Goran Dimić: Everyday Sculpture Garden
A contemporary artwork project in Budapest, Hungary
“Stories, well told” — the slogan of National Public Radio (NPR), the American nonprofit media organization — resonates strongly with Goran Dimić’s artistic practice. During one of his most creative periods, Dimić worked within the framework of the advertising industry, a background that may explain his strong inclination toward constructing narratives through visual means.
His artistic language spans multiple media: drawing, comics, painting, sculpture, small-scale objects, video, culinary creations, and, as seen in this exhibition, participatory multimedia works—even the art of seduction itself.
Dimić studied graphic design at the University of Arts in Belgrade. Early in his career, he gained recognition designing album covers for iconic Yugoslav bands such as Partibrejkers, Električni Orgazam, and Ekatarina Velika (EKV), as well as for magazines including Omladinske, Non, Student, and Pop-Lava. Between 1985 and 1988, he exhibited multiple times at the Student Cultural Center (SKC) in Belgrade under the patronage of Biljana Tomić. In 1991, together with Aleksandar Denić, he created the exhibition From the Life of Squirrels at Happy Gallery.
In 1992, he moved to Budapest, Hungary, where he worked as an art director at Saatchi & Saatchi. He has been a regular participant in the ARC poster exhibitions, winning first prize in 2000 with Cable TV. Since the 2000s, he has continuously returned to his independent contemporary art practice.
Context and References
As a precursor to the present exhibition, it is worth recalling the 2003 exhibition Bad Bones at Műcsarnok, curated by Csaba Uglár with co-curator Júlia Fabényi. Dimić was among the exhibiting artists.
At that time, his work explored symbols such as wheat, bread, and labor. One installation featured sculptural bread placed against a painted blue sky with white clouds—ironically symbolizing prosperity and a “happy future,” reflecting on Hungary’s anticipated EU accession in 2004.
Two decades later, while Hungary’s integration into NATO and the European Union is often framed as a success story, many experienced it as a complex and uneven transition. The present work, Everyday Sculpture Garden, can be seen as both a continuation and transformation of these earlier ideas.
Art Historical Dialogue
This environmental, participatory sculpture cannot be separated from art historical precedents such as Agnes Denes’s Wheatfield – A Confrontation (1982) and Joseph Beuys’s 7000 Oaks, both landmark works in land art and ecological thinking.
Denes’s project created a powerful paradox by planting wheat in a highly valuable urban area, symbolizing food, economy, and ecological imbalance. Beuys, meanwhile, envisioned art as a form of social regeneration, a concept central to his idea of “social sculpture.”
Everyday Aesthetics and Social Sculpture
Dimić’s current work aligns with the idea of everyday art practice—a form of contemporary artwork that blurs the boundaries between art and life. It embraces the notion that everyday creativity is authentic, democratic, and shaped by people interacting with their environment.
In this project, found stones—seemingly insignificant objects—are transformed into a living, communal sculpture through the interaction of passersby, residents, and the artist acting as a subtle director. The process itself becomes the artwork, positioning the project within the framework of relational aesthetics.
One particularly touching moment involved a father and his young son rearranging the stones together—highlighting the emotional and human dimension of the work. These small compositions can carry symbolic meaning, from Christian references (such as the twelve apostles) to Zen-inspired interpretations.
Dedication and Meaning
The exhibition also serves as a tribute to Dimić’s chosen Hungarian mentor, the late sculptor Pál Kő. In his case, the name itself (“Kő,” meaning stone) became inseparable from his artistic identity and medium.
Ultimately, Everyday Sculpture Garden is both a poetic and critical reflection: a contemporary, participatory artwork in Budapest, Hungary that explores memory, community, labor, and hope. It suggests that even within precarious, transactional, and increasingly dehumanized socio-economic systems, art still has the power to create meaning, connection, and belief in a more humane future.
Vító Vojnits-Purcsár
Budapest, May 15, 2025