ODD THEORY #25
Red New Age
Janek Simon
12.10.2019
17:00
After the introduction of the Martial Law in Poland in 1981, the communist 
party completely lost its moral legitimacy. Nobody believed in communist 
ideology anymore. On the other hand, because of the economic crisis of the late 
70’s and early 80’s and events that resulted from it – like the functional 
collapse of the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance –, it was difficult to 
imagine western consumption capitalism to ever be introduced in the country. It 
was difficult to buy toilet paper and people had to queue to buy sugar. That 
led to the creation of an ideological vacuum, that was eventually filled with 
an amalgam of ideas, ranging from Eastern spiritual systems, Catholic church 
and a distorted view of modernisation that came with the introduction of the 
new media – VHS, satellite TV and personal computers. 

Janek Simon had been researching this period in Poland for some time, focusing 
on the introduction of personal computers into everyday life and Red New Age – 
the appropriation of Eastern spirituality in communist Poland. During his 
3-week stay in Bucharest he is working on mapping similarities and differences 
in that aspects of history between Poland and Romania.

For his talk, he will present the findings of this research, as well as give an 
overview of his practice catalyzed by curiosity and travels.

Janek Simon (born 1977) is a conceptual artist and an occasional curator based 
in Warsaw. His main source of inspiration is curiosity. On a more concrete 
level he is inspired by travel, history of science and political ideas, and the 
practice and ethics of the DIY culture, always filtering the theories through 
his personal experience though. In recent years he developed a body of work 
investigating notions of distance and difference between places, working on 
projects that try to remap semi-peripherial position of Eastern Europe through 
geographical experiments. His works was shown, among others, at Manifesta 7, 
Liverpool Biennale, Prague Biennale, and numerous solo shows in major public 
art institutions in Poland and elsewhere (Arnolfini Bristol, Casino Luxembourg, 
Zacheta National Gallery of Art in Warsaw and others).

ODD THEORY 
<https://oddweb.us11.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5c8fa24225389d3209bc8a496&id=ea15f95f47&e=2ca14297a6>
 has been since the beginning an attempt to understand as well as to 
reconfigure, with the delicate means afforded by a small-scale initiative, the 
Romanian imaginary. It functioned as a learning and sharing tool, and in the 
current configuration succeeded in its initial bet of bringing together a 
community of curious and courageous people. The small following overlapped 
ODD’s general following, but also managed to stand out as a work group of 
hybrid practitioners, one that is slowly developing common tools and 
initiatives.

In working with a collective imaginary, regardless of the scale of that 
collective, one has to face the challenge of the poor political imagination 
characterizing the contemporary world. Romania is, in that respect, eternally 
blocked in binaries which do not serve its citizens. The misery of catching up 
conflates with extremely narrow local politics, producing a public sphere in 
which important issues marking the world are never properly discussed. In that 
respect, ODD THEORY makes a point in choosing speakers who can deliver 
presentations and workshops on subjects that remain poorly known and understood 
on the local scene, topics which overlap and create a series of mind-opening 
mirrorings.

ODD THEORY is curated by Cristina Bogdan. 

A space for theoretical discussion and social gatherings of all kinds, ODD 
welcomes to Bucharest artists, writers, critics, philosophers, performers, 
scientists, activists. Through residencies and informal events such as 
discussions, workshops, reading groups, performances, ODD provides for a 
combination of intimacy and playfulness, dialogue and resistance, from which to 
act upon the world.
Project co-funded by the Administration of the National Cultural Fund. The 
project does not necessarily represent the position of the Administration of 
the National Cultural Fund. AFCN is not to be held responsible for the content 
of the project, nor for the ways in which the results of the project might be 
used. Those are entirely the responsibility of the beneficiary of the grant.



With the support of The Polish Institute in Bucharest - Instytut Polski w 
Bukareszcie.


 
<https://oddweb.us11.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5c8fa24225389d3209bc8a496&id=2a9598745e&e=2ca14297a6>
 <mailto:[email protected]>
 
<https://oddweb.us11.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5c8fa24225389d3209bc8a496&id=47f4a4a6d3&e=2ca14297a6>
 
<https://oddweb.us11.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5c8fa24225389d3209bc8a496&id=c05f98a253&e=2ca14297a6>
 
<https://oddweb.us11.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5c8fa24225389d3209bc8a496&id=ddb4cbee51&e=2ca14297a6>
 
<https://oddweb.us11.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5c8fa24225389d3209bc8a496&id=b4ba8153de&e=2ca14297a6>
       Share 
<https://oddweb.us11.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5c8fa24225389d3209bc8a496&id=a0c27c4a20&e=2ca14297a6>
 
<https://oddweb.us11.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5c8fa24225389d3209bc8a496&id=7471618d12&e=2ca14297a6>
       Tweet 
<https://oddweb.us11.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5c8fa24225389d3209bc8a496&id=93316f22aa&e=2ca14297a6>
 
<http://us11.forward-to-friend.com/forward?u=5c8fa24225389d3209bc8a496&id=141a5145cb&e=2ca14297a6>
     Forward 
<http://us11.forward-to-friend.com/forward?u=5c8fa24225389d3209bc8a496&id=141a5145cb&e=2ca14297a6>

_______________________________________________
oberlist mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.idash.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/oberlist

Reply via email to