Marinko Sudac Collection

The Marinko Sudac Collection, based in Zagreb, Croatia, has been created with a clear collecting strategy based on the region of Central and Eastern Europe, additionally spanning from the Baltic area to the Black Sea. The guiding principle of the Collection is systematic exploration, researching, and promotion of the avant-garde practices which have been marginalized, forbidden, and at times completely negated due to the historical, social and political circumstances. In this context, the Marinko Sudac Collection gives the most complete and comprehensive overview on the art of this region. The Collection starts at 1909, and it show the continuity from the first Avant-Gardes, through neo-avant-garde and New Artistic Practices, ending with the fall of the Berlin Wall. The global uniqueness of the Marinko Sudac Collection is also seen in the kind of media it contains. It contains not only traditional artworks, such as paintings, sculptures, and photographs, but it gives equal importance to documentary and archival material. Great importance is put on these almost forgotten media, which enable research of specific phenomena, artists and the socio-political situation which affected this type of art. The Collection contains a great number of museological units, and it treats the documentary and archival material on the same level as traditional artworks. By examining the units contained in the Marinko Sudac Collection, one can read not only the art scene or the art production of a certain artist, but the full status of the society, the socio-political atmosphere of the region in which this art was created in.

This Collection is not merely a process of gathering artworks, but a contextualisation of the art of region in the global history of art and an effort of putting it on its deserved place in history. The aim of the Marinko Sudac Collection is to preserve the cultural heritage of the Central and Eastern European region from globalisation, by maintaining it in a contextual unity. The end goal is to place the Collection in an architectural, physical building of the Museum of Avant-Garde, in which this art will be valorised, museologically processed, open to researchers and experts, and presented to the public. A part of the works from the Marinko Sudac Collection is available in digital form on an innovative platform of the Virtual Museum of Avant-Garde (www.avantgarde-museum.com/en), which unites the work of the Virtual Museum of the Avant-Garde, the Marinko Sudac Collection, and the Institute for the Research of the Avant-Garde, with a goal to form a central database for the researching of the phenomena of the Avant-Garde.

Alongside more than 80 already accomplished successful collaborations with museum institutions and independently organized exhibition in great museum centres such as Tate Modern, London; Ludwig Museum, Budapest, Haus der Kunst, Munich; ZKM, Karlsruhe, Deutsches Filmmuseum Frankfurt, Museum of Modern Art, Warsaw, Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb,... or exhibition of the Collection in unofficial places such as Marshall Josip Broz Tito's boat Seagull (At Standstill exhibition, Rijeka, 2011), Marinko Sudac is also an editor of numerous publications – art monographs, exhibition catalogues and collections of texts, and an author of a successful artist residence project Artist on Vacation, held annually since 2012, which hosted over 50 of the leading world artists which continue the tradition of the Avant-Garde.

Collection strategy

The Collection's interest extends from the Baltic area to the Black Sea, with particular emphasis on Central and Eastern Europe. The collector's strategy is directed towards systematic exploration, research, and promotion of Avant-Garde practices that have been marginalized, forbidden, and at times completely rejected, due to historical, social and political circumstances. In this respect, the Collection is, in relation to already existing European art collections, regionally cohesive, and presents an inexhaustible resource for the research of Avant-Garde art and a dynamic platform for the exchange of knowledge on the phenomenon of Avant-Garde. This can be seen in numerous topical and retrospective exhibitions, organized events, followed by connected detailed publications or studies, articles in professional journals, some published in the framework of research projects and collaborations with numerous important institutions, experts, theoreticians, art historians, and artists from the entire world.

Museum of Avantgarde

The Virtual Museum of Avant-Garde, based on the Marinko Sudac Collection, was created in 2009. It presents the digital database of the Collection through which you can see the overview of Avant-Garde art in the countries of former Yugoslavia structured according to authors, artworks, time periods, and geographical areas, as well as links and influences of the artists with cultural happenings and artistic centres in the region and the world. The website, beside the high-quality digitized artworks, contains biographies and bibliographies, alongside the connection of the artists with other artists, art institutions and cultural forums, as well as selected publications.

The online database show only a small part of the Collection. Speedy digitization of the material is crucial to accomplish the Museum's main aim, which is to make it a centre for information on the regional Avant-Garde practices.

The Virtual Museum of Avant-Garde is a free online platform to research all forms of Avant-Garde art of Eastern and Central Europe, to show connection with the rest of the world, to be a place for free thought and making realisations on the relevant cultural phenomena of Avant-Garde thought and artistic doing, to be a space for creating and publishing expert materials and research on the phenomena of the Avant-Garde. In its work, the Virtual Museum of Avant-Garde managed to become a meeting point of experts and intellectuals from the region and the artists, as well as interested public who can, in one place, find many information on the Avant-Garde movement in this area.[1]

The international Board is made up of leading theoreticians and art historians: Lutz Becker, Jerko Denegri, Živko Grozdanić, Matko Meštrović, Želimir Koščević, Irina Subotić, Feđa Vukić, and Laszlo Beke. The director is Branko Franceschi.

Artists in the Marinko Sudac Collection[2]

Former Yugoslavia

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Aleksandar Vučo

Andrija Maurović

Antun Branko Šimić

Antun Motika

Avgust Černigoj

Boško Tokin

Branko Ve Poljanski

Čedomil Plavšić

Csuka Zoltán

Dada Tank

Dragan Aleksić

Dušan Matić

Eduard Stepančič

Franjo Fius

Ivan Goll

Ivana Tomljenović Meller

Janko Polić Kamov

Jo Klek

Ljubiša Jocić

Ljubomir Micić

Marijan Mikac

Marko Ristić

Mihailo S. Petrov

Miho Schön

Oskar Davičo

Rade Drainac

Radovan Ivšić

Rastko Petrović

Salomon Monny de Boully

Srečko Kosovel

Stanislav Vinaver

Tank

Traveleri

UT

Vane Bor

Vilko Gecan

Željko Hegedušić

Zenit

Aleksandar Srnec

Božidar Jelenić

Božidar Rašica

Branko Vlahović

Dimitrije Bašičević Mangelos

Đuro Seder

Eugen Feller

EXAT 51

GEFF

Gorgona

Ivan Kožarić

Ivan Picelj

Ivo Gattin

Josip Vaništa

Jozef Ács

Julije Knifer

Juraj Dobrović

Koloman Novak

Marijan Jevšovar

Matko Meštrović

Mihovil Pansini

Miljenko Horvat

Pal Petrik

Petrik Pal

Radoslav Putar

Sava Simončić

Stipo Pranyko

Vjenceslav Richter

Vladimir Petek

Vlado Kristl

Vojin Bakić

Želimir Žilnik

Adresa Magazine

Andraž Šalamun

Ante Vukov

Attila Csernik

Autopsia

Bálint Szombathy

Bogdanka Poznanović

Bojan Brecelj

Boris Buċan

Boris Demur

Bosch+Bosch

Braco Dimitrijević

Crveni Peristil

D. Raša Todosijeviċ

David Nez

Drago Dellabernardina

Dragomir Ugren

Dubravko Budiċ

Era Milivojeviċ

Fedor Vučemilović

Franci Zagoričnik

Gera Urkom

Goran Trbuljak

Gorki Žuvela

Group of Six Authors

Igor Grubić

Ilija Šoškić

Ivan Volarič-Feo

Iztok Geister

Janez Kocijančič

Josip Stošić

Katalin Ladik

Kôd Group

László Kerekeš

László Szalma

Marijan Molnar

Marina Abramović

Marjan Ciglić

Marko Pogačnik

Matjaž Hanžek

Milenko Matanović

Mirko Radojčiċ

Mladen Stilinović

Naško Križnar

Neša Paripović

Nuša Dragan

OHO

Peđa Vranešević

Radomir Damnjanović-Damnjan

Raša Todosijević

Sanja Iveković

Slavko Bogdanović

Slavko Matkoviċ

Slobodan Tišma

Srečo Dragan

Sven Stilinović

The Šempas Family

Tok Group

Tomaž Šalamun

Tomislav Gotovac

Verbumprogram

Vladimir Gudac

Vladimir Kopicl

Vlado Martek

Vojin Kovač-Chubby

Željko Jerman

Željko Kipke

Živko Grozdanić

Zoran Popović

Hungary

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
100%

Farkas Molnár

Korunk

Lajos Kássak

MA

Munka

Sándor Bortyik

Tibor Déry

István Nádler

Miklós Erdély

Imre Bak

Attila Pálfalusi

Ferenc Ficzek

Gábor Attalai

Gyula Konkoly

János Sugár

Kálmán Szijártó

Károl Kismányoky

Károly Halász

László Haris

Pécsi Műhely

Sándor Pinczehelyi

Tamás St. Auby

György Galántai

Tibor Hajas

Gyula Pauer

Endre Tot

Tibor Csiky

Géza Pernecky

Dóra Maurer

Balatonboglár

György Jovánovics

Gyula Gulyás

Gábor Tóth

Czechoslovakia

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Red

Odeon

Stavba

Karel Teige

Jindřich Štyrský

Vítězslav Nezval

Olymo

Josef Čapek

Otakar Mrkvička

Ladislav Sutnar

Jaromír Funke

Vladimir Boudník

Milan Grygar

Zdeněk Beran

Dalibor Chatrný

Milan Knížák

Eugen Brikcius

Běla Kolářová

Stano Filko

Jiří Kolář

Miroslav Klivar

Jiří Valoch

Karel Miler

Jan Steklik

Jiří Palla

Jan Mlčoch

Petr Štembera

Jan Woynar

J. H. Kocman

Július Koller

Rudolf Sikora

Desider Tóth

Milan Adamčiak

Rudolf Fila

Juraj Meliš

Otis Laubert

Milan Dobeš

Poland

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Jerzy Bereś

Jarosław Kozłowski

Józef Robakowski

Zdzisław Sosnowski

Andrzej Lachowicz

Natalia LL

Permafo Gallery

Teresa Tyszkiewicz

Lech Mrožek

Andrzej Partum

Russia

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Vladimir Mayakovski

LEF

Dvizheniye

Lev Nussberg

Francisco Infante-Arana

Galina Bitt

Alexander Stepanov

Viacheslav Koleichuk

Anatoli Krivchikov

Viacheslav Shcherbakov

Yuri Lapokov

Vladimir Jankilevskij

Boris Diadorov

Aleksei Smirnov

Michail Grobman

Ernst Neizvestny

Viktor Pivovarov

Dmitri Prigov

Oleg Kulik

USA

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Joseph Kosuth

John Cage

Fluxus

Ken Friedman

Philip Corner

Bruce Conner

Stan Brakhage

Terry Fox

United Kingdom

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Gillian Wise

Romania

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Paul Neagu

Ukraine

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989

Turkey

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Teoman Madra

The Netherlands

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Boegel & Holtappels

Italy

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Filippo Tommaso Marineti

Futurism

Gabriele D'Annunzio

Piero Manzoni

Azimuth

Franco Verdi

Switzerland

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Dieter Roth

Germany

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Dada Almanah

Kurt Schwitters

Der Strurm

Der Blau Reiter

Bauhaus

Dada

Klaus Groh

Bulgaria

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989

France

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Guillaume Apollinarire

Andre Breton

Denmark

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Eric Andersen

Austria

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Arnulf Rainer

Renate Bertlmann

Finland

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989
Outi Heiskanen

Japan

1915–1946 1946–1968 1968–1989

Projects

Since its beginning, the Marinko Sudac Collection has been open to collaboration with various institutions. Through the years, the works from the Collection have been exhibited both locally and internationally.

The Collection has been recognised as a good partner and the growing interest in different types of collaborations (exhibitions, conferences, projects, movies, publications) shows the quality of the Collections and its open character.

List of independently organised projects

  • Andrzej Lachowicz – A Form of Consciousness, Zuccato Gallery, Poreč, Croatia, 2018
  • "Artist on Vacation 2017" by Valamar, Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, Croatia, 2018
  • "IN MEMORIAM" – Josip Vaništa, Šira Gallery, Zagreb, Croatia, 2018
  • Živko Grozdanić Gera – Allegories, Zuccato Gallery, Poreč, Croatia, 2017
  • Radomir Damnjanović Damnjan, Paintings. 2009 – 2012, Zuccato Gallery, Poreč, Croatia, 2017
  • Artist on Vacation 2016 \ Valamar, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2017
  • JIŘÍ VALOCH – THE POWER OF THE POWERLESS, Marinko Sudac Collection, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2017
  • OHO FILMS. A Retrospective (1963–1971) Marinko Sudac Collection, French Pavilion, Zagreb, Croatia, 2017
  • El nem kötelezett művészet – Marinko Sudac gyűjteménye, Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest, Hungary, 2017
  • Miljenko Horvat. Gorgona and After. Photographs | Marinko Sudac Collection, Photo Gallery LANG, Samobor, Croatia, 2017
  • SLOVAKIAN NEO-AVANT-GARDE | Rudolf Sikora, Július Koller and the First Open Studio, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2017
  • Non-Aligned Modernity . Eastern-European Art and Archives from the Marinko Sudac Collection, FM Center for Contemporary Art, Milan, Italy, 2016
  • Jiří Valoch – The Power of the Powerless, Zuccato Gallery, Poreč, Croatia, 2016
  • NEO DADA: GORGONA | Absurd Freedom, Gallery Thalberg, Zürich, Switzerland, 2016
  • Julius Koller U. F. O. – naut J. K.?, Art Market Budapest 2015, Budapest, Hungary, 2016
  • Radical Practices from Marinko Sudac Collection, A38 Ship Gallery, Budapest, Hungary, 2016
  • Gorgona, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2015
  • Artist on Vacation 2015, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2015
  • Gorgona – Then and Now, Villa Polesini, Poreč, Croatia, 2015
  • Blue Noses – From the Transition’s Archives, Gallery of Fine Arts of the National Museum Zadar, Zadar, Croatia, 2015
  • Vlado Martek | Read the Visual, Typholological Museum, Zagreb, Croatia, 2015
  • Bucan Art from Marinko Sudac Collection, Gallery of Fine Arts, Split, Croatia, 2015
  • Jiří Valoch – Word as a Painting, Gallery of Fine Arts, Split, Croatia, 2015
  • Stano Filko – Transcendence, Art Market Budapest, Budapest, Hungary, 2014
  • First World War and Avant-Garde Art, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2014
  • Artist on Vacation 2014, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2014
  • Bucan Art, , 2014Villa Polesini, Poreč, Croatia
  • Transition and Transition – Oleg Kulig, Josip Vaništa, Blue Noses, Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest, Hungary, 2014
  • Good Choice! Examples of Commercial Communication from the 50s and 60s, Fuliranje, Zagreb, Croatia, 2013
  • Artist on Vacation 2013, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2013
  • Transition – Oleg Kulig, Josip Vaništa, Blue Noses, Villa Polesini, Poreč, Croatia, 2013
  • Bauhaus by Ivana Tomljenović Meller, Worker's Gallery, Zagreb, Croatia, 2012 – 2013
  • The manifestation of a spiral due to Y. Klein – Boris Demur, Damian Nenadić, Foto galerija Lang, Samobor, Croatia, 2012
  • Artist on Vacation 2012, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2012
  • Ivan Kožarić, Novi Spa & Resorts, Novi Vinodolski, Croatia, 2012
  • Marinko Sudac Collection: Permanent Avant-Garde, KUAD Gallery, Istanbul, Turkey, 2012
  • Circles of Interference. The Marinko Sudac Collection, the Petőfi Literary Museum – Kassák Museum, Budapest, Hungary, 2012
  • Standstill – Activist art from the Marinko Sudac Collection, "Seagull" ship, Rijeka, Croatia, 2011
  • Branimir Donat and Visual Poetry, Glyptotheque HAZU, Zagreb, Croatia, 2011
  • OHO After OHO, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2010
  • Aleksandar Srnec: Experimental Reality, Museum Lapidarium, Novigrad, Croatia, 2010
  • Ivana Tomljenović Meller, Photographs and Photomontages Bauhaus, Dessau 1929–1930, Photo Gallery Lang, Samobor, Croatia, 2010
  • The Present Absence – Aleksandar Srnec, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2010
  • Aleksandar Srnec, Zuccato Gallery, Poreč, Croatia, 2008
  • The Present Absence – Aleksandar Srnec, The Gallery of Old and New Masters, Varaždin, Croatia, 2008
  • Marginal Specificities – Regional Avant-Garde Art 1915–1989, Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Rijeka, Croatia, 2007
  • Marginal Specificities: Avant-Garde Art of ex-Yugoslavia 1914–1989, Museum of Contemporary Art of Vojvodina, Novi Sad, Serbia, 2006
  • Vlado Martek... The Artist as a Mobile Map, Zlatno oko Gallery, Novi Sad, Srbija, 2006
  • Marginal Specificities – Regional Avant-Garde Art, Gallery Centre Varaždin, Varaždin, Croatia, 2005
  • Marijan Molnar, Vila Oršić, Varaždin, Croatia, 2004
  • Vlado Martek, Vila Oršić, Varaždin, Croatia, 2004

List of collaborations with instititutions (loans of works from the Marinko Sudac Collection)

  • Poetry & Performance. The Eastern European Perspective, Shedhalle Zurich, 2018
  • Years of Disarray / Between Anxiety and Delight: the Birth of the Modern Central European Citizen 1908–1928, Olomouc Museum of Art, Czech Republic, 2018
  • The Other Trans-Atlantic: Kinetic and Op Art in Eastern Europe and Latin America 1950s – 1970s, SESC Pinheiros - São Paulo, Brazil, 2018
  • FAREWELL TO SPRING | 1968 in the Eastern Block, Galeria Centralis, Vera and Donald Blinken Open Society Archives, Budapest, Hungary, 2018
  • Marko Pogačnik – Tretja umetnost, Galerija Prešernovih nagrajencev Kranj, Kranj, Slovenia, 2018
  • CUT / REZ – Examples of collage in artistic practices in Central and Eastern Europe from the Avant-garde until today, Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, Croatia, 2018
  • ŽELJKO KIPKE Diagnosis: Double Vision, Gallery of Arts, Split, Croatia, 2018
  • The Other Trans-Atlantic, Garage, Moscow, Russia, 2018
  • Poezija & performans. Istočnoevropska perspektiva, Student's Cultural Centre, Podroom Gallery, Belgrade, Serbia. 2018
  • NOVI SAD ORPHEUSES – Új Symposion (1965–1992), the Vojvodina journal, Ferenczy Múzeum, Szentendre, Hungary, 2018
  • PROJEKCIJE: Antun Motika in dediščina eksperimenta, Škuc Gallery, Ljubljana, Slovenia, 2018
  • Poézia a performancia. Východoeurópska perspektíva, Nová synagóga, Žilina, Slovakia, 2017 – 2018
  • You've Got 1243 Unread Messages. Last Generation Before the Internet. Their Lives, Latvian National Museum of Art, Riga, Latvia, 2017
  • Párhuzamos avantgárd – Pécsi Műhely 1968–1980, Savaria Múzeum, Szombathely, Hungary, 2017
  • Rejestracje, Fundacja Profile, Warsaw, Poland, 2017
  • Today's Yesterday – The 1st Anren Biennale, Anren, Chengdu, China, 2017
  • The Other Transatlantic. Kinetic & Op Art in Central & Eastern Europe and Latin America, Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland, 2017
  • Kassákizmus 1., Petőfi Irodalmi Múzeum, Budapest, Hungary, 2017
  • Exat 51. Experimental Atelier Synthesis Of The Arts In Post-War Yugoslavia. Ideology, Abstraction And Architecture, Museum Haus Lange, Krefeld, Germany, 2017
  • Natural Histories. Traces of the Political, mumok – Museum moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig, Vienna, Austria, 2017
  • Gutljaj jedan, ali vrijedan. Segestica Sisak 1917.-2017., Sisak City Museum, Sisak, Croatia, 2017
  • THROUGH A FOREST WILDERNESS Actions in the Forest. Performance, Conceptual Art, Events. 1960 – ∞, Brandenburgischer Kunstverein Potsdam, Germany, 2017
  • Viva Arte Viva, 57th Venice Biennial, Venice, Italy, 2017
  • Parallel Avant-garde – Pécs Workshop 1968–1980, Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest, Hungary, 2017
  • PROJECTIONS Antun Motika and the legacy of experiment, Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Rijeka, Croatia, 2017
  • Drago Dellabernardina, P74 Gallery, Ljubljana, Slovenia, 2017
  • Facing the future. Art in Europe 1945–1968, Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow, Russia, 2017
  • Slovenia and Non-Aligned Pop, Umetnostna galerija Maribor, Slovenia, 2016 – 2017
  • ART IN EUROPE 1945–1968: Facing the Future, ZKM, Karlsruhe, Germany, 2016
  • Postwar: Art between the Pacific and the Atlantic, 1945–1965, Haus der Kunst, Munich, Germany, 2016
  • Notes From The Underground. Art And Alternative Music In Eastern Europe 1968–1994, Muzeum Sztuki w Łodzi, Łodz, Poland, 2016
  • Ivo Gattin, Adris Gallery, Rovinj, Croatia, 2016
  • Politiche della Natura, Fondazione Zimei, Pescara, Italy, 2016
  • ecologEAST – Art and Nature Beyond the Wall, PAV Parco Arte Vivente, Turin, Italy, 2016
  • Monuments Should Not Be Trusted, Nottingham Contemporary, Nottingham, United Kingdom, 2016
  • Ludwig Goes Pop + The East Side Story, Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest, Hungary, 2016
  • The EY Exhibition: The World Goes Pop, Tate Modern, London, United Kingdom, 2015 – 2016
  • Phlogiston, Gallery of Fine Arts, Splits, Croatia, 2015
  • Đuro Seder – A Retrospective Exhibition, 1953–2015, Modern Gallery, Zagreb, Croatia, 2015
  • The 80's – Sweet decadence of postmodernism, HDLU, Zagreb, Croatia, 2015
  • Željko Kipke: Prints, Gramophones and Tonsures, Croatian Academy of Sciences and Art -Glyptotheque, Zagreb, Croatia, 2015
  • Art Has No Alternative (An Archive of Artists in Action), tranzit.sk Gallery, Bratislava, Slovakia, 2015
  • Personal Cuts*, Carré d’Art-Musée d’art contemporain, Nîmes, France, 2014
  • Željko Kipke: Graphics '77, Grafički Kolektiv Gallery, Belgrade, Serbia, 2014
  • Conscious Hallucinations. Filmic Surrealism, Deutsches Filmmuseum Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany, 2014
  • Love Towards Subversion, Kazamat Gallery, Osijek, Croatia, 2014
  • Tabula Rasa: Self-Reflective, Primary and Analytical in Croatian Art, Museum of Contemporary Art of Istria, Pula, Croatia, 2014
  • Ivan Kožarić. Freedom Is a Rare Bird, Haus der Kunst, München, Germany, 2013
  • Tabula rasa: The Primary and Analytical in Croatian Art, Glyptotheque HAZU, Zagreb, Croatia, 2013
  • Antun Motika: Experiments, Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Pula, Croatia, 2013
  • Josip Vaništa: Abolition Of Retrospective, Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2013
  • Love Towards Subversion, dr. Vinko Perčić Gallery, Subotica, Serbia, 2013
  • The Freedom of Sound – John Cage behind the Iron Curtain, Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest, Hungary, 2012 – 2013
  • Željko Kipke – Police Back Yard, Art Pavilion in Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia, 2012
  • Željko Kipke: Police Back-Yard, Museum of Contemporary Art of Vojvodina, Novi Sad, Serbia, 2012
  • High times: Reflections of psychedelia in socialist Yugoslavia 1966–1976, Škuc Gallery, Ljubljana, Slovenia, 2011 – 2012
  • Socialism and Modernity, Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, 2012
  • Tune in Screening: Psychedelic Moving Images from Socialist Yugoslavia 1966.–1976., Land of Tomorrow, Lexington, USA, 2011
  • Volume Collection, Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Rijeka, Croatia, 2011
  • Spaceship Earth, Centre of Contemporary Art Znaki Czasu, Torun, Poland, 2011
  • Public matters!, Gallery of Contemporary Art, Celje, Slovenia, 2011
  • Tune in Screening: Psychedelic Moving Images from Socialist Yugoslavia 1966.–1976., Stephan Stoyanov Gallery, New York City, 2010
  • Slought in Transit, HDLU, Zagreb, Hrvatska, 2010
  • FROM ART TO LIFE. Hungarians at the Bauhaus, Janus Pannonius Museum, Pécs, Hungary, 2010
  • As soon as I open my eyes I see a film. Experiment in the art of Yugoslavia in the 60s and 70s, Museum of Modern Art, Warsaw, Poland, 2008
  • Vlado Martek: A Retrospective 1973 – 2007, Croatian Academy of Sciences and Art -Glyptotheque, Zagreb, Croatia, 2008
  • Avant-Garde Tendencies in Croatian Art, Klovićevi Dvori Gallery, Zagreb, Croatia, 2007
  • On unknown works, Gallery Nova, Zagreb, Croatia, 2006
  • Demur, Modern Gallery, Zagreb, Croatia, 2004
  • From Futurism to Fontana, Apedemak Gallery, Zagreb, Croatia, 2002

Collaborations on documentaries

  • The Other Line, documentary film, director and writer: Nenad Milošević
  • Artist on Vacation, documentary film, directors: Sandra Bastašić, Damian Nenadić
  • Gorgona, documentary film, director and editor Ana Marija Habjan

Publications

As part of its activities, the interconnected institutions of the Museum of Avant-Garde, Marinko Sudac Collection, and the Institute for the Research of the Avant-Garde publish various types of publications – artist monographies, exhibition catalogues etc.

The aim of these publishing projects is to present relevant artists, artist groups, artistic movements and developments of the former Yugoslavia region, as well as of Eastern and Central Europe. By presenting them through publications, the aim is to provide them with better international recognition and valorisations, so they could be placed in their rightful position in the global art scene.

Arstist monographs

  • Ješa Denegri, "Gorgona", ArtInova, Zagreb, ({{ISBN 9789535867517}}[3]
  • Ješa Denegri, Feđa Vukić, Hrvoje Turković – Aleksandar Srnec ( ISBN 9789539567819)[4]
  • Miško Šuvaković, "Bogdanka i Dejan Poznanović : umetnost, mediji i aktivizam na kraju moderne" ( ISBN 9789535670612)[5]
  • Želimir Koščević, Vladimir Gudac, "Budić : između geste i programa" ( ISBN 9789539567802)[6]

Exhibition catalogues

  • Transition and Transition ( ISBN 9789639537408)[7]
  • Circles of Interference ( ISBN 9789638701466)[8]
  • At Standstill ( ISBN 9789535670605)[9]
  • Rubne posebnosti : avangardna umjetnost u regiji : Muzej moderne i suvremene umjetnosti, Rijeka, 9. III.-15. IV. 2007. ( ISBN 9789536501519 )[10]
  • Avangardna umjetnost u regiji od 1915–1989 : kolekcija Marinko Sudac Galerijski Centar Varaždin (OCLC: 192137801)[11]
  • Rubne posebnosti : avangardna umetnost ex-Jugoslavije 1914–1989, katalog izložbe, Muzej savremene umjetnosti Vojvodine, Novi Sad[12]
  • Dobar izbor! Primjeri komercijalne komunikacije iz 50-ih i 60-ih : Kolekcija Marinko Sudac ( ISBN 978-953-579-000-6)[13]
  • Od futurizma do Fontane, 2002[14]

Expert publications

  • Ješa Denegri – "Prilozi za drugu liniju 3" ( ISBN 9789535867500)
  • Ješa Denegri – "Razlozi za drugu liniju : za novu umetnost sedamdesetih" ( ISBN 978-868-4773-30-4)[15]

Institute for the Research of the Avant-Garde

The Institute for the Research of the Avant-Garde was created in 2010 as part of the project which has as its goal to research, preserve, present and popularize regional historical Avant-Gardes. The Institute brings together the work of the Virtual Museum of Avant-Garde and the Marinko Sudac Collection. The Institute for the Research of the Avant-Garde's task is to create the work and development strategy of the Museum of Avant-Garde, make projects which promote Avant-Garde art and publish materials on the topic.

Artist on Vacation

Since 2012, the Artist on Vacation project has gathered, hosted and presented to the public a number of internationally prestigious artists who belong to the period of historical Avant-gardes, as well as artists who continue the practice of radical art and further develop its aesthetics. In the summer months, Poreč becomes a vacation spot for international artists. In collaboration with Valamar Riviera d.d., the Institute for the Research of Avant-Garde and Marinko Sudac Collection invite artists to spend a week at an exclusive hotel and vacation on the beautiful Istrian peninsula.

The project was created by Marinko Sudac as an extension of the activities of the Museum of Avant-Garde, the Institute for the Research of Avant-Garde and Marinko Sudac Collection. It complements the Collection's mission, and gives affirmation to the artists in the social, cultural and artistic contexts. The mission of the Artists on Vacation project is to show the various legacies of the original Avant-Garde movement that have developed in different countries and contexts.

The entire driving force behind our project is to present the participating artists to the Croatian public. The project is an effort to connect all the activities that aim to bring together the historical Avant-Gardes and present them to the public in a direct way, outside of an institutional environment. Artists get an opportunity to meet other artists, but also theorists, art historians, and museum professionals. This exchange of ideas and influences brings about personal and artistic developments and paves way to new collaborations and projects. Every year, there is an exclusive one day exhibition organized during the Project.

Each year, at the end of the Project, an exhibition of works created during the Artist on Vacation project, as well as a presentation of the participating artists is organized at the Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb. A catalogue of a year's project is produced. The catalogue contains all the information about the project, the participating artists, their stay at Poreč, their works etc.[16]

Every year, there is an exclusive one day exhibition organized during the Project.

  • 2017 – "Radomir Damnjanović Damnjan – Paintings, 2009 – 2012", Zuccato Gallery, Poreč; "Živko Grozdanić Gera – Allegories", Zuccato Gallery, Poreč
  • 2016 – "Jiří Valoch – The Power of the Powerless", Zuccato Gallery, Poreč
  • 2015 – "Gorgona", Villa Polesini, Poreč
  • 2014 – "Bucan Art" – Boris Bućan, Villa Polesini, Poreč
  • 2013 – "Transition" – Vaništa, Kulik, Blue Noses, Villa Polesini, Poreč
  • 2012 – "Ivan Kožarić", Novi Spa & Resort, Novi Vinodolski

Participants

In 2012: Attila Csernik (Serbia), Era Milivojević (Serbia), Radomir Damnjanović Damnjan (Italy), Ilija Šoškić (Italy), Ivan Kožarić (Croatia), János Sugár (Hungary), Vlado Martek (Croatia), Sándor Pinczehelyi (Hungary), Bálint Szombathy (Hungary), Romelo Pervolovici (Romania), Željko Kipke (Croatia).

In 2013: Željko Kipke (Croatia), Dan Perjovschi (Romania), Rudolf Sikora (Slovakia), Zdzisław Sosnowski (Poland), Blue Noses – Alexandr Shaburov and Vyacheslav Mizin (Russia), Oleg Kulik (Russia), Eric Andersen (Denmark), Marko Pogačnik (Slovenia), Živko Grozdanić (Serbia), Bálint Szombathy (Hungary), Ben Patterson (USA).

In 2014: Dragomir Ugren (Serbia), Gergelj Urkom (Serbia), Ulay (Germany), Era Milivojević (Serbia), Andraž Šalamun (Slovenia), David Nez (USA), Jiří Valoch (Czech Republic), Sven Stilinović (Croatia), Igor Grubić (Croatia).

In 2015: Verbumprogram (Serbia), Autopsia (Czech Republic), Teresa Tyszkiewicz (France), Ewa Partum (Poland), Przemysław Kwiek (Poland), Guia Rigvava (Austria), Jan Steklik (Czech Republic), Michail Grobman (Israel), Vadim Fiskin (Slovenia), Deimantas Narkevičius (Lithuania), Miloš Šejn (Czech Republic), Srečo Dragan (Slovenia), Milan Adamčiak (Slovakia).

In 2016: István Nádler (Hungary), Katalin Ladik (Hungary), Raša Todosijević (Serbia), Lev Nussberg (Russia), Philip Corner (USA), Rudolf Sikora (Slovakia), Slobodan Šijan (Serbia), Jarosław Kozłowski (Poland),Vladimir Gudac (Croatia)

In 2017: Ken Friedman (USA / Sweden), Miroslav Pavlović (Serbia), Zoran Todorović (Serbia), Andrien Sina (France), Nikola Džafo (Serbia), Tanja Ostojić (Serbia / Germany), Koji Kamoji (Japan / Poland), Józef Robakowski (Poland), Jusuf Hadžifejzović (Bosnia and Hercegovina), Boris Buden (Croatia)

Artist on Vacation Documentary

Documentary film "Artist on Vacation" follows the activities of 11 world-renowned artists who have gathered in a luxurious Adriatic resort for a one-month vacation. Documentary is a collage of recorded activities and accomplishments of artists in the given space, which is a vacation destination of mostly high classes of society. The artists which we are following are: Attila Csernik (Serbia), Radomir Damnjanović Damnjan (Serbia), Željko Kipke (Croatia), Ivan Kožarić (Croatia), Vlado Martek (Croatia), Era Milivojević (Serbia), Romelo Pervolovici (Romania), Pinczehely Sandor (Hungary), Balint Szombathy (Hungary), Janos Sugar (Hungary) and Ilija Šoškić (Montenegro).[17]

Directors: Sandra Bastašić, Damian Nenadić

Producers: Oliver Sertić, Vanja Jambrović

Co-producer and author of the concept: Marinko Sudac

Cinematographer: Damian Nenadić

Editor: Sandra Bastašić

Additional camera: Aleš Sudac

Production: Restart Laboratory and Marinko Sudac

in cooperation with: the Institute for researching the Avant-garde and Melange production

Duration: 30 min.

Shooting Format: HD

Interviews

  • Danas je promocija Gorgone, monografije o jednoj od najvažnijih umjetničkih grupa. Pričali smo s njenim urednikom, Telegram, 2018
  • Védőpajzsot akarok vonni az avantgárd köré – Beszélgetés Marinko Sudaccal, Artmagazin no. 96, 2017
  • Marinko Sudac: Hrvatska avangarda integralni je i neodvojivi dio svjetske kulturne baštine, ViV, 2017
  • A GYŰJTŐ ÁLMA. INTERJÚ MARINKO SUDAC HORVÁT MŰGYŰJTŐVEL, Ludwig Museum blog, 2017
  • Interview with Marinko Sudac, Easttopics, 2017
  • «Это проект размораживания утопии», Zerkalo, 2015
  • Historical carriers of vital DNA. Interview with Marinko Sudac, SZUM, 2015

References

  1. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  2. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  3. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  4. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  5. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  6. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  7. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  8. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  9. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  10. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  11. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  12. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  13. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  14. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  15. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  16. "Avantgarde Museum". avantgarde-museum.com. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  17. "RESTART – ARTIST ON VACATION". restarted.hr. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
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