netartdothu (beta)

Internet art and Internet culture in Hungary in the 1990s and 2000s. A research project by Flóra Barkóczi

Andrea Kirkovits: Miklós Erdély: Optimistic Lecture, 1996

This site is a Web adaptation of the Optimistic Lecture of The influential Hungarian neo-avant-garde architect, artist, writer, poet, theorist, and filmmaker Miklós Erdély (1928-1986), held in 1980. The lecture was introduced with 9 points read by Erdély:

  1. One must acknowledge one’s own competence with regards to one’s life and fate, and keep to it above all else.
  2. This competence extends to whatever concerns one’s life, whether directly or indirectly.
  3. In this manner one’s competence extends to everything.
  4. One must have the courage to perceive whatever is bad, faulty, torturous,
    dangerous or meaningless, whether it be the most accepted, seemingly
    unchangeable case or thing.
  5. One must have the boldness to propose even the most unfounded, least
    realizable alternative.
  6. One must be able to imagine that these variants can be attained.
  7. One must give as much consideration to possibilities that have only a slight
    chance but promise great advantages as to possibilities that in all likelihood
    can be attained but promise few advantages.
  8. Whatever one can accomplish with the limited tools at one’s disposal one
    must do without delay.
  9. One must refrain from any form of organization or institutionalization.”
    (Miklós Erdély: Optimistic Lecture: The Features of the Post-neo-avant-garde
    Attitude.

Translated by: Zsuzsanna Szegedy-Maszák. Originally read at Eötvös Loránd University’s Faculty of Aesthetics, Budapest, 22 April 1981. Source: https://www.mke.hu/res/optimistic_exhibition_miklos_erdely_en-web.pdf

URL: http://www.c3.hu/InterMedia/ig/andrea/index.html