Sanja Ivekovic

Biographie

Sanja Ivekovic was born in 1949 in Zagreb, Croatia, where she studied from 1968 to 1971 at the Academy of Fine Arts. As one of the first explicitly feminist artists in Croatia she has also been the facilitator and founder of a large number of political initiatives including the Women Artists’ Center Elektra and the Center for Women’s Studies in Zagreb. Her works have repeatedly won prizes at film and video festivals, including those in Locarno and Montreal. Sanja Ivekovic lives in Zagreb.

Additional biography

Her photo montages, videos, performances, and installations, emerging since the mid-1970s, have been marked by a critical questioning of the mass media and their identity-forging potential. By personally entering into public discourse "be it in the shape of photographic representations in the media or as the actual protagonist of performances" Ivekovic brings out into the open the collective social codes of behavior based on gender-specific standardized patterns in the mass media. In her programmatic series of works entitled "Double Life" (1975), using the form of a dialogue, Ivekovic juxtaposes advertising images and portraits from her own private photo album (from the years 1953-75), exposing the parallels in physical poses and props. This strategy of confronting real life and media realities is one she has also pursued in works such as "Tragedy of a Venus" (1975), "Bitter Life" (1975), and "Sweet Life" (1975/76). While Ivekovic’s early videos and performances reflect representations of womanhood within a traditionally patriarchal order, since the 1980s her works have increasingly placed the accent on issues of democracy and politics. In her video "Personal Cuts" (1982), she exposes media images as channeled visions of reality and reports on the construction of collective memory. These have been recurring themes in Ivekovic’s latest productions as well: The project "Gen XX" (1997-2001), and "The Nada Dimic File" (2000-2002), are devoted to female Croatian resistance fighters against Nazism. Using the example of these erstwhile national heroines of Socialist Yugoslavia whose names have today slipped into oblivion, Ivekovic exposes the mechanisms of collective memory and collective amnesia. (Luisa Ziaja)

Artist's books

  • Sanja Ivekovic. Tragedy of a venus. Tragedija jedne Venere. Ed. Galerija suvremene umjetnosti. Zagreb, 1976.
    KM Ivekovic Sanja 05 RARA -
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