On January 11, 2007, a conference will be organized in the former House of People in Bucharest - more precisely,
in Romania's national museum of contemporay art: mnac. The title of the conference is
Regimes of Representation: Art and Politics
Beyond the House of People.
The subject of the conference is the very location where the event is being held. The
Palatul
Parlamentului and its current co-function as a museum, will be the point of departure for a discussion of the relation
between post-communist politics, imagination and representation. mnac is one of various attempts to use contemporary art
to transform a former 'totalitarian' symbol into one for democracy, but it is unique in simultaneously being the seat of
government.
The central question for the conference is:
Can art take over the location of power,
being 'a symbol of openness and democracy?'
Can, consequently,
imagination influence or take over the meaning of a building that is an essential
logo of totalitarian rule?'
How does Romania's first national contemporary art institution employ the symbolic to express a constructed
national identity, by using (totalitarian) foundation?
Can we speak of a reverse 'Bilbao Effect?' And
how does the institutionalization
of contemporary art reflect the imperative to democratize since the fall of communism?
With Chantal Mouffe, Nicolas Bourriaud, Jonathan
Lahey Dronsfield, Marcus Steinweg, 4space, Ruxandra Balaciand Meta Haven.