The winner exhibition of the Esterhazy Art Dating .
The successful collaboration between artist Emese Kádár and curator Vanda Sárai is reflected in the exhibition NOT_FOUND, which opens on 2 May and won the grand prize of the 2023 Esterházy Art Dating. The pair found each other in the spring of 2023 at the Esterhazy Art Dating event organised by the Together for Art Association and the Esterházy Hungary Foundation. Their exhibition now opening at The Space Gallery is part of the 44th Budapest Spring Festival and will be on view from 3 May.
We spend a significant part of our lives in the digital sphere, so it makes sense that the memories of our personal or even entirely online relationships are increasingly residing on the servers of digital platforms. It is no coincidence that within the software of the big technology companies, we now have control over who has access to our online data after our death. Of course, such a provision cannot be complete, not to mention the fact that even the most careful planning can be a disaster: files can be corrupted, lost in a virus attack, or even the social media platforms that used to store photos, messages or videos of loved ones can be taken down. In their place, error messages remain - like tombstones of memories.
Emese Kádár's solo exhibition NOT_FOUND explores issues of access to digitally stored memories and, through her work, new forms of contemporary mourning rituals, blending the aesthetics of classical gravestones with the challenges of contemporary memory culture and the experience of mourning. The pattern and language of the weavings evoke both traditional funerary symbols and the simplistic visual language of emojis, exploring the extent to which the almost childlike communication tools of social media can express the complex swirls of the experience of grief and loss.
The installation, which fills the entire space, is both a monument to fading memory and a representation of the digital barriers that can stand between us and our lost loved ones - while we once ached for destroyed photos and abandoned trinkets, today we can be struck by unplugged software, forgotten passwords and cancelled subscriptions. And while we are living in the heyday of visual documentation and sharing, Emese Kádár's work highlights that infinitely expanded, encrypted password-protected storage spaces are no guarantee of preserving memories, much less connecting with loved ones who are no longer present.
Curator: Vanda Sárai
The exhibition is organized by the Together for Art Association in cooperation with the Esterházy Hungary Foundation.
Graphics: Rebeka Orosz
Emese KÁDÁR
Opening
- 6:00 pm
- The Space
The exhibition will be opened by artist Emese Kádár and gallery owner Linda Bérczi.
Artist Talk – Linda Bérczi in conversation with Emese Kádár and curator Vanda Sárai
- 6:00 pm
- The Space
Visual artist Emese Kádár and curator Vanda Sárai won the 2023 Esterházy Art Dating Grand Prize with their exhibition concept entitled NOT_FOUND. In connection with the exhibition, which took place in May this year, an Artist Talk will provide more details about the professional collaboration that developed during the program, the creative and curatorial processes, and the background of the exhibition that filled the entire gallery space.
Guided tour with artist Emese Kádár at the exhibition NOT_FOUND
- 4:00 pm
- The Space
Emese Kádár, winner of the 2023 Esterházy Art Dating competition, will give a guided tour of her exhibition NOT_FOUND at The Space. Participants can walk around the site-specific installation designed for the gallery space, where the aesthetics of classic gravestones blend with the challenges of contemporary memory culture and the experience of grief.
Finissage and guided tour at Emese Kádár's exhibition NOT_FOUND
- 4:00 pm
- The Space
At the closing event of the exhibition, Emese Kádár will give a guided tour of the exhibition NOT_FOUND in the form of an informal conversation. The exhibition analyzes issues surrounding access to digitally stored memories and, through this, new forms of contemporary mourning rituals.
Katica Kocsis - How does digitalization influence our ideas about death?

















