PRISTINA.- The National Gallery of Kosova, the countrys leading institution dedicated to modern and contemporary art, reopens to the public following the most extensive renovation and expansion in its history. The project includes the complete reconfiguration of the Gallerys exhibition spaces and the addition of 400 square metres of facilities dedicated to the care, study, and long-term preservation of its collection and archives. The reopening is inaugurated by Not all people exist in the same Now, a group exhibition curated by Hana Halilaj.
Spanning from the 1970s to the present, the exhibition brings together works from NGKs permanent collection and a selection of contemporary artistic practices, rendering visible the ways in which identity, memory, and belonging are claimed, as well as contested. Beginning with the prominence of landscape in some of the earliest works in the collection, the exhibition expands outward to trace how artists across generations reshaped relationships to place amid the rise of neoliberalism and Kosovas political and social transformations from the post-war period to the present.
During the period in which Kosova held the status of an autonomous province within socialist Yugoslavia, political expression was constrained. In this context, the recurring depiction of idyllic fields, mountains, villages, and rural environments carried a persistent assertion of presence. Within these images, landscape operates as a coded surface through which belonging acquires political form.
Placed in dialogue with these historical works, contemporary practices extend this understanding of landscape beyond the depiction of territory. They approach space as a social and historical formation marked by mobility, erasure, and the uneven effects of political change. Taken together, these works present landscape not as a coherent or fixed image of geography, but as a condition in which histories and relations to place remain unsettled.
Not all people exist in the same Now takes its title from Ernst Blochs essay Nonsynchronism and the Obligation to Its Dialectics, in which he considers how different historical temporalities coexist within the same apparent present. The collection emerges as a constellation that brings inherited narratives into critical dialogue with contemporary conditions. Together, the works reveal the present as unequal and unfinished, shaped by histories that do not arrive in the same way for all bodies, places, or generations. At the same time, they remain open to social and political possibilities that have not yet fully emerged.
The exhibition extends into a specially curated display within the NGKs new collection storage facility. Accessible through guided visits with staff members (during designated hours or by appointment), this section presents works related to the exhibition, which will rotate between the storage display and the main galleries to foreground the provisional nature of collection displays and bring different historical relations into view over time.
Participating artists: Adem Kastrati, Agim Çavdarbasha, Agim Rudi, Alban Muja, Alije Vokshi, Bedri Emra, Bora Baboçi, Brilant Milazimi, Budim Berisha, Doruntina Kastrati, Driant Zeneli, Driton Hajredini, Esat Valla, Ëngjëll Berisha, Fatmir Krypa, Feriha Rada, Gjelosh Gjokaj, Halil Muhaxhiri, Hamdi Bardhi, Hilmija Ćatović, Hyrije Krypa, Hysni Krasniqi, Ibrahim Ponosheci, Isa Alimusaj, Jakup Ferri, Kadrush Rama, Lala Meredith-Vula, Masar Caka, Muslim Mulliqi, Nimon Lokaj, Petrit Halilaj, Rexhep Ferri, Rexhep Goçi, Rudina Xhaferi, Simon Shiroka, Sislej Xhafa, Tahir Emra, Valbona Zherka, Violeta Xhaferi, Vlada Radović, Xhevdet Xhafa, and Zake Prelvukaj.