Akasztott Ember

Akasztott Ember (Hanged Man) was a Hungarian language avant-garde art magazine published in Vienna by Sándor Barta. Five issues appeared between November 1922 and February 1923. It was subtitled "The Organ of Universal Socialist Culture".

Akasztott Ember
EditorSándor Barta
CategoriesArt magazine
First issueNovember 1922
Final issueFebruary 1923
CountryAustria
LanguageHungarian

Barta had indicated his dissatisfaction with the stance of MA, another Hungarian émigré avant-garde arts magazine based in Vienna in July 1922. He indicated that owing to the need for a social revolution it was inappropriate to base an arts practice in anything other than literature. This set him on a track at odds with both MA and Egység another magazine established by Béla Uitz and Aladár Komját, who likewise broke away from MA.[1] The title was taken from a poem of the same name published in the 15 July issue of MA which commemorated those who had been executed in the suppression by the White Terror following the fall of the Hungarian Soviet Republic. The first issue included a Manifesto in which Barta wrote, in capital letters: "TODAY WE AS PEOPLE FEEL HANGED, AND THOSE WHO DO NOT FEEL HANGED BELONG TO THOSE WHO HANG US AND KICK US."[2]

Notable contributions

gollark: Idea: automatic OCR systems in bins?
gollark: Apiological!
gollark: I would like to know what software is used to graphinate these however.
gollark: Apiographical protocols?
gollark: Time to maintain a fork of WE with the "fix" fixed!

References

  1. Botar, Oliver (1993). "From the Avant-Garde to "Proletarian Art" The Émigré Hungarian Journals Egyseg and Akasztott Ember, 1922-23" (PDF). Art Journal (Spring 1993). Retrieved 29 November 2018.
  2. Forgács, Éva; Miller, Tyrus (2013). ""The Avant-Garde in Budapest and in Exile in Vienna: A Tett (1915-6), Ma (Budapest 1916-9; Vienna 1920-6), Egység (1922-4), Akasztott Ember (1922), 2x2 (1922), Ék (1923-4), Is (1924), 365 (1925), Dokumentum (1926-7), and Munka (1928-39)"" (PDF). Modernist Magazines. III (Part II): 1128–1156. Retrieved 25 September 2019.
  3. Kállai, Ernő. "The Russian Exhibition in Berlin". modernist architecture. Ross Wolfe. Retrieved 18 March 2019.


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