The world we live in today - and especially Europe, the part of the world we think we know so well - is changing rapidly. The transformation of social democracy to global, neoliberal capitalism and the resulting swathes of privatisation has lead to a loss of public space in the broadest sense. The present crisis is reminiscent of the period 1924-1929. These Socks Not White does not aim to prove that then and now are the same. Rather, by using the collection of the museum as working capital, it seeks to investigate links with our current time and to speculate about our experiences in society today and the direction in which we are heading.
These Socks Not White concentrates on the period 1924-1929, but expands outwards because the spirit of the age never stands still. This time -the roaring twenties- was a time of paradoxes and extremes. The Weimar Republic reached its high peak followed by extreme bouts of inflation.
The title of the exhibition - These Socks Not White- is derived from a Dada document addressed to the "HH Journalists and Editors". This pamphlet was prepared in response to the fierce criticism Van Doesburg and his associates received after the 'Dada Campaign', and says - jokingly - that the socks that Theo van Doesburg wore during the Dada soirees were not white, but 'gris-perle’. Not everything is/should be what it looks like, the pamphlet seems to say. The image created by the media does not always convey reality. What way is information generated, what is deemed important and why, what is chosen to create an image of past and present? If we think we know what we believe we know, do we see it as well, even if it is not directly said or shown, that way?