Self-Determination: A Global Perspective is the culmination of a three-year research project focusing on the new nation-states that emerged in the wake of the First World War, exploring the role of art and artists in relation to the expression of national identities, nation-building, and statecraft.
This Autumn, IMMA presents a major museum wide exhibition, Self-Determination: A Global Perspective. The culmination of a three-year research project, this exhibition focuses on the new nation-states that emerged in the wake of the First World War, exploring the role of art and artists in relation to the expression of national identities, nation-building, and statecraft.
This exhibition brings together a range of Irish and international works, both modern and contemporary, that illuminate the shared experiences of the new states. In 1919, Arthur Griffith, writing from Gloucester Prison, urged his colleagues to ‘mobilise the poets’ to help make Ireland’s case for independence on the international stage. Griffith’s letter acknowledges the role of art and culture in developing international solidarities and justifying Ireland’s right, among other small nations, to ‘self-determine’. It also highlights the new possibilities for artists in the early twentieth century, an era of collapsing empires and seismic geopolitical shifts, to articulate and enact radical modern and democratic principles.
This exhibition explores some of the common cultural strategies that emerged across many of the new nation-states including Finland (1917), Estonia (1918), Poland (1918), Turkey (1923), and Egypt (1922), against the backdrop of the international movement towards self-determination, most famously articulated by Woodrow Wilson at the Paris Peace Talks in 1919. How did diverse countries understand the formation of the new state? How did their artists and poets imagine it? How was this situated within an international context? And how do contemporary artists today reckon with the legacies of this period?
Each of the new states produced its own cultural complexities, with its own traditions, histories, and industries to be reimagined in line with the new imperatives of modernity. Self-Determination: A Global Perspective explores common strategies and methodologies developed by artists, cultural practitioners, and others invested in the formation of a new state in the first half of the twentieth century.
For this major international exhibition, IMMA will work in dialogue with a range of partnering museums and institutions worldwide, drawing on the expertise and specialist knowledge of a network of advisors and borrowing key works from national and international collections.
Self-Determination: A Global Perspective is supported by the Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media under the Decade of Centenaries Programme 2012–2023.
Featured Modern Artists: Alvar and Eino Aalto, Ilmari Aalto, Arnold Akberg, Seref Akdik, James Archer, Ljubo Babić, Vladimir Becić, Aleksandra Beļcova, Berezil Group, Nurullah Berk, Zoia Bielkina, Jovan Bijelić, Onufriy Biziukov, Blok Group, İbrahim Çallı, Vasyl Chalienko, Abram Cherkasky, Margaret Clarke, Marcus Collin, William Conor, Lozje Dolinar, Ģederts Eliass, Refik Epikman, Bedri Rahmi Eyüboğlu, Annti Favén, Eileen Gray, Kyrylo Gvozdyk, Pekka Halonen, Henri Hayden, Grace Henry, Paul Henry, Evie Hone, Jerzy Hulewicz, Antonina Ivanova, Božidar Jakac, Władysław Jarocki, Mainie Jellett, Oskar Kallis, Eino Kauria, Jēkabs Kazaks, Sean Keating, Harry Kernoff, France Kralj, Tone Kralj, Olena Kryvynska, Charles Lamb, Ludolf Liberts, Herberts Līkums, Maria Ewa Łunkiewicz-Rogoyska, Karin Luts, Jūlijs Madernieks, Konrad Mägi, Rafał Malczewski, Louis Marcoussis, Đoko Mazalić, Lydia Mei, Vadym Meller, Kosta Miličević, Jănis Muncis, Eemu Myntti, Tymon Niesiołowski, Henrik Olvi, William Orpen, Johannes Pääsuke, Oksana Pavlenko, Veno Pilon, Felix Randel, Kristjan Raud, Tyko Sallinen, Helene Schjerfbeck, Emanuil Shechtman, Maya Simashkevich, Władysław Skoczylas, Melek Celal Sofu, Edith Somerville, Vojko Stanojević, Franjo Stiplovšek, Strādnieku Teātri Workers Theater, Niklāvs Strunke, Sava Šumanović, Romans Suta, Leo Svemps, Mary Swanzy, Milivoj Uzelac, Kuno Veeber, Nande Vidmar, Dmytro Vlasiuk and Jack B. Yeats.
Featured Contemporary Artists: Ursula Burke, Banu Çennetoğlu, Jasmina Cibic, Declan Clarke, Array Collective, Dorothy Cross, Ieva Epnere, Minna Henriksson, John Hinde, Dragana Jurišić, Ilya & Emilia Kabakov, Gülsün Karamustafa, Istvan Laszlo, Niamh McCann, Brian O’Doherty, İz Öztat, Alan Phelan, Larissa Sansour and Søren Lind, Ursula Schulz-Dornburg, Sasha Sykes, Dilek Winchester.