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Art and Heritage in Central Europe
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Call for Papers: “Magical Realism and Surrealism in Central and Eastern European Graphic Art between 1945 and 1990” (Szolnok, Hungary, 4-5 December 2025)

Art and Heritage in Central Europe

 

During the decades of the socialist era (1945-1990), graphic art flourished in Central and Eastern European countries that were under Soviet influence. The conference gives an occasion to present the outcomes of the research project, funded by the Hungarian Scientific Research Fund, which examines the oeuvre of three Hungarian graphic artists, Margit Ágotha (1938-2015), Mihály Gácsi (1926-1987) and Csaba Rékassy (1937-1989) and outlines their broader historical context. These artists, active primarily between 1960 and 1980 within the socialist art scene, worked extensively with graphic techniques. Rékassy was an exceptional master of engraving, while Margit Ágotha and Mihály Gácsi were experts in relief printing. All three of them were frequently engaged with biblical and mythological themes, often reinterpreting them in contemporary contexts. Rékassy was particularly drawn to ancient mythology, illustrating Ovid’s “Metamorphosis”, while also interested in space exploration and astronomy; Margit Ágotha created cosmological compositions in the manner of medieval popular engravings, and Gácsi reimagined biblical stories, often alluding to Cold War anxieties in his dystopian visions of the future. Members of our research team will present comparative studies of these artists at the conference.

The conference welcomes papers that contextualise these parallel artistic tendencies within the wider framework of Central and Eastern European graphic art. It is important to give a definite outline of those tendencies of the region that are closely related to surrealism and magic realism. Although these archaic, narrative or metaphorical representations have often been described in art history as apolitical, their esoteric or escapist vision and their frequently self-ironic or grotesque qualities can be interpreted as subtle critiques of their time.

Conference format: hybrid (in person or online).

Conference languages: Hungarian, English

Location: Szolnok, Damjanich János Museum, Hungary

Date: 4-5 December 2025.

Abstracts (max. 2,000 characters) for 20-minute presentations in Hungarian or English should be submitted to Nándor Szebenyi szebenyi@djm.hu by 30 April 2025. Notifications of acceptance will be announced by 31 May 2025.

Accommodation in Szolnok will be provided for conference speakers.

The organisers welcome both in person and online participations, please indicate your preference in the application.

Selected proceedings from the conference will be published in a digital format in 2026.

More information: https://djm.hu/hirek/2025/02/25/call_for_papers_magical_realism_and_surrealism_in_central_and_eastern_european_graphic_art_between_1945_and_1990

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