
Artist

Oliver Lantos
Oliver Lantos (b.1992) is a Hungarian photographer currently living and working in Budapest.
His works are mostly long term project, whose starting point are personal experience or a visceral reaction. He is interested in the systematization of his observations and researches, and the process of building these systems.
In his projects, he usually explores the effect of contemporary politics, the LGBTQ community, and the casual relationships between the problems of global social systems and their consequences, as well as their effects on human psyche and nature.
He graduated from the Moholy-Nagy University of Art and Design (MOME) in Budapest, in 2022, before that he studied at the KREA Contemporary Art Institute. Member of the Studio of Young Photographers since 2023. In 2024 he was awarded the József Pécsi Photography Grant.
Male Geist
The series explores the concept of masculinity. I contrast the symbols associated with masculinity and their effects with the patterns they bring. My project is based on social psychology literature and interviews, which I supplement with my own perspectives. I seek causal links between them and build a system along an associative chain.
My aim is to portray the man of the present age, with all his fragility and problems. It is an attempt to find images of the man of the 21st century. I want to nuance the stereotypes associated with men and masculinity in the past. The symbolic and associative images, processed from research and interviews, form the structure of the series. These will be supplemented with images from my own experiences and from my observation of the contemporary environment. In the following, I will create a system to map the male psyche in the 21st century and its influences.
I started my project during the József Pécsi Photography Grant 2024 and I am currently working on it.
Du musst dein Leben ändern!
The series focuses on the polarised political discourse and its representation in the media and its impact on the human psyche, while also exploring the relationship between politics, nature and the living world.
In the series, the images are linked according to a universal system of symbols, forming pairs of images that form an endless chain of associations with each other. In the process, I work with staged photographs, but consciously on way that seems to be looking at the world around us through the eyes of a 21st century flaneur.
The frame of the heterogeneous series is a balance between nature and the human-made environment - this can be a social environment, personal situations or human-made physical space - so the built environment is as much a part of the picture as the natural one.
The frustration experienced in one is what drives the exploration of the other, but the politics and digital world has an impact on everything. In associative imagery, I am not looking for solutions, rather to interpret, to find similarities and connections between the environment and the current mood of the people living in it, and their visions of the future.
*“You must change your life.” Rainer Maria Rilke
Gajewszky Anna // Vékony Dorottya
Anna Gajewszky explores the mysteries of life through a series of sensitively made photographs. Alongside the paradox of life and death, she examines different layers of existence, clearly reflecting an honest and curious female perspective. In her work, she playfully incorporates experiences from both individual and collective lives, creating a universe that feels like an invitation to shared adventures. These adventures often begin with self-exploration—as in Anna's case—and continue with a deeper investigation of our roots, origins, and family. Through her own presence, the artist grants insight into the themes that captivate her while simultaneously becoming an organic part of them: in reality, her work is about us, even as we see her in the images. Her photographs combine the classical elements of staged photography with experimental techniques, including collage and archival materials, making her artistic approach even more dynamic and diverse.
Dorottya Vékony
visual artist, university lecturer (Institute of Media and Design, Eger), former FUTURES Talent
Hevesi-Szabó Lujza // Virágvölgyi István
Lujza Hevesi-Szabó is an exciting personality on the emerging photographers' scene of Hungary, who explores a wide range of current and relevant issues in her dynamic, experimental and fresh photo series, also in search of her own authentic voice. Her often bold and unconventional perspectives and visual conceptualisation usually result in an ironic, curved mirror viewpoint, but one can always sense that she uses these tools not for their own sake, but with a good sense of proportion, to elevate the situations faced by her subjects. Already at such a young age, she has found her place on the team of one of the country's leading news portals, but she is also building her private life's work, and is concerned with themes independent of the press. As an agent of two worlds, embracing both autonomous and applied photographic attitudes, she reflects experimentally on the social problems that surround her, an approach that is part of a long tradition of photography and promises a bright future for the author.
István Virágvölgyi
artistic director, Capa Center, Budapest
Lantos Olivér // Csizek Gabriella
The starting point of Olivér Lantos' long-lasting photo series are always questions that affect him personally and to which he responds with his own photographic tools. His researcher's attitude provides the basis for this, and he expresses his opinions and questions in the photographs that emerge from the process of observational image-making. His imagery is varied: nature and the urban environment, personal and public spaces, staged and found images, portraits, still lifes can all be interpreted as interacting parts of a flow of images, but they also carry meaning in their own right. He uses an associative method to construct his series, in which he interprets and organises, thus creating an open system.
Gabriella Csizek
curator of the permanent Robert Capa exhibition, Capa Center, Budapest
Kölcsey-Gyurkó Sára // Kopin Katalin
In the works of Sára Kölcsey-Gyurkó, the personal dimension is the most important. It was during her studies at university that she was introduced to feminist readings and viewpoints, which had a great influence on her. Besides her personal attachment, this also contributes to her focus on the themes of femininity, the female body and motherhood. She is a curious and sensitive observer of people and herself. The projects she works on are mainly related to her own life events: defining home, living with cancer. She likes to use metaphorical images in combination with documentary photography, giving her series an exciting rhythm. An important element in her work is that she is not an outside observer in the situations she photographs, but an active participant, shaping events and influencing the course of events. Her use of symbolic motifs is a departure from the classical documentary tradition, placing her on the border between conceptual imagery and documentary photography.
Katalin Kopin
curator, Capa Center, Budapest
Tóth Hunor // Mucsi Emese
Hunor Tóth, Hungarian artist from Bikafalva, Romania, was born in 2000, more than ten years after the 1989 revolution. His work is set in the village of Tăureni, the main location of his childhood and where he currently lives, and commute to Budapest. After the Romanian regime change, cities were transformed faster than rural settlements, the latter being more slowly affected by the processes of globalization, which is why in many cases folk, domestic traditions are still preserved there. Hunor Tóth's commuting lifestyle and intergenerational situation between two or three settlements create a kind of dual perspective in his photographs, allowing him to present the peculiarities of rural life in Romania in a loving, yet ironic, and self-reflexive way. Beyond the authentic, unique problem-solving strategies that emerge in relative isolation, and the Eastern European bricolage aesthetic of traditional buildings, spaces and objects, Hunor Tóth's work creates a contemporary image of a village that moves away from romantic stereotypes and offers insights into the new challenges of disintegrating communities, slowly changing rural landscapes, transformation of family life and uncertain futures. He graduated from Sapientia EMTE Cluj-Napoca with a BA in Film, Photography and Media and from Moholy-Nagy University of Art and Design in Budapest with an MA in Photography, and his visual solutions, which subversively blend traditionalism with contemporary aesthetics, and the cinematic references of his photobook show the influence of these institutions on his oeuvre.
Emese Mucsi
curator, Capa Center, Budapest