National Gallery: Every past is my past

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Every Past Is My Past displays a selection of more than three hundred pictures from the popular Fortepan digital photo-archives, which is now ten years old. The photographs are closely intertwined with Hungary’s 20th-century history. The images capture the period in many ways and layers but with a focus on the perspective of ordinary people and their experiences conveyed by private photographs, which form the backbone of the collection.

Two secondary school classmates, Miklós Tamási and Ákos Szepessy, began to collect the more than 110 thousand photographs of the digital Fortepan archives back in the 1980s. After a period of regular but haphazard collecting of discarded amateur photos and negatives in flea markets and other places, they launched an online site with 5,000 digitised images in 2010. Soon after this many private individuals and public institutions joined the circle of donors, now comprising 600 hundred, thanks to whose pictures the archives are augmented every month.

Temporary exhibition until 25 August

Opening hours: 
Tuesday–Sunday from 10 am

Ticket desks close at 5 pm. The closing of the exhibition halls begins at 5.45 pm, the gates of the building close at 6 pm. Tickets: HUF 3,000

Venue: 
National Gallery
1014 Budapest, Szent György tér 2. – Buda castle

The two main strengths of the Fortepan archives (Fortepan was the most popular negative film, extensively used by amateur photographers too, and manufactured at the Forte factory in Vác) are it’s being free and shared by all. It is shared because it contains our photos about our reality. It is shared because it is based on the collaboration of volunteers. Shared because anyone can help identify the locations and people in the images. It is free because it is available to all without restrictions and the images can be used freely, without the payment of copyright fees.

Each photograph in our exhibition tells a story. In some lucky cases these stories can be reconstructed but in most others the people in the pictures are no longer known, and neither are the circumstances of their making so visitors can use their imagination and invent their own stories linked to these images. The background stories available for some of the photos capture the desperation of spot-checks carried out by the central police force in the Kádár era, the interesting story of our world champion pentathlonist posing for the athletic figure on the back of the 20-forint banknote at the time, and even the salvaging of a photo archives consumed by fire. The show emphatically evokes the image of Budapest bombed into ruins during WWII, while visitors can walk down an imaginary street of the capital, which was ‘built’ with photographs spanning several decades and locations. They can get an insight into the work of the Fortepan archives’ editors, select images from a legacy, and can sample readers’ letters, some of which are truly heart-stirring.

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