Modern Hungarian artists were committed to creating a new means of seeing, and ultimately a new way of behaving. They, like other progressive artists in Europe from the 19th and early 20th century, were among the most inventive and articulate in projecting a new vision through which a better world might be perceived and achieved. Many Hungarian painters were eager to rebel against the conservative values and tastes of their parents’ generation. What motivated these modernists was a general feeling of profound disquiet that only a new art might portray and through which a remedy could be visualized.
Tickets are $10 and do not included admission to Museum galleries. Seating is limited.
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