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Central Europe (not Germany, Switzerland, and Austria), 1900 a.d.present

Encompasses present-day Czech Republic, Hungary, Liechtenstein, Moldova, Poland, Romania, and Slovakia

Georges Fouquet and Alphonse Mucha: Brooch Pavel Janák: Coffeepot Frantisek Kupka: Vertical and Diagonal Planes László Moholy-Nagy: [Photogram: Hands and Paintbrush] Victor Brauner: Prelude to a Civilization, 1954 Josef Koudelka: Kendice Jiri Kolar: Homage to Georges Braque Magdalena Abakanowicz: Androgyn III Stanislav Libensky and Jaroslava Brychtová: Vestment II


See an abridged list of European rulers.

See also Balkan Peninsula, British Isles, Central Europe (Austria, Germany, and Switzerland), Eastern Europe and Scandinavia,France, Iberian Peninsula, Italian Peninsula, Low Countries, and The United States and Canada.

The region is characterized by great political and ideological conflict during the twentieth century. Hungary, aligned with Austria, plays a major role in World War I. Following the conflict, Czechoslovakia is established as a political entity. It possesses 70–80 percent of the industry of the former Austria-Hungary. With the exception of Liechtenstein, all of the nations in this region are involved in World War II. In the postwar period, all are dominated by oppressive political regimes that do not fall until around 1990, to be replaced by more open, democratic governments.

The domination of the region by Communist and other repressive regimes has a chilling effect on what had previously been a vibrant international culture. In Hungary, around the turn of the century, Art Nouveau flourished in architecture and the other arts. In Prague, just before World War I, groups of artists combined their interests in local traditions with a fascination for Parisian Cubism to develop their own unique Cubist style. That style is seen in works of painting and sculpture, but also, most distinctively, in architecture and the decorative arts. During the years of Communist regimes, through most of the century, the early connections with Western European art are mostly lost. It is only with the fall of the repressive governments that the artistic communities in these countries are revitalized, and Western Europeans become more conversant with the histories of avant-garde movements in Hungary and Czechoslovakia.





• 1900 Czech-born artist Alphonse Mucha (1860–1939), known primarily for his posters in the Art Nouveau style, designs the Bosnia-Herzegovina Pavilion at the 1900 World's Fair in Paris. In 1909, he begins a series of murals, The Slav Epic, commissioned for the Lord Mayor's Hall in Prague. The twenty canvases, measuring about 24 x 30 feet, are not completed until 1928.

• 1901 Inspired by the Arts and Crafts movement, as well as Tolstoy's heroic depictions of the peasantry, the Gödöllö artists' colony is founded outside Budapest to foster a modern national style in the decorative arts by adapting elements of Hungary's vernacular art and architecture. Gödöllö's workshops, which are open to the rural poor, include weaving, textile and wallpaper design, furniture making, stained glass, sculpture, graphics, and ceramics. Until the colony disbands in 1921, its designers and craftsmen exhibit at international salons to much acclaim and receive commissions for important public projects.

• 1903 The Cifra Palace in Budapest, designed by Géza Márkus (1872–1912), is completed. With its organic forms, polychrome tile roof, and floral ornamentation on the exterior, it exemplifies the Hungarian Art Nouveau. The simple geometry of the building's massing also demonstrates the influence in Hungary of the Vienna Secession.

• 1903–14 Prague-born Maria Kirschner is the principal staff designer for the Bohemian Loetz glassworks. Kirschner and other designers, such as Dagobert Peche (1887–1923) and Josef Hoffmann (1870–1956), contribute to the high quality of Loetz wares. Their designs reflect the influence of both French Art Nouveau glassmaking and Viennese modernism.

• 1904 Romanian sculptor Constantin Brancusi (1876–1957) travels from Bucharest, where he had studied at the School of Fine Arts, to Paris, where he will produce important modernist works, starting with The Kiss in 1908.

• 1904–6 The Gresham Palace Hotel is constructed in Budapest, an important example of the Hungarian Art Nouveau style in architecture. Designed by Zsigmond Quittner (1857–1918), the hotel is built by the Gresham Life Assurance Company of Britain, and originally caters primarily to a British clientele.

• 1905 An exhibition in Prague of paintings by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch (1863–1944) is a catalyst for the formation of Osma (the Eight), the first specifically modernist Bohemian group. Members, including Emil Filla (1882–1953) and Bohumil Kubista (1884–1918), create an aesthetic vocabulary melding expressionism and primitivism to explore a sense of alienation engendered by the sociopolitical conditions of a kingdom on the verge of collapse. Many of the Eight will be instrumental in the development of Czech Cubism.

• 1905 Polish writer Henryk Sienkiewicz (1846–1916) receives the Nobel Prize in literature for his novel Quo Vadis.

• 1908 The Association of Architects of the Mánes Union of Artists (Spolek Vytvarnych Umelcu Mánes) is founded in Prague. Among its members are Pavel Janák (1882–1956), Otakar Novotny (1880–1959), and Josef Gocár (1880–1945), who, inspired by the buildings and writings of Viennese architect Otto Wagner (1841–1918), formulate an aesthetic for architecture and the decorative arts that incorporates aspects of Cubist painting. In 1912, Janák and Gocár establish the Prague Art Workshops for crafts and furniture design, through which they produce Cubist-inspired utilitarian household items.

• 1908 English king Edward VII (r. 1901–10) orders a set of crystal drinking vessels from Moser & Sons, the Bohemian glass manufactory established by Ludwig Moser (1833–1916). The firm's high-quality product then becomes known as the "Glass of Kings."

• 1911 The Group of Plastic Artists (Skupina Vytvarnych Umelcu) is founded in Prague, its members embracing Cubism as a means of establishing a national Czech style in painting and other visual arts. Three works produced by sculptor member Otto Gutfreund (1889–1927) in 1911 (Anxiety, Hamlet, and Don Quixote) embody the group's "Cubo-Expressionist" style. By 1912, however, a split will develop between practitioners of this "pluralism" and the more "concentrated" devotees of Parisian Cubism.

• 1912 Czech-born painter and graphic artist Frantisek Kupka (1871–1957) exhibits Amorpha: Fugue in Two Colors at the Salon d'Automne in Paris. A pioneer of abstract art, that same year Kupka creates Vertical Schemes I, which will later be described as the first purely geometric work in modern painting.

• 1914 Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia, thus beginning World War I. Austria-Hungary will be aligned with Turkey, Bulgaria, and Germany as the Central Powers against the Allies: Great Britain, France, Russia, Italy, and the U.S. In 1916, Romania enters the war on the Allied side.

• 1914–16 Hungarian pianist and composer Béla Bartók (1881–1945) achieves international renown with his score for the ballet The Wooden Prince. When his ballet The Miraculous Mandarin is poorly received in 1919, he gives up performing in Hungary and later moves to the U.S. Bartók is known for preserving Hungarian folk music and incorporating aspects of it into his own compositions.

• 1915 "The Metamorphosis," a short story by Czech writer Franz Kafka (1883–1924), recounts the saga of traveling salesman Gregor Samsa, who metamorphoses overnight into a giant insect. One of the few works by Kafka to be published during his brief life, it encapsulates the haunting narrative more fully elaborated in novels such as The Trial: the alienated individual persecuted by unseen forces.

• 1915 The first issue of the journal A Tett (The Act) is published in Budapest. Edited by writer and artist Lajos Kassák (1887–1967), A Tett is a forum for the avant-garde group Aktivismus (Activism), whose members include László Moholy-Nagy (1895–1946) and Béla Uitz (1887–1972). Inspired by the international avant-garde, particularly Expressionism and Constructivism, the Activists' revolutionary politics and cultural ideas attract official condemnation. When A Tett is banned for its socialist, antimilitarist stance, Kassák and Uitz found Ma (Today) to promote modernist art, international and Hungarian. In 1920, Ma is banned and Kassák moves to Vienna, where he continues to produce the journal for a Hungarian audience until 1926.

• 1916–18 Edvard Benes (1884–1948), Milan Stefánik (1880–1919), and Tomás Masaryk (1850–1937) lead the movement for Czech independence. With the support of the Allied forces of World War I, the Czechoslovak Republic (Czechoslovakia) is created in 1918 and Masaryk is elected its first president. The end of the war also brings the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian empire, and Hungary becomes an independent republic, as does Poland.

• 1917–1920s Various currents in Polish avant-garde art are embodied in a number of groups active after World War I. Inspired by Expressionism, the Formisci (Formists, 1917–22) of Kraków attempt to articulate a new national style comparable to Italian Futurism or French Cubism. Bunt (Revolt), a group of painters, graphic artists, and poets in Poznan (1918–20), have strong ties to the German Expressionists as well. The 1923 Exhibition of New Art in Wilno (now Vilnius, Lithuania), organized by Wladyslaw Strzeminski (1893–1952), functions as a manifesto for Polish Constructivism, inspired by the Soviet avant-garde. Strzeminski will co-found several Constructivist groups–Blok (Block, 1924–26), a.r. (artysci rewolucyjni, "revolutionary artists," 1926–39), and Praesens (1929–36)—that advance the cause of modernism through exhibitions, publications, and the International Museum of Modern Art, established in Lódz in 1931.

• 1919–20 Communist rule in Hungary under the leadership of Béla Kun (1886–1939) is halted by Admiral Miklós Horthy (1868–1957), aided by Romanian troops. Horthy establishes a dictatorial regime (1920–44), launching a "white terror" aimed at ridding the country of leftists and Jews. Some 5,000 people are executed, another 100,000 forced to emigrate. In the inhospitable political environment of hypernationalism and rising fascism, many artists and intellectuals leave the country, among them several Hungarians who will have a profound impact on graphic design and photography in their adopted homes, including László Moholy-Nagy (1895–1946), André Kertész (1894–1985), Gyula Halász (later called Brassaï, 1899–1984), György Kepes (1906–2001), Martin Munkacsi (1896–1963), and Robert Capa (1913—1954).

• 1920 The Czech avant-garde group Devetsil ("nine forces") is founded in Prague to advocate the fusion of Constructivism and "poetism" in architecture, literature, the arts, film, and photography. The group's leader, Karel Teige (1900–1951), makes major contributions in book design and typography, particularly through the house organ ReD (Revue Devetsilu), and becomes an internationally recognized architectural theorist whose concept of the "minimum dwelling," a model of Functionalist design, will be incorporated into Communist-era housing.

• 1920 Romanian composer Georges Enescu (1881–1955) begins the work that is considered his masterpiece and which establishes his reputation as one of the country's greatest musicians of the century, Oedip: Tragedy in Four Acts and Six Tables.

• 1922 Romanian-born writer Eugène Ionesco (1909–1994) returns from Paris (where he had lived with his family since shortly after his birth) to Romania, where he will be educated in Bucharest and begin his career as a critic, before returning to France for good in 1942. Ionesco will become a well-known playwright associated with the Theater of the Absurd.

• 1923 Czech satirist Jaroslav Hasek (1883–1923) dies before completing his multivolume masterwork, The Good Soldier Schweik, an absurdist antiwar novel that will become a world classic.

• 1924 The Czech Photographic Society is founded to oppose the romanticized aesthetics of Pictorialism and promote avant-gardism. Its leading proponents, including Jaromír Funke (1896–1945) and Josef Sudek (1896–1976), bring preciseness and objectivity to photographs of architecture, city scenes, the artifacts of technology and industry, and everyday objects, using bold cuts, sharp diagonals, unconventional overviews and underviews, and diagonal compositions.

• 1924 Polish writer Wladyslaw Stanislaw Reymont (1867–1925) receives the Nobel Prize in literature for his novel Chlopi (The Peasants).

• 1925 Hungarian-born architect and furniture designer Marcel Breuer (1902–1981) becomes head of the carpentry workshop at the Bauhaus in Dessau, where he begins to experiment with tubular steel in various chair designs (i.e., the Wassily) and develops a line of modular furnishings. Breuer will tap new technologies and unusual materials—plywood, cane, mortared rubble, concrete, aluminum—throughout his career in Germany and the United States, where he emigrates in 1937.

• 1926 Marshal Józef Pilsudski (1867–1935) stages a coup and inaugurates the Sanacja ("sanitation") regime in Poland. Autocratic rule will continue under the military after Pilsudski's death.

• 1930s The Iron Guard, a fascist mass movement, is a major social and political force committed to the "Christian and racial" restoration of Romania.

• 1933–39 The Kraków Group (Grupa Krakowska) of avant-garde artists forms in response to the conservative teaching methods of the Academy of Fine Arts as well as the rise of fascism in Polish politics. Led by sculptor Henryk Wicinski (1908–1943), the group is affiliated with the (banned) Communist party and defines its program as pro-proletarian and antinationalist. Most members' works are destroyed during the Nazi Occupation.

• 1937 Constantin Brancusi (1876–1957) erects the Infinite Column, a sculpture more than 96 feet tall and constructed of cast iron beads on a steel framework, in Tîrgu-Jiu, Romania, near his birthplace. One of a series of similar works begun in 1918, the Infinite Column commemorates those killed in a battle against the German Army in World War I.

• 1938 Prince Franz Josef II (1906–1989) is the first prince of Liechtenstein to reside in the country, where he rules from the capital city of Vaduz until his death in 1989.

• 1939–45 Nazi Germany invades Poland. World War II begins when Britain declares war on Germany in response to the invasion. In 1940, the Jewish quarter of Warsaw is cordoned off. In 1941, Germany begins building concentration camps in Poland (Auschwitz and Treblinka). In 1943, Jewish resistance erupts in the Warsaw Ghetto; the uprising lasts nearly four weeks before the Germans raze the ghetto. In 1944, Polish resistance forces capture Warsaw, but the Germans recapture the city and burn it to the ground. In 1945, the Soviet Red Army drives the Germans from Poland.

• 1939–45 The Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia begins. The country is partitioned and Slovakia declared an independent state. Czechoslovakian Jews are sent to a ghetto at Terezín, and then to camps in Poland, where they are exterminated. A 1945 uprising against the Germans in Prague precedes the end of World War II in that year. Liechtenstein remains neutral, while Hungary and Romania are aligned with the Axis powers (Germany, Italy, Japan). In 1944, Miklós Horthy (1868–1957) is deposed by Hungarian Nazis after he attempts to negotiate an armistice with the Soviets; a puppet government is installed and Hungarian Jews and gypsies are deported to death camps.

• 1945 A Soviet-backed government is installed in Romania. The Romanian People's Republic is proclaimed in 1947. The next year, Socialist Realism is imposed on artists; all avant-garde forms of expression are banned.

• 1945–49 German troops are driven from Hungary by the Soviet Red Army. The new government introduces a land reform bill, redistributing land from large estate owners to peasants. By 1949, the Communist Hungarian Workers Party dominates the government and the country becomes part of the Soviet bloc.

• 1947 In elections widely regarded as rigged, Communists consolidate power in Poland and the country becomes a Soviet satellite. From 1949 until 1954, the doctrine of Socialist Realism prevails in the arts; independent artistic formations are discouraged, and independent galleries are replaced by large, state-sponsored exhibitions held in Warsaw.

• 1948–49 A political crisis in Czechoslovakia is followed by the establishment of a government dominated by members of the Communist party and modeled on the Soviet Union, of which it becomes a satellite state. The Union of Artists is established to promote Socialist Realism and the avant-garde art community withers.

• 1948 In Bucharest, Romanian painter Corneliu Baba (1906–1997) exhibits The Chess Player, among the works that will establish his reputation as one of the foremost painters in his country during the twentieth century. The painting will be shown at the Venice Biennale in 1956 and later in Moscow, Prague, and elsewhere.

• 1948 The National Museum of Art in Bucharest is founded to house the former Royal Collection, as well as those of other museums in the Romanian capital. The collection includes Romanian traditional and modern art, but also emphasizes French art of the turn of the twentieth century.

• 1953 Soviet control over the Eastern Bloc begins to loosen after the death of Joseph Stalin. Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev's official denunciation of Stalin at the XX Party Congress in 1956 is the first step in a gradual process of "destalinization" in the Soviet satellites.

• 1955 Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, and Romania are founding member of the Warsaw Pact, a military alliance of Soviet Bloc countries organized against the perceived threat of the NATO alliance of Western nations.

• 1955 Polish theater director and painter Tadeusz Kantor (1915–1990) founds Cricot 2, an avant-garde collective of artists and theoreticians, in Kraków.

• 1955 In Poland, a critical break with the tenets of Socialist Realism occurs with the state-sponsored Polish Exhibition of Young Artists. Held at the Arsenal in Warsaw, the show features expressionistic canvases and galvanizes public discussion of the state of contemporary art. In the aftermath, new artistic formations dedicated to abstraction and Art Informel spring up around the country and new venues showcase contemporary European art (East and West), including Warsaw's Galeria Krzywe Kolo (opens 1956), Krzysztofory Gallery in Kraków (1959), and El Gallery in Elblag (1960), the first space in Poland dedicated to experimental art.

• 1955–58 The postwar trilogy of filmmaker Andrzej Wajda (born 1926)—A Generation (1955), Kanal (1957), and Ashes and Diamonds (1958)—brings international renown to the "Polish School" of cinema, which flourishes in the more liberal post-Stalinist climate of the years 1956 to 1963. Wadja is a graduate of the Lódz Film School, a state-operated institution that opened in 1948. Over the years, its students will include Kryzysztof Zanussi (born 1939), Jerzy Skolimowski (born 1938), and Krzysztof Kieslowski (1941–1996), among other famed filmmakers.

• 1956 A demonstration by Hungarian students and workers escalates into a full-scale uprising against Stalinism and interference from Moscow. Thousands are killed in street fighting before the rebellion is crushed by Soviet troops. Prime Minister Imre Nagy (1896–1958) is removed from office and later executed, along with some 400 freedom fighters and sympathetic politicians.

• 1956 Polish workers riot in Poznan over social and economic conditions, and more than fifty people are killed. In response, the Polish Communist party—over Moscow's objections–selects the more liberal Wladyslaw Gomulka (1906—1982) as its new chief. Gomulka initiates modest reforms but stops short of full-scale destalinization.

• 1957–58 Working in Czechoslovakia's collectivized glass industry making utilitarian objects, designers such as René Roubícek (born 1922), Jaroslava Brychtová (born 1924), and Stanislav Libensky (1921–2002) create a new art form: monumental glass sculpture. Their astonishing works are introduced to the West at the Milan Triennale in 1957 and Expo '58 in Brussels,

• 1959 The Béla Balázs Studio for young experimental filmmakers opens in Budapest. The studio will nurture a renaissance in Hungarian documentary and feature films in the 1960s, and provide a sympatico working environment for avant-garde film and video artists in the 1970s.

• 1959 Jerzy Grotowski (1933–1999) founds the Laboratory Theater (Teatr Laboratorium) in Opole, Poland, where he transforms the relationship between actors and audience by incorporating audience members into dramatic productions. Grotowski's Towards a Poor Theater (1968) becomes the bible of exploratory theater in the 1970s.

• 1963 Tadeusz Kantor (1915–1990) organizes an "anti-exhibition" at Krzysztofory Gallery in Kraków, Poland, consisting of 937 objects of everyday life. Kantor's theatrical environments and happenings (the first in 1965) lay the groundwork for much of Poland's experimental art in the 1960s and '70s.

• 1964–66 Aiming for a total synthesis of art and life, Czech and Slovak artists take to the streets in Fluxus-style actions and happenings. Among their numerous ephemeral activities: Stano Filko (born 1937), Alex Mlynárcik (born 1934), and Zita Kostrová release their Happsoc ("happenings" plus "society") manifestos declaring the city of Bratislava and all its inhabitants a work of art. Milan Knízák (born 1940) and members of the Aktual Group organize walks through Prague staged as happenings and deliver packages filled with art to randomly chosen mailboxes.

• 1965 The István Király Museum in Székesfehérvár becomes a hub of contemporary culture with its series of exhibitions documenting the history of modernist Hungarian art and shows of avant-garde artists unable to exhibit in Budapest. In 1968–69, the museum organizes landmark exhibitions of the work of László Moholy-Nagy (1895–1946) and the long-neglected pioneer Lajos Kassák (1887–1967).

• 1965 Nicolae Ceausescu (1918–1989) becomes leader of the Communist party in Romania. Although he challenges Soviet domination—largely because of his opposition to destalinization—Ceausescu rules the country with an iron fist, notable for extreme cruelty and the exploitation of workers. Internal dissent is swiftly suppressed.

• 1965 Polish artist Magdalena Abakanowicz (born 1930) receives the Grand Prix at the São Paulo Bienal for her fiber sculptures called Abakans, three-dimensional relief weavings suspended from the ceiling. In the 1970s, Abakanowicz expands her repertoire of materials, using sisal, burlap, and resin over plaster casts to create installations of figures and body parts (i.e., Backs, 1976–82), each installation containing dozens of sculptures.

• 1965 Polish painter and Conceptual artist Roman Opalka (born 1931) begins the series Counted Paintings, a lifelong project that consists of painting rows of tiny numbers from zero to infinity in shades of gray on uniformly sized rectangular canvases.

• 1965 The First Biennial of Spatial Forms is organized in Elblag, Poland. Sponsored by Zamech, the local industrial plant, the project commissions artists to partner with plant workers in creating public sculptures from scrap material. The Elblag biennials continue through 1974, involving artists such as Henryk Morel (died 1968) and Andrzej Matuszewski (born 1924). The "plein-air" movement climaxes with the Symposium Wroclaw '70, in which Henryk Stazewski (1894–1988) presents his "light sculpture" drawn in the sky with anti-aircraft spotlights. Stazewski's career stretches back to the first Polish avant-garde formations in the 1920s, when he belonged to the Constructivist groups Blok and a.r.

• 1965–66 The state-sponsored Galeria Foksal opens in Warsaw and quickly becomes a progressive venue for Conceptual and other types of experimental art. Among the artists who congregate at the gallery is Krzysztof Wodiczko (born 1943), whose early installation works—ironic comments on modern technology—invite viewer participation. In the 1980s, Wodiczko will organize Public Projections—gigantic images projected onto public buildings—in New York and other cities.

• 1966 Romania bans contraceptives and mandates a five-child quota per family.

• 1966 Miklós Erdély (1928–1986), Gábor Altorjay (born 1944), and Tamás Szentjóby (born 1944) organize Hungary's first "happening," The Lunch: In Memoriam Batu Khan. Spurred by the radical politics of the student movement, Conceptual Art flourishes during the late 1960s and into the '70s, encompassing all media. Erdély produces "textual actions" and photo-text series. Szentjóby's work precedes from the idea that art is what is forbidden, hence his "Be Prohibited" slogan. Dóra Maurer (born 1937) begins her pioneering work with the photogram. Endre Tót (born 1937) renounces painting and begins his purely verbal works, particularly in book form, for instance, My Unpainted Canvases and the I Am Glad If … series. Sculptor György Jovánovics (born 1939), exploring various logical systems on which to base his work, reconstructs a 1916 chess match between Lenin and Tristan Tzara. Performance artist Tibor Hajas (1946–1980) uses a camera flash to illuminate essential moments of the action. Many of these artists are included in the groundbreaking exhibitions held in 1968–69 at the architectural planning office IPARTERV in Budapest, organized to draw attention to and energize Hungarian avant-garde art.

• 1966 Closely Watched Trains, a film by Jirí Menzel (born 1938), becomes the first international hit of Czech New Wave cinema. The film is adapted from a novel by Bohumil Hrabal (1914–1997), whose tales of ordinary people inspire many New Wave directors.

• 1967 Czech writer and opposition leader Milan Kundera (born 1929) publishes his first novel, Zert (The Joke), a satirical account of everyday life under Stalinism in the 1950s.

• January–August 1968 The Prague Spring. Hardline Czech party leader Antonín Novotny is replaced by liberal Alexander Dubcek (1921–1992), who implements political, economic, and cultural reforms intended to create a new model of socialism. Censorship is lifted; guidelines are drafted for democratizing the electoral system, and freedom of assembly and expression are to be constitutionally guaranteed. As the movement to democratize socialism becomes more widespread, antireformists appeal to Moscow and Warsaw Pact troops invade Czechoslovakia in August. The extraordinary popular resistance to the invasion is captured by photographer Josef Koudelka (born 1938) in stirring images smuggled out of the country and published around the world.

• 1968 Polish authorities ban the theater production of Dziady by Adam Mickiewicz (1798–1855) at Warsaw University, claiming the play is anti-Soviet. The action, taken at a time of simmering discontent over the restoration of strict communist doctrine to school curricula, triggers student protests that are met with severe reprisals.

• 1968 The Hungarian Communist party introduces a package of reforms called the New Economic Mechanism, coinciding with a period of liberalization that begins in the mid-1960s.

• 1969 An exhibition of works by Romanian sculptor and Conceptual artist Paul Neagu (1938–2004) is held at the Demarco Gallery in Edinburgh. Neagu settles in London, where he founds the Generative Arts Group (GAG), with Philip Honeysuckle, Husney Belmood, and others. The members are actually fictitious personas invented by Neagu, through which he creates work in a variety of styles.

• 1970 Romanian textile and installation artist Ana Lupas (born 1940) creates an earthwork with the women of Margau, a village in Transylvania, by hanging dozens of white sheets on laundry lines extended across a green hillside. Lupas, who refers to the process of her art as "social therapeutics," will influence a generation of Romanian artists as a teacher at the academy in Cluj.

• 1970–73 Balatonboglár Chapel Gallery, an alternative space established by Conceptual artist György Galántai (born 1941) outside Budapest, hosts lively gatherings of the avant-garde. Regularly harassed by authorities, the gallery is closed by police in 1973 as part of renewed restrictions on culture and the arts after Moscow halts the New Economic Mechanism.

• 1972 Romanian leader Nicolae Ceausescu (1918–1989) launches a program of demolition and reconstruction in town and country. Much of historic central Bucharest, once known as the "Paris of the East," is destroyed to make way for a new civic center, which will include the president's palace, the third largest building in the world (popularly referred to as the Madman's House).

• 1977 Charter 77 circulates in Prague. Drafted by a group of dissidents including Václav Havel (born 1936) and Jan Patocka (1907–1977), and signed by 240 intellectuals and activists, the document demands the restoration of civil rights. Havel and Patocka are arrested; Patocka dies as a result of police abuse during interrogation.

• 1978 Hungarian Conceptualist Gyula Pauer (born 1941) creates A Forest of Demonstrating Boards, an installation of 131 placards with slogans and inscriptions, for a sculpture exhibition in Nagyatád. Authorities confiscate and destroy the work.

• 1978 Romanian intelligence officer Ion Mihai Pacepa (born 1928) defects to the West. In 1986, he publishes Red Horizons: Chronicles of a Communist Spy Chief, which is a condemnation of the Ceausescu regime.

• 1978 Liechtenstein initiates greater integration into Europe by becoming a member of the Council of Europe. In 1990, Liechtenstein will join the United Nations and in 1995 the World Trade Organization.

• 1979 Husband-and-wife team György Galántai and Júlia Klaniczay establish Artpool in Budapest as an archive for alternative art, collecting and cataloguing documents of the nonofficial art scene from the 1960s to the present.

• 1980 Polish émigré poet and literary critic Czeslaw Milosz (born 1911) receives the Nobel Prize in literature.

• 1980 Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, and the Soviet Union boycott the Venice Biennale when the director refuses to cancel an exhibit of Eastern European and Soviet dissident art.

• 1980–90 The trade union Solidarnosc (Solidarity) emerges in the tumult of strikes and other disturbances at the Lenin Shipyards in Gdansk, Poland, under the leadership of Lech Walesa (born 1943). Within a year, 10,000 Poles have joined the union. Authorities respond by imposing martial law, outlawing Solidarity, and jailing many of its leaders. In 1983, martial law is lifted and Walesa receives the Nobel Prize for Peace. Solidarity is legalized in 1988 and helps to form a coalition government. In the 1989 elections, Solidarity candidates defeat the Communists; Walesa becomes president the next year and immediately introduces market reforms, including large-scale privatization, in what becomes known as the "big bang."

• 1984 Czech collagist and poet Jirí Kolár's Newsreel 1968, composed of fifty-two collages each devoted to a week in 1968, is exhibited at Kunsthalle Nuremberg. The graphic diary combines documents of private and public life—newspapers, letters, manifestos, petitions, obituaries—and short commentaries by Kolár (1914–2002).

• 1986 Group Inconnu invites Hungarian and foreign artists to submit mementos of the 1956 Revolution for an exhibition entitled The Fighting City, to be held in the apartment of Inconnu member Tibor Philipp in Budapest. The entire collection of works is confiscated by the police before the exhibition opens.

• 1987 Romanian workers storm Communist party headquarters to protest the mass starvation caused by President Ceausescu's brutal economic policies.

• 1989 Communist power in Czechoslovakia comes to an end with the Velvet Revolution. As mass protests and strikes gain momentum, a broad antigovernment coalition forms, called the Civic Forum. The Communist leadership resigns and longtime dissident Václav Havel (born 1936) is elected president.

• 1989 Romanian security forces fire on demonstrators in Timisoara, triggering a rebellion that spreads to Bucharest and into the armed forces. President Ceausescu attempts to flee, but is captured by the military. Charged with a number of crimes, including genocide, Ceausescu is executed on Christmas Day. The leader of the revolution, Ion Iliescu (born 1930), is elected president in 1990.

• 1990 Milan Knízák (born 1940), an artist associated with the earlier Fluxus movement, is appointed professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague. In 1999, he is made General Director of the National Gallery in Prague and in that capacity undertakes its financial, curatorial, and physical reorganization, placing greater emphasis on modern and contemporary art.

• 1991 The collapse of the Soviet Union leads Hungary, which had been moving toward a free-market economy and democratic political institutions during the 1980s, to establish closer ties to Western Europe. Hungary will join NATO in 1999.

• 1993 Czechoslovakia is divided into two independent countries, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, an event called the Velvet Divorce. Vladimír Meciar (born 1942) becomes prime minister of Slovakia. His regime is characterized by resistance to economic reform in the post-Communist era and political distance from the rest of Europe. When Mikulás Dzurinda (born 1955) becomes prime minister in 1998, he leads Slovakia toward European Union and NATO membership.

• 1993 Poland and the Czech Republic ban abortion.

• 1999 The Czech Republic gains membership in NATO. The Republic's future membership is threatened when Austrians protest the Czech start-up of a nuclear power plant at Temelin.

• 2000 The Museum of Fine Arts (Kunstmuseum) of Liechtenstein, in Vaduz, opens a new building designed by the Swiss firm of Morger, Degelo & Kerez. The museum exhibits works produced since 1900 and emphasizes sculpture and installation art.