From December 10, an exciting exhibition opened in the UP Gallery, on the 3rd floor of the UP Rendezvénytér. In the 20-year-old Braun Collection, there are hundreds of works that were included in the collection through auction purchases, appanage, or in exchange for staying at the Törek art center. In recent years, the collection, which has been sleeping like a sleeping beauty, was again presented to the general public and pieces were exhibited that carry some kind of mysterious message.
Among the exhibitors were well-known great artists such as Gyula Pauer, Mihály Schéner, István Drozsnyik, László Simon Csorba, as well as works by younger artists such as Luca Korodi, Csaba Filp, Naomi Devil, or Dániel László.
Each work is a separate story. The exhibition included, for example, one of the works of the runner László Simon Csorba, who ran from Paris to Hungary in the early nineties, then on to Moscow, all the way to Lake Baikal. In the meantime, he painted and wrote to relax. But we were able to see István Drozsnyik's witch-burning chair, from which visions can erupt with maximum force. The shape of the sculptor's objects is determined not by physical laws, but by the realm of his subconscious. The chapel of Tamás Kaduk Fuchs symbolizes the recollection of an imaginary former Auschwitz prisoner.