Budapest's Banksy disciple sparks treasure hunts and nostalgia
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, December 26, 2024


Budapest's Banksy disciple sparks treasure hunts and nostalgia
Ukrainian-Hungarian parents' child, sculptor Mihajlo (Mihaly) Kolodko poses next to his small-size, 15 centimeter tall sculpture 'Lisa', a character of the American cartoon 'The Simpsons', in Budapest, Hungary on December 11, 2019. Drawing inspiration from enigmatic British artist Banksy, a sculptor of tiny bronze statues has gained a cult following in the Hungarian capital Budapest by placing his quirky works randomly around the city for the public to discover. Attila KISBENEDEK / AFP.

by Peter Murphy



BUDAPEST (AFP).- Drawing inspiration from enigmatic British artist Banksy, a sculptor of tiny bronze statues has gained a cult following in the Hungarian capital Budapest by placing his quirky works around the city for the public to discover.

"I look for places which are a little hidden but still easy to find if you know where to look," Mihaly Kolodko, 41, told AFP in his workshop in Vac, north of Budapest.

"I never tell anyone in advance where I have put them," he grinned while working on a new figure, bearded beneath a beanie-hat.

While his statues don't have the biting satire of Banksy's work, they have been provoking some heated debate -- as well as nostalgia.

Kolodko, whose grandmother was Hungarian, grew up in western Ukraine where he could watch TV from nearby Hungary. Many of his works depict 1970s and 1980s Hungarian cartoon figures.

Since moving to Hungary in 2016 he has peppered Budapest with over 20 cast metal sculptures measuring just 10-15 centimetres (4-6 inches) tall.

A cheeky talking worm is sat on a rampart on the river Danube opposite the Hungarian parliament. A flying rabbit with oversized chequered ears looks down on the city from a perch near Buda castle.

More cryptic pieces include a Marcel Duchamps-style pissoir, and a mysteriously murdered squirrel.

'Guerilla' sculpture?
Kolodko doesn't ask for permission from the authorities to install his metal miniatures, fuelling his reputation as a "guerilla" sculptor, a tag he shrugs off.

"I just follow my feelings, I'm not a lawyer, if I had to spend time and money asking for permits I'd lose the urge to make art," he told AFP.

"I communicate with people through statues, it's my first language."

Thousands of Kolodko devotees are running a Facebook fan page, swapping tips on hunting the statues and debating the meaning of the more abstract works.

"These are the statues of our 30 to 40-something generation," says 40-year-old Szilvia Liptai, who organises regular "Kolodko tours" for runners, which take in a dozen of the bronzes.

"He triggers our childhood memories," she told AFP, as runners took selfies beside the talking worm -- now sporting a winter scarf and bobble hat knitted for him by an anonymous donor.

Kolodko was trained in monumental sculpture in the Ukrainian city of Lviv by teachers who designed gargantuan statues of Lenin during Ukraine's Soviet period -- and nationalist heroes after the country gained independence.

But he found his artistic voice in less time-consuming and cheaper, smaller-scale works, sculpting the mini-statues in his hometown of Uzhhorod near the Hungarian border.

It was Hungary where the father-of-two's work found the best reception, winning commissions like one from Budapest airport for a diminutive Franz Liszt or memorials for historical events such as the Holocaust.

Thrown into the Danube
"Banksy inspired me to use the language of sculpture the way he does for painting," Kolodko said, beside a statue of US cartoon character Lisa Simpson bound to a lamppost in downtown Budapest -- a "Joan of Arc" commentary on the "oppression of American culture".

Not everyone gets his messages though.

A statue of another 1970s children's favourite, a hapless handyman goat, was widely seen as a critique of shoddy workmanship on a recently renovated main square in Budapest.

"I meant to show that you can be lovable even if things don't work out, and also reflect on the Ukrainian guest workers who used to gather here in mornings for odd-jobs," he said.

Then last November an ultra-nationalist politician interpreted Kolodko's statue of a Russian "ushanka" fur ear-flap cap with a red star on it as approval of a nearby Soviet World War II memorial.

After filming himself cleaving it from its place with an axe, the politician said it was "the symbol of a dictatorial system" and threw it into the Danube.

"I don't mean to be provocative," Kolodko told AFP. "The ushanka was actually trying to say the past is still with us.

"Some people just look at things differently. After the statues go public they take on a life of their own, I say goodbye to them."

Three of his pieces have been removed or stolen so far, he added.

Earlier this month, the latest "Kolodko" suddenly appeared, the artist's answer to the recent act of violence: a tiny bronze axe where the ushanka once rested.


© Agence France-Presse










Today's News

January 30, 2020

Important H. Daumier discovery offered by The Potomack Company

An exhibition of New York City paintings by Mark Laguë opens at Rehs Contemporary

The Met acquires rare inscribed vessel by David Drake

Victoria Miro presents the first UK solo exhibition of works by Hedda Sterne

A way to rethink urban housing

$1 million John Hancock letter leads Sotheby's $20.1 million Americana Week Auctions in New York

One of the largest Ming porcelains from the British Museum will go on loan outside of London for the first time

The stories their skateboards could tell

Mario Buatta auction shatters estimates for chintz

Budapest's Banksy disciple sparks treasure hunts and nostalgia

Unit London opens exhibition of Tom French's last series of works

Rago/Wright announce "Structure & Ornament: Studio Jewelry 1900 to the Present"

Fondazione Prada, Milan opens two new exhibitions

The 25th edition of Communicating the Arts will take place in Lausanne

David Roche Foundation House Museum opens a new exhibition of western floral art

Farah Al Qasimi presents new suite of photographs for 100-site exhibition citywide

Harvard Art Museums appoint Sarah Laursen as new Curator of Chinese Art

Harriet Frank Jr., a screenwriter for 'Hud' and 'Norma Rae,' dies at 96

Fondation Cartier opens the largest exhibition to date dedicated to the work of Claudia Andujar

The Perth Centre for Photography opens an exhibition of photographs by Massimiliano Camellini

Anna Laudel opens an exhibition of works by sculptor Bilal Hakan Karakaya

Cristina Veríssimo and Diogo Burnay appointed curators of Lisbon Triennale 2022

Babe Ruth-signed baseball sells for world-record $183,500; ball was signed night before Ruth died

Frank Carter will stage a one-night happening at a secret East London location

L.A. Louver opens an exhibition of prints by Los Angeles artist Alison Saar

9 Tricks Casinos Use So You'll Play More than You Want

4 Great Photoshoot Tips For Budding Photographers

5 Business Principles That You Have to Follow




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Houston Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง
Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful