Exhibition at Museum Ludwig focuses on Hungarian painter Sam Havadtoy's New York years
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Exhibition at Museum Ludwig focuses on Hungarian painter Sam Havadtoy's New York years
Yoko Ono: Játssz bizalommal, Fotó: ROSTA József © Ludwig Múzeum – Kortárs Művészeti Múzeum, Adattár és Digitális Archívum // Yoko Ono: Play it By Trust, Photo: József ROSTA © Ludwig Museum - Museum of Contemporary Art, Archive.



BUDAPEST.- The exhibition focuses on the New York years of Hungarian painter Sam Havadtoy. His work relations with the city’s influential artists throughout the 1970s and ‘80s greatly affected his developing career as an artist. Having arrived in New York as a young man and working as an interior designer Havadtoy was often invited by Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, Yoko Ono and many others to participate in their art projects. His unique creative approach gained more and more room in these collaborations, which would also be the foundation of his future career as an independent artist. The exhibition draws a parallel between Sam Havadtoy’s New York collaborations and his own later artistic endeavours.

Born in London to a Hungarian family, Havadtoy arrived in New York in 1972 and began working as an interior designer, which was how he got acquainted with John Lennon and Yoko Ono, who opened the gates for him to the élite of contemporary art. He started getting request after request from influential artists, trendsetters and architects. His experience in interior design, his expertise in material and production technology soon made him popular. Some of these collaborations would leave room for his own proposals, which was how Keith Haring’s Altarpiece was conceived, for instance.

One of the main sections of the exhibition is based on his relationship with Yoko Ono, with chess as its leitmotif. “Of all the letters of condolence and gifts that came to the Dakota after John Lennon’s death, one of the strangest and most touching was the 5x5cm handmade leather chess set sent by the chess world champion Bobby Fischer. This was how Yoko and I began playing chess,” recalls Havadtoy. Chess also became a metaphor for their separation twenty years later. In Havadtoy’s explanation, the games in a relationship are a lot like chess. “Chess has turned into the symbol of love in my mind,” he says. This is how Bobby Fischer’s 1972 championship match of 41 moves against Boris Spassky deserved a series of 41 paintings, in which each move is represented in a different shade of white.

A typical trait of Havadtoy’s art is the act of wrapping, covering, concealing. The series Doors from the mid-2010s is about his personal transformations and turns of fate: each door stands for the opening or closing of a stage in his life. Collected from the streets of Budapest, the discarded doors are pieces of the city’s history, silent witnesses to the destinies of people who used them. They are time capsules that undergo the stages of mummification owing to Havadtoy’s signature technique, anointed, wrapped in lace, textile, then Plextol, to be eventually painted over and “dotted”. The artist collects stories that he then carefully conceals behind an unbreakable shell, presenting them to the spectators in quest of meaning, who then have no choice but to project their own memories welling up onto these closed yet discernible objects.

Havadtoy’s game with objects, materials, forms and creative gestures of other artists cannot be dissociated from the situation that characterised his years in New York. As an interior designer he worked with a keen interest in art and a creative impulse, while in constant struggle for independent artistic opportunities. The walled-up fireplace and the resulting altarpiece made with Keith Haring is perhaps the piece that best demonstrates how, still as a designer, he insisted on his ideas being realised in the artistic sense throughout the creative process. The mummification process mentioned with regard to Doors, which is the most typical feature of his art, can also be witnessed in this case. When designing Haring’s apartment, he used the artist’s formal and gestural language to “wrap” it into the space.

It is exactly in this sense that the series defining his later periods as an artist (Modigliani, de Kooning, Jasper Jones, Warhol, Haring, Kertész etc.) become Havadtoy’s time capsules, borrowing, appropriating, wrapping other people’s art. The gestures of re-creation, concealment and partial masking are common in the history of art, and in modern art they are charged with significant critical potential. This is why it is important that his works often seem to be concealing and re-contextualising themselves, making his relation to himself and his creative practice all the more self-explanatory. Havadtoy’s series, his works that are often also in dialogue with one another, are playing a game built on move after move. He forces his series to engage in games based on the logic of chess, often with themselves (Nobody Knows That I Am Gay), or with iconic pieces from other artists’ oeuvres (Keith Haring's Ludo, Andy Warhol's Uncle Sam), but even with his own works.

Of course, the exhibition also features pieces from the artist’s later periods, such as the series of works made using Disney figures, the wrapped Fiat 500, or one of his latest works, a giant carpet of ducks, exhibited now for the first time. The selection also includes pieces of contemporaneous American art from the Ludwig Museum’s collection – taking these as a starting point, we can reach the essence of Havadtoy’s art in a few knight moves.

Curator: Attila Nemes










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