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The Czech skill for irony and sarcasm appreciation society

 
 
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:06 pm
Slovakia was portrayed as a Hungarian sausage. Haaahaha! Good one! Lots of furious little proud Slovaks.

Czech EU art stokes controversy

slideshow: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/7827747.stm

A new art installation going on display at the European Council building in Brussels has angered EU members with its lampoons of national stereotypes.

Entropa portrays Bulgaria as a toilet, Romania as a Dracula theme-park and France as a country on strike.

The Czech Republic, which holds the EU presidency, thought it had commissioned work from 27 European artists.

But it turned out to have been entirely completed by Czech artist David Cerny and two associates.

The eight-tonne mosaic is held together by snap-out plastic parts similar to those used in modelling kits.

The Netherlands is shown as series of minarets submerged by a flood - a possible reference to the nation's simmering religious tensions.

Germany is shown as a network of motorways vaguely resembling a swastika, while the UK - criticised by some for being one of EU's most eurosceptic members - is absent from Europe altogether.

Raised eyebrows

The 16-square-metre (172-square-foot) work was installed at the weekend to mark the start of the six-month Czech presidency of the EU.

There has already been an angry reaction to the piece from Bulgaria, which has summoned the Czech ambassador to Sofia to explain.

The three artists responsible for Entropa were led by David Cerny who, says the BBC's Rob Cameron in Prague, is the enfant terrible of the Czech art world.

A close-up of the Entropa installation which shows Bulgaria as a basic toilet, Brussels, Belgium, 13 January 2009

When his government commissioned him to create the installation, several eyebrows were raised, and they were not raised in vain, our correspondent adds.

Czech Deputy Prime Minister Alexandr Vondra said he was only informed on Monday that the installation was not the work of 27 European artists, but David Cerny and two colleagues.

Mr Vondra condemned Mr Cerny and said the Czech EU presidency was considering what steps to take before Thursday's official launch.

"An agreement of the office of the government with the artist clearly stated that this will be a common work of artists from 27 EU states," he said.

"The full responsibility for violating this assignment and this promise lies with David Cerny."

Mr Cerny, who presented Entropa to his government with a brochure describing each of the artwork's 27 supposed contributors from each member state, has apologised for misleading ministers, but not for the installation itself.

"We knew the truth would come out," said Mr Cerny. "But before that we wanted to find out if Europe is able to laugh at itself."

He added that Entropa "lampoons the socially activist art that balances on the verge between would-be controversial attacks on national character and undisturbing decoration of an official space".

Mr Cerny first created a splash in the early 1990s when he painted a Soviet tank, a Second World War memorial in a Prague square, bright pink.


The full dossier of art pieces used with brief explanations:
http://www.eu2009.cz/scripts/file.php?id=8282&down=yes
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Type: Discussion • Score: 8 • Views: 4,287 • Replies: 29
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CalamityJane
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:16 pm
Interesting! I would have portrayed the individual countries differently,
but it's all in the interpretation - plus, the Czech Republic isn't in the EU for
very long yet, they don't know of the characteristics of its EU members yet. Very Happy
dagmaraka
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:19 pm
@CalamityJane,
well, it's based on popular stereotypes...not really what would the countries choose to have represented (if they had a choice that is). i had a few good laughs. also about the netherlands, and poland. good stuff.
0 Replies
 
Green Witch
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:20 pm
I think I would portray the USA as a penis on Viagra.
dagmaraka
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:22 pm
@Green Witch,
or a group of fat people making a lot of noise. there HAS to be noise.
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:23 pm
that's pretty cool
0 Replies
 
CalamityJane
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:25 pm
I now dagmar, but popular stereotypes of Poland, Italy and Netherlands are
actually different. I would portray Germany with a cleaning rag and a can of
windex. Laughing

Good one, Green Witch - I probably would add a giant garbage pile to the US
as it is known everywhere as the "throw-away-society".
dagmaraka
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:28 pm
@CalamityJane,
really? those three actually hit it right home for me. Netherlands is perfect - both the dykes and the immigrant issue are huge and hugely mishandled. Italy and soccer -- inseparable. Poles and Catholicism-likewise. It's the most conservative country of Europe. I found it quite good, actually.
dagmaraka
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:53 pm
@dagmaraka,
alright. who tagged this thread? raise your hand! :-)
jespah
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:55 pm
@dagmaraka,
Heh heh heh
dagmaraka
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:56 pm
@jespah,
i think bounced czechs are my favorite.
0 Replies
 
dagmaraka
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 06:57 pm
Meanwhile Vaclav Havel is very ill Crying or Very sad
Breathing with the aid of a respirator, severe lung infection. Hope he pulls through.
patiodog
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 07:02 pm
@dagmaraka,
How very dramatic of him.
0 Replies
 
littlek
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 07:03 pm
@dagmaraka,
cashing in.

I downloaded the file when you gave me the link on FB. I will view it when I am more cognitively able.
0 Replies
 
patiodog
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 07:04 pm
It must be significant that every Bulgarian's toilet empties into another Bulgarian's toilet...
dagmaraka
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 07:09 pm
@patiodog,
the thing is that that toilet is called "Turkish toilet".... Bulgaria has a large Turkish minority and lots of anti-Turkish sentiment.

Havel is not on respirator, just using an oxygen mask - big difference and phew.
CalamityJane
 
  2  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 07:55 pm
@dagmaraka,
dagmaraka wrote:

alright. who tagged this thread? raise your hand! :-)


Haha, I seldom read tag lines, but these are hilarious Laughing
0 Replies
 
patiodog
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 09:37 pm
@dagmaraka,
Turkish toilet? Reminds me of rural central Spain...
CalamityJane
 
  1  
Reply Wed 14 Jan, 2009 11:04 pm
@patiodog,
Well they're better than some others. In parts of Asia you've got a hose in
every stall and that's it!
0 Replies
 
CalamityJane
 
  1  
Reply Sat 17 Jan, 2009 01:41 pm
Well, Brussels is not amused over the Czech sculpture

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,601209,00.html
0 Replies
 
 

 
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