Hungarian Cubes

In Hungarian Cubes, German-Hungarian artist Katharina Roters explores the one aspect of these traditional architectures that could be individualized: the ornamental decorations on their facades.

Hungarian Cubes. Subversive Ornaments in Socialism
The Magyar Kocka, or Hungarian Cube, is a standardized type of residential house in Hungary that dates back to the 1920s.
It was designed as a radically functional single-family home for Budapest’s suburbs and housing projects, but it became closely identified with the postwar communist era, when many villages were rebuilt with uniform rows of single-family homes, and the Hungarian Cube – often renamed the Kádár Kocka, after Hungary’s communist president, János Kádár – became ubiquitous.
Hungarian Cubes. Subversive Ornaments in Socialism
Katharina Roters, Hungarian Cubes. Subversive Ornaments in Socialism. Top: Székelyszabar. Above: Cégenydanyád
In Hungarian Cubes, Katharina Roters explores the one aspect of the Magyar Kocka that could be individualized: the ornamental decorations on their facades. Roters strips the houses she photographs of all surplus details, clearing out fences, railings, antennas, road signs, power lines, and the like, which enables the viewer to focus on the ornaments – and to see how they offered a rare opportunity for individualism and even protest under the conformity of the communist system.

 

Katharina Roters, born 1969, visual artist, studied at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf and the Hungarian University of Fine Arts, Budapest. Numerous scholarships and exhibitions in Germany, Austria, Hungary, Turkey, and other countries.

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