Artisans-The Dream Brigade (film): Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
====Medium: [[:Category:Film Video|Film Video]]==== | ====Medium: [[:Category:Film Video|Film Video]]==== | ||
---- | ---- | ||
[[File:Jeles.jpg|left]] | |||
'''Artist:''' András Jeles | '''Artist:''' András Jeles (b. 1945) | ||
'''Confronting Bodies:''' Hungarian Soviet Republic | '''Confronting Bodies:''' Hungarian Soviet Republic | ||
Line 39: | Line 39: | ||
[[Category:András Jeles]] | [[Category:András Jeles]] | ||
{{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="font-style: italic;">Artisans-The Dream Brigade</span> (film)}} | |||
__NOTOC__ | __NOTOC__ |
Latest revision as of 20:12, 19 February 2012
Date: 1983
Region: Europe
Subject: Political/Economic/Social Opinion
Medium: Film Video
Artist: András Jeles (b. 1945)
Confronting Bodies: Hungarian Soviet Republic
Dates of Action: 1983
Location: Hungary
Description of Artwork: Artisans-The Dream Brigade focuses on Hungarian workers who are going to stage a Soviet play. As they rehearse, they begin to become more self-aware. They no longer see real patterns that help them to understand characters in the play, but rather start to become characters in the play. Their lives feel fictitious and the boundaries between fiction and reality are destroyed.
The party bureaucrats held that the film disempowers the working class by showing them as financially and spiritually weak. What's more, it challenges the idea that history is a linear and unalterable narrative. This challenged the goal-oriented nature of history that the party wanted to push.
The Incident: The film was completely banned in Hungary due to its questioning of the official ideology. Jeles continued to work afterwards, but continuous censorship and criticism from bureaucrats eventually caused him to quit film and instead work in theater.
Results of Incident: The movie remained banned until the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Source: Censorship: A World Encyclopedia. Ed. Derek Jones. Chicago; London: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2001.