily at a party whose populist program is intended to mobilize authoritarian and misanthropic prejudices. Furthermore, these protests were and are intended to stop the "integration of popular racism" (Steyerl) into the social and political mainstream, which is also on the rise in countries other than Austria. 

What is declared normal by some and accepted as such by the majority sometimes represents a concrete threat to others. Normality 1–10, a series of short video essays, registers everyday neo-fascist violence as being
an instrument of such "normalization." In a matter-of-fact and at the same time insistent manner, Hito Steyerl offers a richly detailed report on the growing number of anti-Semitic and racist attacks - on cemeteries, monuments and human beings — in both Austria and Germany. In a sober visual language, she develops a number of forms and styles of commentary to pose questions concerning the social structures inherent to this variety of violence and their representation.

At the same time, Steyerl assumes an unequivocal political position: The important thing is to penetrate the silent acceptance and opportunistic racist consent. Normality also shows how immigrants — many of whom left their homes because of Europe´s commitment to global capitalism - demand their rights and remind us: "Your silence is encouraging fascism, telling the fascists that it´s okay what they are doing." (Thomas Korschil)

After the screening we invite you to the presentation of OSA project and meeting with Bogna Stefańska. Moderator: Stanisław Welbel. (in Polish)

OSA is a travelling exhibition displayed in the interior of a renovated K67 kiosk designed in 1966 by Saša Mächtig, an architect from the former Yugoslavia. The characteristic design and the modern structure became a starting point for the creation of a display space for anti-war statements and actions found in the history of art, culture and social activism, including both historical accounts and the projects of contemporary artists. The futuristic shape of the K67 kiosk inspired us to imagine the future without wars and violence.

event accompanying the exhibition
  • 10.09 – 17.11.2019
    Strike
    Käthe Kollwitz, Hito Steyerl, Keren Donde

    The exhibition project was inspired by the historical exhibition of the works of the German graphic artist, sculptor and painter Käthe Kollwitz, which took place in the Zachęta Central Bureau of Art Exhibitions (CBWA) in 1951. The development of documentation and analysis of the exhibition reception was possible thanks to a research project conducted in recent years at the Zachęta gallery, in which exhibitions, rather than individual works, were the subject of research.

    Zachęta – National Gallery of ArtZachęta
Upcoming events
all
  • 26.04 (Fri) 17:00
    Hidden meanings of objects
    (in Polish)
    Zachęta – National Gallery of ArtZachęta
  • 27.04 (Sat) 12:15
    From the Ashes
    (in Polish)
    Zachęta – National Gallery of ArtZachęta
  • 28.04 (Sun) 12:15
    Sunday guided tour
    (in Polish)
    Zachęta – National Gallery of ArtZachęta
  • 06.05 (Mon) 13:00
    Roosters, lajkoniks and rosettes
    (in Polish)
    Marszałkowska 55/73, WarsawMarszałkowska 55/73, Warsaw