Cultural trips: calendar of events for April
This month, going wherever your feet take you in Kaunas, you can unwittingly travel around the world. April travel directions: Šilainiai – Japan (and back). Culture will be visiting courtyards, neighbourhoods, shop windows and cinema halls. And one space deserves particular support – the CulturEUkraine Centre, a place for Ukranians, who have fled war, to create and spend time together. But there is always something for everyone to make the most of their time in Kaunas: for theatre lovers and jazz enthusiasts, culture’s senior participants and the Mythical Beast’s youngest fans.
The schedule of cultural trips in April is ready :
Marina Abramović's exhibition “Memory of Being”
One of the most anticipated art events in Kaunas and all of Lithuania is the exhibition “Memory of Being” by Marina Abramović, one of the most famous performance artists in the world, which is to be presented for the first time. The exhibition offers a detailed presentation of the works by Abramović from the 1960s to recent years; the exhibition also draws attention in a unique form – for the first time it is prepared as an impressive video installation from selected documentaries and films of the artist’s performances.
When: From 30 March 2022 to 31 July 2022
Where: Kaunas Picture Gallery
Admission at the exhibition is paid.
Organizer: Meno Parkas Art Park and “Kaunas 2022”
Programme of European Film Journeys
The renewed “Romuva” Cinema will finally open its doors in April. It will host a European cinema tour. 12 advance screenings of films of contemporary filmmakers, which will take place in the cinema and outdoor cinema sessions, invite you to discover the colourful diversity of European cinema culture. The program presents films on contemporary topics and the most important filmmakers in Europe today. “European Film Journeys” is for picky spectators and reviewers of good films!
When: from 22nd of April
Where: Romuva Cinema
Attendance at the exhibition is paid.
Organizer: Kaunas “Romuva” Cinema
Culture in the courtyards: Šilainiai
Culture to the Courtyards, the internationally acclaimed project, launched during Lithuania's first quarantine and organised by the Fluxus Labas!, will fill those living next door to one another with the excitement of anticipation, will make balconies resound with applause and joy as culture will once again fill Kaunas’s courtyards! Theatrical, dance, contemporary circus and music professionals will perform in the courtyards of 11 neighbourhoods. This time we invite you to take a seat in the balcony boxes of Šilainiai or choose a standing place in the courtyard area.
When: 19–21 April 2022
Where: Šilainiai Neighbourhood
Admission to the exhibition is free.
Organizer: “Kaunas 2022”
Art space “Artery”. Opening of a new cycle
The open-air exhibition “Blink” features sound and light installations, which are accessible around the clock but can be best appreciated after dark. There will be four Arterija exhibitions presented in the old town , each designed for a different season. The exposition's author is Saulius Paliukas (Kaunas Faculty of the Vilnius Academy of Arts, VAA), and its co-authors are Romualdas Požerskis and Rimantas Giedraitis (Kaunas Faculty, VAA). ARTERIJA, the open-air public art space of the Kaunas Faculty of the Vilnius Academy of Arts, is participating in the “Kaunas – European Capital of Culture 2022” programme.
When: 21 April 2022
Where: Kaunas Faculty of Vilnius Academy of Arts
Admission to the exhibition is free.
Organizer: Kaunas Faculty of Vilnius Academy of Arts
Japan Days in Kaunas “WA!”
“WA!”, the Days of Japan in Kaunas, is your ticket to the land of the rising sun. The festival's programme includes: a joint project by Aura and Ryu Suzuki, a renowned Japanese modern dance choreographer; a performance by the world-renowned calligraphy artist Aoi Yamaguchi, who invites visitors to explore this artform through a spectacular show; live drawings created by a robot; Hanami Matsuri, a traditional Sakura-watching festival spanning more than 1000 years; a concert by Tanaka Kyokusen, one of Japan's most famous traditional lute players; as well as numerous exhibitions, lectures, concerts, food tastings and other events.
When: From 25 April 2022
Where: Kaunas
Admission to the exhibition is free.
Organizer: “Kaunas 2022”, “Azija LT” MB, Kaunas Dance Theatre “Aura”, public bodies “Kultūrinės ir organizacinės idėjos”, “KyūmeikanKendo”
Exhibition “Kaunas – Vilnius: Moving Mountains”
The secret of the friendship between the rival cities – Kaunas and Vilnius – will be revealed by the co-exhibition of the MO Museum and the Kaunas City Museum. The expositions will uncover the fundamental interdependence of the two cities, how they have shaped one another, and how present-day Lithuania has emerged from the tensions between the two. The mountains and motifs of the exhibition are repeated in the exhibition halls of both museums, but they tell different stories. In this way, the concept and architecture of “Kaunas-Vilnius: Moving Mountains” embodies the very necessity for Kaunas and Vilnius to stay together: to see the whole exhibition, one must visit both cities.
When: From 23 April 2022 to 28 August 2022
Where: Temporary Gallery of MK Čiurlionis, MO Museum in Vilnius
Attendance at the exhibition is paid.
Organizer: Kaunas City Museum, MO Museum
Earlier opened exhibitions are ready to welcome visitors
Visit the installation of the non-conformist of the art world Yoko Ono in the historical Bank of Lithuania or the monthly cycle of exhibitions “100 years to Kaunas Art School. 12 Exhibitions. 12 Months”, which is intended to commemorate the centenary of the Kaunas School of Arts. The exhibition “Lithuanian Design: from Temporary to Contemporary” on display in the shop windows of Laisvės Alėja boulevard is still inviting visitors to admire the history of design. To deepen the dialogue with oneself, we invite you to the exhibition “That Which We Don’t Remember” by William Kentridge, a South African artist of Lithuanian Jewish descent.
Full programme: www.kaunas2022.eu
“1972. Breaking Through the Wall”. An Exhibition about the Alternative Kaunas That Survived Suppression
Exactly fifty years ago, on 14 May 1972, Kaunas and Lithuania’s history was changed by an event in the city centre. Romas Kalanta, protesting against the Soviet regime, poured petrol on himself in front of the Musical Theatre and set himself on fire. His notebook bore the inscription: ‘My death was the fault of the system’.
This tragedy sparked an unprecedented public opposition, which even led to imprisonment for many young people who wanted to participate in the funeral that became protests (later called the Kaunas Spring), not to mention the suppression of the artistic ambition they had begun, at least in public. But in the underground, the spirit of freedom remained.
In 2022, Kaunas is a city of a free country, proud to be the European Capital of Culture. While bloody massacres are taking place hundreds of kilometres away in Ukraine, a number of elements of the Kaunas 2022 programme take on a new, even more significant meaning. The exhibition “1972. Breaking the Wall” is high on this list. “We are sure that this exhibition will touch a nerve. Through this exhibition, our city will engage in a candid conversation with itself like never before,” declare the organisers.
The exhibition, which opens on 14 May, will run all summer at the Kaunas Central Post Office, not far from the site of Kalanta’s self-immolation. The author of the idea and the exhibition’s curator is the art historian Prof Dr Rasa Žukienė (Vytautas Magnus University). She says that although the event is intended to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Kalanta’s death, it will also highlight the problem of the individual’s inner freedom, which has been directly linked at all times to the resistance against violence and oppression.
A Broad Spectrum of Ideas of Free Life and Dissatisfaction With Reality
“This exhibition is dedicated to events in Lithuanian life and the world of art whose existence is for some an integral part of their being, but for others, especially those born after 1990, hardly believable. For a large part of Lithuanian society, it is already hard to believe that this could have been the case in the Sovietised Lithuania, on the other side of the Iron Curtain, in the 1970s and 1990s: modern works were created, openly opposed to the system, the Soviet hippie movement developed, and then instead of liberty, love, and rock’n’roll, we were met with violence, and the suppression of public thought and art began,” explains the art critic.
Constraints and violence did not stifle the desire for freedom then, just as they do now. One of the bastions of freedom in the 7-8th decade of the 20th century was the city’s cultural scene - theatre, art, youth music groups, cinema. The exhibition will focus the gaze of contemporary Kaunas citizens and guests on the groups of the disobedient and those who disobeyed the system. These include the Kaunas hippies, rock bands, mime artists and professional painters, whose works reflected the moods of the members of the unfree society and who experienced ideological violence after the burning of Romas Kalanta.
R. Žukiene has managed to assemble an awe-inspiring team for the exhibition - the section dedicated to the memory of R. Kalanta is curated by art historian Rimantė Tamoliūnienė (Kaunas County Public Library), the works of art and photography have been selected for the exhibition by art historian Genovaitė Bartulienė (National M. K. Čiurlionis Museum of Art), theatre and pantomime are curated by art historian Edgaras Klivis (VMU), music - by composer Zita Bružaitė (Kauno “Santaka”), the cinema and video programme - by film critic Gediminas Jankauskas (VMU), the “Chronicles of the Catholic Church of Lithuania” - by historian Dr Arūnas Streikus (Vilnius University).
“My team is fantastic; each of them has been known to me for a long time as experts and admirers in their field. The team members have done a lot of research and in-depth studies; half of them are PhDs,” says Žukienė, who brought her team together two years ago when the exhibition concept was included in the Kaunas 2022 programme. According to the art historian, it was not difficult at all to convince her colleagues.
Guitars From Stolen Wood and a red Necklace
“1972. Breaking Through the Wall” is not just an exhibition of artworks. The mood of Kaunas Spring is created, and the stories of contemporaries are brought to life with various artefacts, documents, film stills from demonstrations or pantomime performances - and, of course, music and fashion. R.Žukienė and her colleagues had the opportunity to interact with an impressive number of people who remember 1972, either reviving acquaintances or making new ones, in the course of preparing the exhibition.
“The most striking thing for me was that almost every person over 50 years old, when asked about Kaunas in 1972, remembers something - their eyes light up, and they want to speak. So many years have passed, and not everything has been told and written down yet. I have heard many stories about how one was beaten by militia on Laisvės Alėja on 18 May 1972, how the attenuators in one’s parents’ transistor squeaked (they listened to Western radio stations), how one climbed over the fence into the furniture factory to steal a board to make a guitar, how the prisoners in Pravieniškės used to make clogs. There are many such stories,” the art historian intrigues. She points out that during the preparation of the exhibition, unique exhibits were found that could be of interest to museums in the country.
“At first, I was even shy to ask for the fashionable clothes of a past era. However, 40-50 years have passed. But it turns out that they do exist, and I got them - I got them, for example, from an artist who designed the fabric herself, printed it in a factory in Kaunas, modelled it and made a dress. And she knitted a red necklace for herself because she needed a red necklace. One woman, now a professor, had the idea to recreate a bag she had as a teenager with the inscription “Love, Art, Music”. She even discovered the same yarn. I already have that cool bag. We will display everything,” says R. Žukienė.
There will be discussions with the curators, historians, and participants of the 1972 Spring events in Kaunas during the exhibition. Educational programs will be offered for students and youth of different ages. The show and the conversations it provokes will encourage a more active dialogue between the generations, other countries and nations of Europe, who have different histories but still share many similarities that unite them.
“A common dialogue on freedom and the expansion of its boundaries in art and society, thinking about cultural diversity and place of cultures in the modern world is relevant and necessary both in Lithuania and Europe,” believes the curator of “1972. Breaking Through the Wall”.
Location: Kaunas Central Post Office
Time: 14 May 2022 - 31 August 2022
Organiser: Kaunas 2022
Partners: National M. K. Čiurlionis Museum of Art, MO Museum, Lithuanian National Art
Museum (Vilnius), Ninth Fort Museum, Vytautas Magnus University, Valdas Adamkus Library-
Museum, Kaunas County Public Library, Kaunas City Museum, Embassy of the Czech Republic
in Lithuania, City Gallery of Prague (and others).