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Ádám DALLOS, Gideon HORVÁT, Vanda HUMINILOWICZ, Zsófia JAUERNIK, Rebeka RÁCZ, Anna TÁNCOS:
Whispering Ruins

26 May - June 26 2026

 

The Rechnitzer Gallery’s summer exhibition focuses on works that draw heavily on the era of antiquity as a primary source of inspiration. Given that the connection to Greek and Roman antiquity has been a recurring artistic practice since the Renaissance, and considering the works of contemporary artists, one might ask in what ways this connection remains relevant or exciting today. For which themes can this return be inspiring, and which perspectives and artistic practices are worth rethinking from a contemporary viewpoint? To what extent do artists approach this period critically or rather nostalgically? How can these topos, often deeply ingrained in European culture, be reframed? The works on view in this group exhibition draw inspiration from ancient culture in the broadest sense: architecture, archaeology, and ruins, as well as mythology and its interpretations, become recurring themes across a variety of paintings, sculptures, and installations.


ÁDÁM DALLOS 
Ádám Dallos (1986) is a leading representative of the younger generation of figurative painters in Eastern Europe. 

Mythological creatures are recurring figures in his paintings. In his paintings, nude male figures appear in the company of mythical, symbolic animals, telling stories of desire, masculinity, and the dynamics of dominance and subordination. His powerful compositions, dominated by red tones, celebrate physicality.

He graduated from the Hungarian University of Fine Arts in 2009 and was a student at the Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Nuremberg in 2007. In 2023, he earned his Ph.D. from the Hungarian University of Fine Arts; his research focused on the examination of hidden homoeroticism in 20th-century Hungarian painting. In 2019, Dallos won the junior category of the Herczeg Klára Award. In recent years, he has exhibited at venues including the Kunsthalle in Krems, the Ludwig Museum in Budapest, the Saatchi Gallery in London, and Alkinois in Athens. In 2017, he was a resident at the Cité des Arts Internationale in Paris, and in 2025, at the Salzburger Kunstverein. His works can be found in numerous private collections across Europe, from Switzerland to Poland.

He currently lives and works in Cologne.
GIDEON HORVÁTH
Gideon Horváth (1990) is a Hungarian-French interdisciplinary visual artist, working mainly with sculptural installations. Conceptually he is often dealing with queer and ecological theories. His works question anthropocentrism and dualistic worldviews, always giving space to the sensual and intuitive ways of experiencing his topics. In his sculptural installations he mainly works with beeswax, which he uses as a queer material as it is both very sensitive and highly resilient. The wax has the qualities of being ambivalent, fluid and constantly becoming, which are notions that are in Horváth’s central interests.

From 2010 to 2013, he was a student at the Université Paris VIII., and from 2014 to 2015, he studied in the Intermedia program at the Hungarian University of Fine Arts. His works have been exhibited at numerous domestic and international institutions and exhibitions, including the TIC Gallery, the OFF-Biennale Budapest, Pragovka, the Carl Kostyál Gallery, and the Museum of Fine Arts. In 2023, he won the Esterházy Art Award, and in 2024, the AICA Award.

He lives and works in Budapest.
VANDA HUMINILOWICZ
The most striking feature of Vanda Huminilowicz’s (1978) paintings is that the artist approaches painting not as a potential method of image-making, but as one of the most ancient and instinctive forms of artistic expression. Therefore, when discussing Huminilowicz’s panel paintings, we cannot necessarily speak of images, or at least of visual qualities in the sense of the autonomous pictoriality that emerged during modernism. In interpreting her paintings, the not insignificant question of whether these images depict or rather express something, or perhaps bear witness to something, or even make us aware of something within ourselves, and through this—as visual portals—establish a connection with another world, seems to recede into the background.

Vanda Huminlowicz graduated in 2003 from the Faculty of Visual Arts at Eszterházy Károly University. Her works have been featured in numerous exhibitions and fairs in Budapest, including AQB, Artus Gallery, and Művház. 
She lives and works in Budapest.
ZSÓFIA JAUERNIK
Zsófia Jauernik (1989) is an architect who also works as a visual artist. Her artistic practice focuses on the personal and collective dimensions of architecture and heritage. She enjoys experimenting with various media and combining them.

She graduated from the Faculty of Architecture at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics in 2014, and in 2022 she earned a degree in historic preservation engineering from the same institution. She works in the Architectural Heritage Protection Group of the Budapest Mayor’s Office and is also involved in architectural history research on folk architectural monuments. Jauernik is a member of the Young Artists’ Studio Association. Her works have been featured in numerous group exhibitions in Budapest, including at the Art+Text Gallery, the Pince Gallery, and the Labor Gallery. She also regularly participates in performance art events.

She currently lives and works in Budapest.
REBEKA RÁCZ

Rebeka Rácz (1990) is a self-taught ceramic artist whose playful works straddle the boundary between design and fine art. Her works are inspired by the endless, serendipitous possibilities of working with clay, as well as by a questioning of daily rituals and habits. The unpredictability of motherhood and the ever-changing circumstances of daily life serve as an inexhaustible source of inspiration for her work. Her creations range from everyday objects and pieces of design and interior architecture to small and large-scale sculptures. Her trademark is a naive, humorous approach, a wide range of colors, and an experimental, exploratory use of glazes.

She earned a BA in Aesthetics from Eötvös Loránd University in 2013, and in 2017 she completed a master’s degree in Design Theory at MOME. Her ceramic works have been exhibited at numerous domestic and international exhibitions and fairs, including the Ceramic Art Fair in Paris, the Way Gallery in Stockholm, and Művház in Budapest.

She lives and works in Budapest.
ANNA TÁNCOS
 
Anna TÁNCOS (1992) is an architect; she also paints, creates graffiti, works with ceramics, and always keeps one eye on exploring architectural forms and the peculiarities of human behavior. But it all comes together: what inspires her and how she creates.She is captivated not by the exposed leg of the classical Apollo torso, but by its plastic souvenir; not by the early Baroque façade of Il Gesu, but by the crumbling plaster of the pre-modern orange façades of the Garbatella suburban experiment; and she is inspired more by De Chirico’s metaphysical paintings than by postmodern star architects. These are reflected in the transcendent ruins of her landscapes, her crystalline, shimmering flower portraits beneath neon twilights, and her statues of Graces, who, with hunched backs, struggle to hold the weight of ceramic bowls. 
She graduated in 2017 from the Faculty of Architecture at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics, and in the same year was a visiting student at Sapienza University of Rome. Her works have been exhibited in numerous domestic and international galleries, such as the Amerigo Tot Museum in Piran, the Dindin Gallery in Budapest, and the Useless Gallery’s pop-up exhibitions.
 
She lives and works in Budapest.

Featured works

TÁNCOS ANNA_Születés_2026_akril, vászon_90×120 cm_SMALL WEB

Anna TÁNCOS 

Birth, 2026
acrylic on canvas, 90×120 cm

TÁNCOS ANNA_Pusztulás_2026_akril, vászon_90×120 cm_SMALL WEB

Anna TÁNCOS

Decay, 2026
acrylic on canvas, 90×120 cm

DALLOS ÁDÁM_Ovidius_008_SMALL WEB

Ádám DALLOS 

Ovidius 8., 2025
ink on paper, 36×48cm

DALLOS Ádám_Ovidisu_0022_SMALL WEB

Ádám DALLOS

Ovidius 22., 2025
ink on paper, 36×48cm

DALLOS Ádám_Young Centaur Prepares for Hunting_2025_100x70cm_SMALL WEB

Ádám DALLOS

Young Centaur Prepares for Hunting, 2025
oil pastel, paper, 100×70cm

RÁCZ Rebeka_Farewell (to The Past)_2025_mázas kerámia, fém_80x40x20cm_SMALL WEB

Rebeka RÁCZ

Farewell (to The Past), 2025,
mazed ceramics, metal, 80×40×20 cm

HUMINILOWICZ Vanda_49_Virágmintás amfóra_2025_olaj, vászon_120×80 cm_SMALL WEB

Vanda HUMINILOWICZ

Flower-patterned amphora, 2025
oil on canvas, 120×80 cm

HUMINILOWICZ Vanda_63_Torzó_2025_olaj, vászon_120×80 cm_SMALL WEB

Vanda HUMINILOWICZ

Torso, 2026
oil on canvas, 120×80 cm

JAUERNIK Zsófia_My Little Pillar_2021_faragott ytong_100×30×30 cm_SMALL WEB

Zsófia JAUERNIK

My Little Pillar, 2021
carved Ytong, 100×30×30 cm