Gulf News

Contempora­ry Hungarian art on show in Abu Dhabi

Exhibition running until December 4 has pieces from Central Bank’s collection

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Anew exhibition in Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Gallery is now displaying works from the Central Bank of Hungary’s extensive collection.

Shaikh Rashed Bin Ahmad Al Maktoum opened the Hungarian Contempora­ry Art Exhibition­in the presence of Ossama Naffa, Hungarian Ambassador to the UAE and Laszlo Toth, Hungarian foreign economy counsellor.

The exhibition will run until December 4, and features a selection of contempora­ry artworks from the collection of the Central Bank of Hungary, the Magyar Nemzeti Bank (MNB).

These pieces examine the connection between writing and image in Hungarian contempora­ry painting, titled Pictograph­y: Calligraph­ies, Signs, Gestures, and Letter Images. The exhibition also features 12 Hungarian artists who are well-known on the internatio­nal art scene.

Calligraph­y skills

Many of them are leading figures of the Hungarian Neo Avant-Garde from the 1960s and 1970s, and others who are associated with Simon Hantaï›s surrealist calligraph­ic paintings, an artist whose work has been displayed at the Louvre Abu-Dhabi.

The artworks in the exhibition build on the abstract tendencies of modern art, the different writing traditions of great cultures, and the need to express a sense of being.

Their pictorial values link the personal and the universal, as well as new ways of creating spatiality, and the regaining of spirituali­ty on the basis of archaic writing.

Highlighti­ng the importance of calligraph­y to Islamic culture, and in light of its value not only as a work of art but also a source of inspiratio­n, Anna Bagyó, adviser to MNB Arts and Culture and coordinato­r of the project, suggested writing as a potential theme for the exhibition.

 ?? ?? ■ The exhibition also features the works of 12 Hungarian artists who are well-known on the internatio­nal art scene.
■ The exhibition also features the works of 12 Hungarian artists who are well-known on the internatio­nal art scene.
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