The purpose of the international promotion of the group is to continue the series of author projects of the Ist Kuns T and this time to intervene in the ideological blockade within the state of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The ji project was based on the interpretation of portraits of all the National Heroes of Bosnia and Herzegovina from the time II. world wars. As a rule, an ideological construct is a framed image. Through their own poetics, the group will move the ideological point of view of the works outside the frame in such a way as to frame the works in their author's frames. With this, the construct suddenly disintegrates, leaving only a clear trace of the ideological apparatus, which, of course, works further and gives a new image a new ideological construct. Art as such, Of course, goes further and surpasses ideology. Also with international, transnational projects that extract only and only the essence from the content.
The exhibition was created in cooperation with the Museum of Contemporary Art of Republika Srpska and the Historical Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Photo: Jaka Babnik, gbj archive
Namen mednarodno uveljavljenje skupine IRWIN je v nadaljevati serijo avtorskih projektov Was ist Kuns t in tokrat poseči v ideološko blokado znotraj države Bosne in Hercegovine. Projekt ji bil zasnovan na interpretaciji portretov vseh narodnih herojev Bosne in Hercegovine iz časa II. svetovne vojne. Ideološki konstrukt je praviloma uokvirjena podoba. Skupina IRWIN bo skozi lastno poetiko ideološko točko pogleda na dela premaknila izven okvirja na način, da bo dela uokvirila v njihove avtorske okvirje. S tem konstrukt naenkrat razpade, ostane samo jasna sled ideološkega aparata, ki seveda deluje naprej in novi podobi pridoda nov ideološki konstrukt. Umetnost kot taka seveda seže dlje in ideologijo preseže. Tudi z mednarodnimi, transnacionalnimi projekti, ki iz vsebine izluščijo zgolj in samo bistvo.
Razstava je nastala v sodelovanju z Muzejem sodobne umetnosti Republike Srbske in Zgodovinskim muzejem Bosne in Hercegovine.
Foto: Jaka Babnik, arhiv GBJ