Iconographia Popularis, 2002
Paper, felt-tip pen, adhesive tape – 515 x 345 mm
Bónyai Barbara’s Iconographia Popularis is a seminal piece from her Contemplative Cycle (1999–2010), which focuses on the duality of contemporary visual culture and the shifting representations of social identity. While formally rooted in drawing, the work’s complete adhesive tape covering functions as both a physical and conceptual layer, imbuing the image with unique technical and symbolic depth.
The adhesive tape layer is not merely protective; it forms a translucent, yellowish, striated glaze across the surface of the paper. This simultaneously conceals and preserves the image, creating a strange lamination effect – a time-infused patina. This surface treatment, characteristic of Bónyai’s paper-based works from this period, serves as a metaphor for the tension between exposure and obfuscation: the image becomes archival and object-like, yet uncannily intimate.
The composition is particularly striking in its bidirectional readability. In its upright orientation, it reveals an alternative diva, rendered in a style reminiscent of anime and manga aesthetics. The female figure strikes a chansonnière-like pose, her body erotically contorted in a classical contrapposto with raised arms. Her face, drawn in expressive red, blue, and black lines, bears the raw, gestural mark-making that permeates the entire work.
When the image is flipped upside down, an entirely different narrative emerges: a sporty woman dressed in trousers and a cropped top appears, kneeling on her left knee and looking up seductively. Her elaborate headpiece doubles as a graffiti-like inscription reading Szomjas (“Thirsty”) – a coded manifesto of desire, absence, and self-expression. This dual reading underscores the tensions inherent in female body representation and subverts the clichés of popular iconography through irony and ambiguity.
The palette – white, red, green, yellow, blue, and black – is bold and poster-like, heightening the visual tension embedded within the image. Along the edge, the inscription Iconographia Popularis acts as a meta-reflection on the artwork itself: a critical gesture that appropriates and reframes the languages of popular image production. Chinese characters and their Hungarian translations (“TV,” “cinema screen,” “monitor”) further evoke the multilingual, globalized condition of contemporary visual culture.
Beyond its technical ingenuity and compositional ambiguity, Iconographia Popularis derives its deeper significance from the broader context in which it was created. As part of the Contemplative Cycle, the work reflects an artistic practice situated at the intersection of Western and Eastern thought, cultural critique, and abstraction. This period is characterized by a distinctly interdisciplinary and multimedia approach, incorporating elements such as video, animation, experimental sound, manga aesthetics, arte povera sensibilities, and the creative use of digital and electronic waste. Performative strategies also play a key role, often merging personal expression with socially engaged, activist impulses. Within this framework, Iconographia Popularis stands as a complex reflection on identity, visual culture, and the layered nature of representation.
In this light, Iconographia Popularis is not merely a standalone piece, but a visual and cultural manifesto – an intricate, layered reading of the female body, mass culture, and the construction of identity.