10/09/2025
This is an attempt to evoke the possibility that each museum collection might be, could be, as eventually it is – endless. As each absence and omission in a collection is nothing less than a presence.
Through the gathering of the archival, the (non)visible elements of this collection of ours and the possible and impossible experiences and relationships, it becomes a gathering of our many possible pasts. Past, or to be more accurate, pastness that could be.
Pastness that our living present(s) might need and hope for.
Envisioned as notes on unseen collection of desires, in the form of an artistic research into the possible, this is only one of the many thinkable archival and documentary interventions into the MoCA-Skopje’s visible and invisible collection.
Through a speculative take on the history of the Museum’s collection, initially responding to American and USA based presences, and the potential relationships between the art spaces of USA and first Yugoslavia, then North Macedonia, so to critically look at the spaces of making and open possibilities for the multiple pasts to be treated as open-ended (non)regimes.
The exhibition gathers archives, works and thoughts of Sarai Sherman, Jasper Johns, Ann Chernow, Burt Chernow, Christo Javašev, Metka Krašovec, Tadeusz Mislowski, Luis Camnitzer, Jeff Russell, Petar Hadži Boškov, Robert Jankuloski, Dunja Ivanišević, Janaki and Milton Manaki, Blagoja Drnkov, Roland Baladi, Diana Thompson, Kumjana Novakova.
We are grateful for the knowledge and work of all known and unknown artists, writers, scholars, activists and all other cultural and art workers without whom it would be impossible to research and activate all the multiplicities we come from and learn from.
Honoring 30 years of cooperation between the United States and North Macedonia, the exhibition is organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art – Skopje, with the support of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of North Macedonia and the Embassy of the United States of America in the Republic of North Macedonia. Its realization was generously supported by the State Archives, National Cinematheque, and the USA National Academy of Design.
Exhibition opening September 10, 2025 at 7pm.