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Exhibition Bauhaus Ecologies – Webs of Continuity at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb

Discover the exhibition Bauhaus Ecologies – Webs of Continuity, open from 24.02.2026 to 24.05.2026 at MSU (Museum of Contemporary Art – Zagreb) on the 1st floor of the temporary exhibitions.

The Exhibition Bauhaus Ecologies – Webs of Continuity

The exhibition Bauhaus Ecologies – Webs of Continuity opens up with the question of whether the historical Bauhaus can be read from an ecological perspective. In doing so, ecology is understood not only as a theme but also as a way of thinking, as a web of relations among materials and ideas, past and present practices, and between art and the everyday.

Within this framework, ecology is establishing connections among materials, technology, and social conditions, and recycling becomes an essential method for reading and connecting artworks, the way in which forms and methods of modernism were introduced in the art practice from the second half of the 20th century until today. In that way, history is not confined to archives but returns to the present as a starting point for examination of space and materials, and our common world.

Avant-garde artists were pondering over the future of nature, environment, and climate already in the 1920s, and Bauhaus artists were searching for new ways of expression inspired by different currents of thought, including biocentrism, philosophy of nature, holistic interpretations, and organicism. In that context, ecological thinking has not emerged in the Bauhaus as a separate topic; it was recognised in the basic tenets of this school – learning by doing, examination of relationships between materials and forms, functions and space – and also in the collective work organized at the boundaries of technology and designs, of art and the everyday.

Artworks by Otti Berger, Ivana Tomljenović Meller, and the EXAT 51 Group

Otti Berger, Fragments of a Shroud, 1930, MSU (Museum of Contemporary Art) Zagreb, Archi-living.com
Otti Berger, Fragments of a Shroud, 1930, MSU (Museum of Contemporary Art) Zagreb

Artworks from the collection of the Museum of Contemporary Art related to the Bauhaus heritage and its reverberations in art practices after World War II were used as a starting point for the exhibition Bauhaus Ecologies – Webs of Continuity. Works by Otti Berger, Ivana Tomljenović Meller, and the EXAT 51 group are three standpoints from which modernism is perceived as a living system, as a web of processes, relationships, and transformations.

Ivana Tomljenovic, Rest on the Terrace, Bauhaus, 1930, MSU (Museum of Contemporary Art) Zagreb, Archi-living.com
Ivana Tomljenovic, Rest on the Terrace, Bauhaus, 1930, MSU (Museum of Contemporary Art) Zagreb

In her work, textile designer Otti Berger posed questions about material, structure and tactility; films and photos by Ivana Tomljenović Meller demonstrated how rhythm and repetitions are forming perceptions of time and space, as well as the relationship between natural cycles and the everyday, and members of the EXAT 51 group developed spatial schemes whereby the shaping became method for the spatial organization as a system of relations and ways by which the space is constructed, used and shared.

Picelj, Richter, Radić, Layout Designs for the Exhibition at the Chicago World's Fair, 1950, MSU (Museum of Contemporary Art) Zagreb, Archi-living.com
Picelj, Richter, Radić, Layout Designs for the Exhibition at the Chicago World’s Fair, 1950, MSU (Museum of Contemporary Art) Zagreb

“The Three Ecologies” Linked by Félix Guattari

In this reading of historical artworks, ecology enters as a way of thinking, in terms of “the three ecologies” linked by the French philosopher and psychotherapist Félix Guattari – environmental, social, and mental ecology. Hence, modernism is not understood as a closed historical style, but as an open archive of possibilities which can be read critically and reintroduced in the contemporary social and environmental context. In the exhibition, Guattari’s threefold perspective finds a parallel to the three levels of linking artworks – material, conceptual, and social – by which changes in materials, relationships, and meanings are traced over time.

Recycling Connects the Historical and the Contemporary

Recycling is an essential method for connecting the historical and the contemporary, understood as a process of translation and change of meaning, and at the same time as a way to read a web of relations among works. In a material sense, reusing and repurposing of materials is implied, as well as the work on traces of time layers that were inscribed in them. On the conceptual level, recycling denotes a shift in reading and the reinterpretation of historical terms, methods, and forms, in order to translate and reintroduce them in the new context. On the social level, recycling enters as an exchange of knowledge and collaborative practices, and also in connection with collective and institutional memory.

Three Sections of the Exhibition: Material as a Structure, Rhythm of the Picture, and Space as a System

The exhibition is organized in three sections: Material as a Structure, Rhythm of the Picture, and Space as a System. Each section establishes its own way of reading the continuity by connecting historical footholds with artworks made from the second half of the 20th century until today. This relationship is thus shown as an aesthetic and ethical procedure by which a material and its traces, ideas, and knowledge, as well as cultural layers, are reinterpreted and exposed to new meanings.

International Research Project Bauhaus Ecologies

The exhibition Bauhaus Ecologies – Webs of Continuity is a part of the international research project Bauhaus Ecologies carried out by the Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau in cooperation with the Museum of Architecture and Design in Ljubljana (MAO) and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Zagreb (MSU). The project starts with an analysis of their three collections through the prism of ecology, and questioning how modernistic ideas had been shaped, disseminated, and transmitted in contemporary art practices.

Within the framework of the project, students from the Department of Art Education of the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb participated in the program Bauhaus Study Rooms 2025, which the Stiftung Bauhaus Dessau is implementing, and they conducted artistic research of works from the MSU collection under mentorships from Ivan Skvrce, Nikola Bojić, and Marko Tadić.

Exhibition Bauhaus Ecologies – Webs of Continuity at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, Archi-living.com

Artists: Otti Berger, Jagoda Buić, Jasmina Cibic, EXAT 51 group, Ivan Ladislav Galeta, Mladen Galić, Mihael Giba, Tomislav Gotovac, Tina Gverović, Hrvoje Hiršl, Ana Hušman, Marijan Jevšovar, David Maljković, Zvonimir Malus, Hana Miletić, Antun Motika, Milan Pavić, Slavka Pavić, Mladen Stilinović, Marko Tadić, Ivana Tkalčić, Ivana Tomljenović Meller, Silvio Vujičić

Curator: Vesna Meštrić

Visual Identity and Visual Setup: Oaza

Text and Photos: Museum of Contemporary Art

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By Danica Maričić

Interior Designer and Integrated Marketing Communications Pro, Loving Writing and Photography, Passionate about Life & Style, “True Blue” Mediterranean Girl, Curious Traveller & Designer