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Exhibitions and Projects
Revelations | 7 Nov. 2024 – 3 Dec. 2024

Revelations: Maksim Gaspari, Caricatures for the political-satirical weekly Osa

The political-satirical weekly Osa (The Wasp), edited by Radko Murnik (1870–1932), was published on Saturdays in 1905 and 1906 and was a propaganda publication of Ljubljana’s liberals. The short, often rhymed texts were designed to shock and provoke outrage. Gadfly attacks on church dignitaries, domestic politicians and foreign leaders are set alongside descriptions of domestic life: there are many allusions to sexuality, from nudity to intimacy before marriage, and amusing descriptions of marital problems such as infidelity and alcoholism. Osawas a pan-Slavic paper, although it was inspired by Germanic satirical magazines. The texts and illustrations emphasised the differences between Slavs and Germans, as well as the pitfalls of a glorious past, such as the Italian one.

Criticisms of the Church were multi-tiered, ranging from accusations of puritan morality, hypocrisy, rapacity, the paradoxes of celibacy to suggestions of offences against young boys in the Vatican. The jokes about stupid priests, episcopal avarice and the use of nicknames, e.g. “Neverfull”, are still shocking today. The clergy, of course, did not hold back and accused liberals of corrupt morality and Satanism. Osa's tone suited Ivan Tavčar (1851–1923), lawyer, writer and future mayor of Ljubljana, who became famous in the Regional Assembly for his stinging insults, directed either against his colleagues or against the audience gathered in the gallery. More moderate liberals were able to judge that in the end these harsh attacks undermined bourgeois interests.

Maksim Gaspari (1883–1980) was one of the main illustrators of Osa, along with Hinko Smrekar (1883–1942), Gvidon Birolla (1881–1963) and Fran Tratnik (1881–1957). The 22-year-old artist, who left Vienna when he was unable to support himself, took on every commission. But working for Osa had consequences - Gaspari later claimed that it was precisely because of these cartoons that he had not received the support of the Carniolan Regional Committee. The drawings do not have the traditional magnetism of the artist's later and non-political works, but the influence of the Stuttgart satirical magazine Der Wahre Jacob (1879-1933), an organ of the German Social Democrats, and the Munich magazine Simplicissimus ( 1896-1944; 1954-1967), founded by Albert Langen (1869-1909), an acquaintance of Ivana Kobilca in Paris, is noticeable. The possibility that Osa was known to editors and artists in the north remains unexplored.

Osa was published at a time of great and rapid change in Austrian politics. Baron Max Wladimir von Beck (1854–1943) became Prime Minister in 1906 and, although he lost office after only two years, his mandate was a key one for the monarchy: the voting reform gave men in the Austrian half of the country universal suffrage. He came into office at a time of crisis - in addition to the electoral reform, the country was in the middle of a customs dispute with the Hungarian part of the country. The opposition of the Slovenian liberals, including the National Progressive Party, stemmed from three features of the electoral system: the distribution of seats, which gave Styria and Carinthia fewer Slovenian deputies; the lower representation of the townspeople, with Ljubljana having one seat, while the other towns were merged with the countryside; and the absolute majority system, which gave the seat to the first-placed party in the district. Although the Slovenian parties were thus guaranteed 24 seats, which was proportionally the same as the number of Slovenians in Austrian lands, the conservative Slovenian People's Party won the elections in almost all districts. In the Tuesday elections on 14 May 1907, the conservatives won 18 seats and the progressives 4; one seat went to a candidate from the bipartisan camp, and in Istria to a joint Slovenian-Croatian candidate.

Author: Michel Mohor

7 November – 3 December 2024
National Gallery of Slovenia
Prešernova 24
1000 Ljubljana