• NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

    Photo: Dejan Habicht

  • NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition

RECURRING PROGRAM

 

NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition - Recurring Events
On Tuesdays at 4 p.m. and Thursdays at 6 p.m.
Victory under the Sun, 1988, documentary film directed by Goran Gajić
Film projection
auditorium MG+

 

NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition - Recurring Events
On Thursdays at 7 p.m.
Predictions of Fire, 1996, film directed by Michael Benson
Film projection
auditorium MG+

Screenings of NSK videos and films until 1992
Every day between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m., auditorium MG+

Screenings of NSK films after 1992
In July and August see the Museum of Contemporary Art Metelkova (+MSUM)

 

Weekly tours of the exhibition

June 23 at 5PM, Domen Ograjenšek and Tjaša Pogačar Podgornik IN SLOVENE

June 30 at 5PM, Domen Ograjenšek and Tjaša Pogačar Podgornik IN SLOVENE

July 7 at 5PM, Domen Ograjenšek and Tjaša Pogačar Podgornik IN SLOVENE

July 14 at 5PM, Domen Ograjenšek and Tjaša Pogačar Podgornik IN SLOVENE

July 21 at 5PM, Hana Čeferin IN SLOVENE AND / OR ENGLISH

July 28 at 5PM, Miha Valant IN SLOVENE

August 4 at 5PM, Hana Čeferin IN SLOVENE AND / OR ENGLISH

August 11 at 5PM, Hana Čeferin IN SLOVENE AND / OR ENGLISH

 

Tour of the exhibition in dialogue with 20th Century. Continuities and Ruptures (MG+):

July 29 at 5PM, Tjaša Kocjan

Tour of the exhibition Presence and Present (+MSUM) in dialogue with the exhibition NSK From kapital to Capital

August 12 at 5 p.m., guided by Tjaša Pogačar Podgornik and Adela Železnik (can be also partly in English)

SCHOOLS, FAMILIES, CHILDREN

Educational programmes for schools
“The foundation and support for the national spirit must be discovered within the youth” (Laibach)
More at: www.mg-lj.si/izobraževanje, contact: izobrazevanje@mg-lj.si 

Programme for families and children
“Action in the Name of Idea” (Laibach)
More at: www.mg-lj.si/izobraževanje, contact: izobrazevanje@mg-lj.si

 

Exhibition

NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition - Schools, families, children

A group portrait of NSK members in front of a model of Tatlin’s Tower from the Scipion Nasice Sisters Theatre production Baptism under Triglav, 1986. Photo by Marko Modic

The exhibition NSK from Kapital to Capital covers a period that marked the final decade of Yugoslavia, highlighting the fact that NSK was no less a critic of the coming global capitalism than of the failing outgoing socialism. In the latter respect it differed both notably and fundamentally from the liberal critique of socialism. Rather than employing the standard forms of artistic critique or irony, NSK based its approach on subversive affirmation and over-identification, articulating, among other things, the kind of society the groups envisioned after the collapse of socialism. Founding the NSK State in Time in 1992, they opted for a global community based not on territorial or economic principles but on aesthetics and thought.

In 1990, the Cosmokinetic Cabinet Noordung (the successor of the Scipion Nasice Sisters Theatre and Cosmokinetic Theatre Rdeči pilot) staged a production entitled Kapital; in 1991, IRWIN published a book and staged an exhibition entitled Kapital; and in 1992, Laibach released an album entitled Kapital. With these projects the three core NSK groups marked the end of ideology and the beginning of total capitalism, which many continue to see as a social system without an alternative. Not so NSK: it has already established itself as an alternative institution and an alternative state, in both the concrete and abstract senses of the word.

In the 1980s, NSK built its subjectivity through the deconstruction of various traumatic absences in Yugoslavia: the absence of the emancipatory potential of struggle for liberation, the absence of workers’ rights, the absence of an original national culture, and the absence of a developed art system and a strong state. In order to find a substitute for this considerable body of absences it devised, within the framework of its aesthetic concept, a unique principle of construction that is at the same time a principle of deconstruction. NSK generally needs to be understood in terms of its complexity and ambivalence; no NSK work is merely an artefact, a painting, a theatre production, a concert, a publicity action, a provocation – as often as not it is all of these and more all at once. The various media and approaches employed combine to form a Gesamtkunstwerk, a total work of art that transcends the boundaries of the usual understanding of art.

The exhibiting of NSK from Kapital to Capital is designed to trace both the many separate events that developed and the duration of the various concepts at work. Much like the 1980s marked a pivotal decade in politics, with a string of related events leading up to the bloodshed of the war in Yugoslavia in the 1990s, each NSK concert, exhibition, theatre performance or other public appearance triggered processes that have not yet run their course to this day. Employing the philosophical language of Alain Badiou, we could say that the NSK Gesamtkunstwerk was an event that ruptured with the established order of things. Every NSK event was a monolith with multiple meanings, new projects, and references stemming out of it. NSK was not a chronicler of the era; by the same token, however, it cannot be fully comprehended without an understanding of the socio-political context of the 1980s. All too often the work of NSK is associated exclusively with the context of the failing Yugoslavia and socialism, with a general disregard for its artistic reflection, its reflection on broader global processes, and the artists’ fundamental goal: to construct a new artistic constellation that would allow them to enter international dialogues in their own right.

NSK - From Kapital to Capital | Neue Slowenische Kunst Exhibition - Schools, families, children

Photos by Dejan Habicht

The art of NSK could be compared to such international trends as appropriation art, institutional critique, and relational art, though these descriptions fail to encompass a crucial difference, one that NSK safeguarded by coining its own terms for what it did. NSK countered the postmodern art of the 1980s with its retro method, laying bare the ideological manipulation with images: Laibach with the retro-avant-garde, the Scipion Nasice Sisters Theatre with the retrogarde, and IRWIN with the retro principle. NSK differed from Western appropriation art in that it appropriated, with its events, the state itself and state institutions; it differed from the familiar paradigms of institutional critique in that it arrived at the conclusion that there was actually nothing to criticize, since both the state and the institutions first needed to be constructed; and it differed from usual relational art in that the NSK events of the early 1990s already involved the participation of others who wanted to see radical changes in the art system and who shared the same sense and set of urgencies regarding the Eastern European cultural space in the new circumstances.

The NSK principle is embodied, from the very outset, in the collective’s German name, meaning New Slovenian Art and alluding to both “Junge slovenische Kunst”, the title of a special issue of the German avant-garde journal Der Sturm from 1929 featuring young Slovenian art, as well as to the trauma that grew out of more than one thousand years of German political and cultural hegemony over the small Slovenian nation. “New national art” presented itself both as international, i.e., capable of entering the international art arena, and as the cultural product of a small nation that can only thrive once it recognizes its inherent eclecticism based on and in relation to Eastern and Western cultural influences.

What can we take away, what lesson might be gleaned from NSK that could be of use to us today? At first glance, the NSK fusion of mutually exclusive symbols appears to have become an essential part of contemporary imagery. On the one hand, we are witnesses to a process of complete symbolic depletion, and on the other, to the reactivation of symbols.

Today, this game of symbols is becoming uncomfortably similar to that of the dubious 1980s, making the NSK tradition more topical than ever.

Zdenka Badovinac

Neue Slowenische Kunst

Conference

19–21 June, auditorium MG+

Concept: Zdenka Badovinac and Eda Čufer

Friday, 19 June at 6 p.m.: Boris Groys, key lecture

Conference participants: Zdenka Badovinac, Barbara Borčić, Eda Čufer, Mladen Dolar, Charles Esche, Anthony Gardner, Marina Gržinić, Lev Kreft, Dejan Kršić, Tomaž Mastnak, Rastko Močnik, Alexei Monroe, Daniel Ricardo Quiles, Igor Vidmar, Alexei Yurchak

The conference NSK from Kapital to Capital – Neue Slowenische Kunst, an Event of the Final Decade of Yugoslavia will try to shed light on the legacy and present-day significance of the NSK collective through a series of talks and panel discussions, organised around the following topics: From Kapital to Capital, NSK and the Legacy of Historical Avant-gardes, What Was the Alternative – the Relationship between NSK and the Alternative Culture of the 1980s, Art History and Institutional Critique in the Light of Geopolitical Relations, Capitalism and the State.