2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
 
Slovak Myth
30. September 2005 - 28. February 2006
 
Mary of Hungary
2. February 2006 - 30. April 2006
 
Vladimír Havrilla
23. Marec 2006 - 4. June 2006
 
Artworks from the Collection of the Museum of Modern Art of Saint - Étienne Métropole
7. April 2006 - 28. May 2006
 
Andy Warhol – the Last Return of the King of Pop Art So Far
17. May 2006 - 15. June 2006
 
Figures and Episodes from the Old Testament
From Dürer to Chagall

25. May 2006 - 20. August 2006
 
Autopoesis
20. June 2006 - 3. September 2006
 
Ukiyo-e
Japanese Colour Woodblock Prints

7. September 2006 - 5. November 2006
 
Jindřich Štreit. Photography 1965–2005
Calendars for Jindra Štreit

20. September 2006 - 12. November 2006
 
Something Happened – Aspects of New Narratives
27. September 2006 - 26. November 2006
 
Aleš Votava
1. December 2006 - 25. February 2007
 
Flying Dutchmen
14. December 2006 - 18. Marec 2007
 
2005
2004
 
INSITA 2010 9th International Triennial of Self-Taught Art
Esterházy Palace, 1st floor and basement
4. July 2010 - 26. September 2010
 
Curator: Katarína Čierna
Conception: Katarína Čierna in cooperation with the International Jury (Roger Cardinal, Nico van der Endt , Laurent Danchin, Monika Jagfeld, Vladimír Kordoš, Nina Krstić)
 
Laureat Grand Prix Insita 2010 - Philippe Azéma | Honorary Mention Insita 2010 - Egidio Cuniberti
 
The international triennial event INSITA is a selective exhibition presenting the genuine values of self-taught art – Naïve Art, Art Brut and Outsider Art.
The structure of the INSITA 2010 exhibition:
1. Solo exhibition of Justyna Matysiak (1979), the Laureate of the Grand Prix INSITA 2007 from Poland, featuring detailed depictions of figures and architecture; the artist’s drawings are characterized by pure composition with refined linear structures and reduced colour tones.
2. The competitive international exhibition of the works of contemporary artists included in the categories Naïve Art, Art Brut and Outsider Art, from which the International Jury will choose the laureate of the Grand Prix INSITA 2010. The exhibition presents specific vocabulary and morphological features of original spontaneous creation ranging from expressive dynamic structures to primary forms of expression.
3. The Mini Gallery presents small collections of works by Ivan Rabuzin (1921 – 2008), the most significant Croatian naïve artist who created harmonious, poetical paintings of flowers and landscapes; Robert Burda (1942), the German protagonist of Art Brut, showing his minimalistic drawings of interiors, and Kashinath Chauhan (1966) from India, the author of spontaneous elementary figures. The Mini Gallery is complemented with the work of an unknown German artist and his interpretations of fantastical stories and fairy tales, painted in flowing handwriting with gentle modelling of volumes.
4. The collection of Fabric Art represents twenty artists of European and world renown (Helga Sophia Goetze, Danielle Jacqui, György Kricsfalussy, Raymond Materson, Michel Nedjar, Anna Zemánková and other artists) and their works created from threads and fibres. The exhibition shows various forms of interpretation of the textile medium from the classical picture to object and installation. The artists’ works display a wide range of motifs. While some artists chose to depict the objective world, others draw on the creative power of their inner vision and imagination.


 
up

 
Adam Nidzgorski - Exodus, 1992
 
Anonymous German Artist - Zvierací pohreb, nedatované
 
Emma Widmer-Gass - Kde som bývala žila, 1984
 
Ivan Rabuzin - Orehovecké vrchy, 1959
 
 

 

 

 

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