Skip to content

“Shifting sand of history on the wall”

© Zsuzsanna Ardó
© Zsuzsanna Ardó

Photographed by Zsuzsanna Ardó, Budapest, 1996

“To be a Hungarian is a collective neurosis” – Arthur Koestler, author of Darkness at Noon.

I took this photograph in Budapest in the mid-1990s. A new street-sign replaces an old one, but the old one remains on the wall, a big line drawn across it. To me, this photo is about the social representation of history shaping our universal consciousness and planting our orientation points. The photo is purposefully lacking in harmony: it’s uneasy, off-balance and cluttered, pulling in different directions to subvert aesthetic expectation... and yet, the woman strides on.

openDemocracy Author

Zsuzsanna Ardó

Zsuzsanna Ardó is an Arts Council Award-winning visual artist, curator, writer, and the founder of Creatives without Borders. Learn more about her work at www.ardo.org

All articles
Tags:

More from Zsuzsanna Ardó

See all