Category: Projects

  • Interpretation Diefenbunker

    Interpretation Diefenbunker

    An Exhibition of Canadian-Hungarian Artists

    Directed by Anne Kmetyko

    The exhibition “Interpretation Diefenbunker” by the Collective of Canadian-Hungarian- Artists took place at the Diefenbunker Cold War Museum in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada from May 8th to the 28th, 2022. This is the promotional video for an overview of its scope and a presentation of the works of the participating artists.

    Diefenbunker Museum

    Diefenbunker Museum, a National Historic Site
    Canada’s Cold War Museum
    3929 Carp Road
    Carp, Ontario, Canada K0A 1L0

    Info: 613‑839‑0007 or 1‑800‑409‑1965

    diefenbunker.ca

    Wednesday to Friday/ mercredi à vendredi
    10 h – 16 h

    Saturday and Sunday/ samedi et dimanche

    10 h – 15 h

    About the exhibition

    Coordinator: Andrea Blanar
    Curator: Alex Brzezinski
    Curatorial assistants: Julianna Joos, Judith Klugerman and Brigitta Kocsis

    The Diefenbunker facility, Canada’s Cold War Museum is a national historic site that was built (1959-1961) to shelter Canadian government officials in the event of a nuclear attack.

    Members of the Canadian- Hungarian Artists’ Collective were asked to submit works drawing on the themes of collective memory, immigration and communal victimhood. The works in this exhibition interpret these themes through personal history, family narrative or in some cases through a reaction to the nature of the facility.

    Several artists had personally experienced the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. The black and white photographs of Gabor Szilasi and Gabor Boros reflect the bleakness of this period in their portraits of people in the streets of Budapest. Sophie Fekete-Fehér’s paintings speak of a confrontation between superpowers during the cold war. Just as one would dig through the rubble of a war-torn site, Andrea Blanar salvages fragments from some previous past to create her shrines. A number of artists touch on fear and the need to seek refuge. This common human condition is explored in the works of Eva Ferenczy-Reichmann, Julianna Joos and Sandor Sipos. Vivian Törs’ and Judith Klugerman’s art reflects in different ways the responsibility of remembering the past and the deceased who was a part of it. For artist Tom Kapas remembering goes deeper in recalling the damage caused by the past to relationships. Dealing with ethnic and national identity are common themes in the works of Agi Zoni and Mary Keczan-Ebos.

    Every artist whose work is in the Vault, Corridor or the Allard Room of the Diefenbunker has been stirred in some way by this facility to remember some association they or their families had to the cold war period.

    As we listen to the news these days, it seems as if history has gone full circle. The cold war no longer seems to be so in the distant past. Terms such as national identity, displacement, immigration and the fear of violence and the threat of nuclear war have once again become part of our vocabulary. A facility like the Diefenbunker has once again acquired relevance.

    Artists

    Curator: Alex Brzezinski – QC
    Curatorial Committee: Andrea Blanar, Julianna Joos, Judith Klugerman, Brigitta Kocsis

    Susan Bardos-Dobbek
    Andrew Benyei
    Andrea Blanar
    Gabor Boros
    Alex Brzezinski
    Joseph  Bunkoczy
    Sofie Fekete-Feher
    Eva Ferenczy-Reichmann
    Tibor Hargitai
    Geza Hermann
    Maria Jankovics
    Julianna Joos
    Suzanne Joos
    Tom Kapas

    Mary Keczan-Ebos
    Attila J.Keszei
    Judith Klugerman
    Brigitta Kocsis
    Margareta Mina
    Emma Pallay
    Sandor Sipos
    Sheila Szabo Butler
    Andrea Szilasi
    Gabor Szilasi
    Erika Takacs
    Vivian Tors
    Agi Zoni
    David Zsako

    The Opening on May 7, 2022

    Artworks

    Fundraising for Diefenbunker Project

    OUR GRATITUDE & ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

    CHAC would like to express our deepest gratitude to the Hungarian Embassy in Ottawa for their Patronage of this Exhibition.

    We also express our sincerest thanks to Her Excellency Mária Vass-Salazar, Ambassador of Hungary for her support of the cultural endeavours of the  Canadian-Hungarian Artists’ Collective.

    CHAC wishes to thank our Fundraising collaborators Magor Foundation, and the generosity of the many supporters of the Diefenbunker Project.

    DISTINGUISHED BENEFACTORS

    The Hungarian Embassy in Ottawa

    George Lengvari, Montreal, QC
    Maria S. Roy, Westmount, QC
    Peter Tekker, Ancaster, ON

    BENEFACTORS
    Magor Foundation, Montreal, QC
    Aniko Gaal Schott, Washington, DC

    DONORS
    Nicole Doucet, Baie d’Urfé, QC
    Hungaria Social Klub, Montreal, QC
    Christine Lengvari, Montreal, QC
    Ronald & Carmella Vincelli Family Foundation, Westmount, QC

    SPONSORS

    Gyula Detre, Montreal, QC
    Dr Gordon Balazsi, Mount-Royal, QC
    Leslie Jonas, Lac Brome, QC
    Sophie Madon, Montreal, QC
    Nadine & Leslie McLean, Burlington, ON
    Erzsebet Schneider, Montreal, QC
    Judy Young, Ottawa, ON

    FRIENDS

    Beatrix Argeropoulos, Toronto, ON
    Robert and Lynn Cairns, Montreal West, QC
    Ava Couch, Beaconsield, QC
    Elizabeth Gorzo, Montreal, QC
    Andrea de Gosztonyi, Montreal, QC
    Teresa Fekete, Laval, QC
    Gabor Glasz, Montreal, QC
    Karl Heuser, Montreal, QC
    Richard Lecoq & Ilona Horvath, Ottawa, ON
    Zoltan Palko, Kirkland, QC
    Alex Sebe, Montreal, QC
    Kathryn Stephenson, Westmount, QC
    Attila Szell, Boucherville, QC
    Jacynthe Tremblay, Beaconsfield, QC
    Karola Waterhouse, Montreal, QC
    Patrick Zimanyi, Montreal West, QC

    And many thanks to all of our anonymous donors!

  • Re:InSitu – Canada150

    Re:InSitu – Canada150

    Location: NCC International Pavilion, Ottawa, Onatrio

    Coordinator: Andrea Blanar

    Curator: Alex Brzezinski 

    Catalog: Alex Brzezinski 

    Une exposition d’artistes canadiens-hongrois

    Re:InSitu – Canada150 met en valeur les œuvres d’une quarantaine d’artistes canadiens d’origine hongroise. Ce projet d’exposition variable à facettes multiples,  a fait le tour de musées en Hongrie et au Canada.  Maintenant RACH se regroupe avec des artistes de HuVAC pour célébrer Canada 150 à Ottawa. 

    Catalogue (PDF – 7.6 MB)

      Invitation (PDF 2.5 MB)

    Vernissage: le dimanche le 1 octobre 2017, de 14 à 17 heures

    au Pavillon International, Commission de la Capitale Nationale

    7, Rue Clarence, Ottawa

    L’exposition se poursuivra jusqu’au 28 octobre, 2017

    NCC Pavillon International

    Heures d’ouverture :

    De 10 h à 18 h, du mardi au dimanche, De 10 h à 20 h, le jeudi

    Une collaboration de

    RACH: Regroupement des artistes Canadiens-Hongrois et 

    HuVac : Hungarian Visual Artists of Canada

    Les Artistes

    Susan Bárdos-Dobbek
    Éva Bell
    Andrew Benyei
    Anna Biró
    Andrea Blanar
    Gábor Boros
    Alex Brzezinski
    Joseph Bunkoczy
    Péter Cserháti
    Sofie Fekete-Fehér
    Éva Ferenczy-Reichmann

    Tibor Hargitai
    Géza Hermann
    Margit Hideg
    Nándor Horthy
    Mária Jankovics
    Ilona Jeszenszky
    Julianna Joós
    Suzanne Joós
    Mary Keczán-Ebos
    Ági Kéri-Szeben
    Attila J. Keszei

    Judith Klugerman
    Géza Kokai
    Balazs Kralovansky
    Robert Lantos
    Doreen Lindsay-Szilasi
    Elizabeth Merei
    George Mihalka
    Andrea Pottyondy
    Péter Pusztai
    Mária Sárkány
    Clarissa Schmidt-Inglis

    Gábor Schultz
    Kati Siklos
    Sheila Szabo Butler
    Tibor Szakaczki
    Andrea Szilasi
    Gábor Szilasi
    Erika Takacs
    Éva Turkewitsch
    George Ungár
    Tamás Wormser
    Ági Zóni

    Exposition spéciale à l’ambassade de Hongrie à Ottawa

    Façonner la Hongrie – le Design au 21e siècle

    30 septembre – 28 octobre

    299, rue Waverley , Ottawa , Ontario

    Ambassade de Hongrie à Ottawa

    An Exhibition of Canadian-Hungarian Artists

    Re:InSitu:Canada150 is an unprecedented multimedia project that showcases the work of over 40 Canadian-Hungarian artists. Having successfully toured Museums in Hungary it has since then been featured in public and private galleries across Canada. As we celebrate Canada 150 in Ottawa, CHAC is pleased to include a selection of HuVAC artists.

      Catalog (PDF – 7.6 MB)

      Invitation (PDF 2.5 MB) 

    Opening: Sunday October 1, 2017 | 2 to 5 pm

    National Capital Commissions’ International Pavilion

    7 Clarence Street, Ottawa

    Exhibition continues to October 28, 2017

    NCC International Pavilion

    Opening Hours: From Tuesday to Sunday, 10 am to 6 pm, Thursdays 10 am to 8 pm

    A collaboration between

    CHAC: Canadian-Hungarian Artists Collective and

    HuVac : Hungarian Visual Artists of Canada

    Participating Artists

    Susan Bárdos-Dobbek
    Éva Bell
    Andrew Benyei
    Anna Biró
    Andrea Blanar
    Gábor Boros
    Alex Brzezinski
    Joseph Bunkoczy
    Péter Cserháti
    Sofie Fekete-Fehér
    Éva Ferenczy-Reichmann

    Tibor Hargitai
    Géza Hermann
    Margit Hideg
    Nándor Horthy
    Mária Jankovics
    Ilona Jeszenszky
    Julianna Joós
    Suzanne Joós
    Mary Keczán-Ebos
    Ági Kéri-Szeben
    Attila J. Keszei

    Judith Klugerman
    Géza Kokai
    Balazs Kralovansky
    Robert Lantos
    Doreen Lindsay-Szilasi
    Elizabeth Merei
    George Mihalka
    Andrea Pottyondy
    Péter Pusztai
    Mária Sárkány
    Clarissa Schmidt-Inglis

    Gábor Schultz
    Kati Siklos
    Sheila Szabo Butler
    Tibor Szakaczki
    Andrea Szilasi
    Gábor Szilasi
    Erika Takacs
    Éva Turkewitsch
    George Ungár
    Tamás Wormser
    Ági Zóni

    Special exhibition at Embassy of Hungary Ottawa

    Shaping Hungary: Design in the 21st Century

    September 30-October 28

    299 Waverley Street, Ottawa, Ontario

    Embassy of Hungary Ottawa