During the 90s a number of individual and community initiatives within the "culture sector" and/or within the industrial sector emerged. Many had rather short life spans, especially if trying to reconnect to or recycle the older “alternative” or “counterculture” models and visions of parallel communities of the 1960s and 70s. In a way such a limited cycle could be a positive and enriching experience.
Flashbacks are noisy, dangerous, painful intrusions from the past that arise from the tension between the desire to forget and the necessity of remembering.... The linearity of perception of time, which naturally erodes memory, is interrupted by the traumatic event, disturbing the integration of the past into a narrative, its assimilation into memory systems. Out of this conflict, of the body’s re-ordering of time, the past returns repeatedly and intrusively through flashbacks in the form of auditory, visual and sensory hallucinations or dreams, sometimes precise, intensely clear and lifelike accompanied by a full spectrum of sensory and emotional associations, at other times fragmented and cloudy.
Cathy Caruth: Unclaimed Experience: Trauma and the Possibility of History
The key point is that all systems (from the very largest, the universe as a whole, to the very smallest nano-systems), have three moments: their coming into existence, their “normal” life during which they are constructed and constrained by the institutions they have created, and the moment in which their secular trends move too far from equilibrium and bifurcate.
Immanuel Wallerstein
I presume it would be legitimate to locate those almost “historical” cultural and / or art initiatives in the proximity of the ongoing - both academic and non-academic - discussions / confrontations, which are evolving around such buzzwords as "a collective national identities", or “politics of memory” are. Because: who is allowed to speak about the past in an authoritative manner? Why do he / she assume the respective interpretive positions? What the mnemonic claims actually entail? Let's try to observe and to approach those narratives from a perspective of Cultural Wars - today perpetual cultural clashes, which are deeply intermingled with social, political, cultural or ideological turbulence and tensions of our societies.
At least in the last 10 years we could notice those tensions in the public sphere of the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland or Hungary. In our geopolitical context it was for example the fierce media discussions, resonating in the huge part of the Czech population: what was our “totalitarian” past during the “normalization years”? Why are we witnessing such turmoil of “anti-system” protests during the demonstrations on the street and in the parliament? And - on a smaller scale – how should we interpret the “transition years”, “comeback” or “revival” of a Democracy after the Velvet Revolution? In Poland are the conflicts and discussions evolving around similar topics, only tempered by dominant position of the neo-nationalists in the government or the power of the Catholic church, and same rhetorics are present in Hungary, to a certain extent probably as well in Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia, Romania and Bulgaria.
Such controversies are sometimes violent, sometimes milder confrontations of the opinions or ideologies, fostered by lack of a common sense and by general insecurity concerning the way how to "get over" our common recent “small” histories? In fact are we not here rather addressing our future than the past? Such waves of flashbacks haunt us with “burning” questions like: who I am, who are we? What is my real identity? How integral my ethical intransigence was as an individual and as a part of a class or community of nation? The flashbacks can disturb us and bring our bad feelings, wake our suppressed, rejected memories, the deeds we prefer to forget. Flashbacks can influence our mode of perception; Flashbacks can induce an altered, trance-like mindsets, and dissolve our sense of reality. If we don't know how to cope with them, they would infest our volition. They get suspended and we become vulnerable and easily exposed for emotional chantage from extreme political opinions.
The main goal and time-span of the Olomouc gathering was to reflect several topics of marginal histories, culture and durability in the framework of artists' usual private archives which survived from the period between 1989 and 2000. The exhibition Hermit Flashback became a model of a small-scale assemblage of historical documents, derived from a particular initiative, which almost disappeared already 25 years ago. Nevertheless in memory and in documentation its aura survived even if it was by "chance”.
The state of vulnerability / fragility / temporariness is not necessarily endemic for the situation of a “transformation period” of the 90s and for the situation of former East Block countries. Let's presume it is symptomatic of the times of shifting from the ancient regime to the new regime. I argue that Hermit was interwoven with a heterogenous asynchrony textures of alike (both ancient and postmodern) narratives, thoughts and ideas, reaching beyond limitations and restrictions of individual or singular “strivings' ', or “achievements'.
For the gathering at the end of the exhibition we invited those who we believed could contribute towards the bedrock of the present situation in art and culture in Central Europe. We were discussing their personal experiences and opinions with Gertrude Moser Wagner, Martin Zet, Tomáš Ruller, Michal Murin, Michael Delia, Alexander Roberto Moust and David Miller who are on the list of about 400 who actively participated in the Hermit events in the 1990s. Marina GRŽINIĆ, Jovita PRISTOVŠEK, Miklós PETERNÁK did draw a larger contours of a particular situation for both today and then in Hungary, Slovakia, or Slovenia. Petr Bergmann talked about his dream to build an “alternative” art community in Prague and about what he tried in a remote area of East North Bohemia, operating at more or less the same time when Hermit was ending. Ivan Mečl is an example of a "grassroot" cultural / artist / activist, a stubborn and independent publisher, who succeeded to adjust to the changing times of the Czech society for 30 years.
It would be dull to discuss the place and role of art in the post-socialist societies in 1989–2000 and not reflect the present situation of Europe in 2024. How has the CE landscape and its geopolitical setting in the course of the last 30 years transformed? Does something remain similar as it was in the times of the Iron Curtain? Are we not just now walking on the path of new curtains, erected from ruins and toxic remnants of the failures in communication and ignorance about history? If we compare the current situation of the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Poland or even Austria, it seems that those “cosmopolitan” liberals who in the 1990s managed to win over communists, over national conservatives and populists, are slowly retreating and those who seem to be defeated are coming back to take revenge. Often they became the alliance of a global, anti-liberal turn, of the retro-avant-garde rising populistic, neo-nationalistic, neo- fascist or neo-liberal conservatism we are witnessing all over!
Victor Orbán famously stated back in 2017: ‘In 1989 we saw our future in Europe. Now we are the future of Europe.’ And It sounds almost like the words of a clairvoyant prophet.
The current wave of neo-nationalistic / ultra-conservative resentiments in Central Europe seem not to be just a product of the traumatic memory, or endogenous dynamics of "post-communist" societies, or the clash between the "totalitarian" (adolescent) past and "democratic"(adult) futures. It seems rather as an integral part and inherited parcel of the pan-European identity, maybe our anxiety from globalisation and same time from the anti-globalist movements. It looks like a battle for our common identity as a human race. When the machine of market economy and the tools of liberal democracy in Central Europe during the 90s were established, the fragile balance between the "cosmopolitan-liberal" and "nationalistic-conservative" camps lost its raison d’être. Can we find again the hidden gate to the “promised land”? Can we replace the xeno-utopia of the Global West with a "horizontal" East-West-South-North Union?
Miloš Vojtěchovský
November 2024