The Fifth Park

The Fifth Park – Fight for the Everyday

Exhibition [2010]

Authors: Branko Belaćević, Dubravka Sekulić, Jelena Stefanović, Marko Miletić, Srđan Prodanović

Library „Vuk Karadžić“, Mala galerija Miljković
298 Bulevar Kralja Aleksandra

Exhibition opening: June 1, u 18h

Five years ago (June 11, 2005), a small green area, The Fifth Park in Zvezdara municipality, became the site of a battle between citizens of this part of Belgrade and a private investor. Changes of laws and urban plans and general lack of a public debate about these changes have created a situation that one morning inhabitants woke up to see the demolished park.

However, that was not the end of the park – neighborhood decisively responded, and from that day, they have been successively defending their park. The longtime fight that took various forms, from legal battle to physical encounters, opened up many questions to which members of the Initiative for Protection of the Fifth Park tried to answer so that they could  from a group of individuals establish themselves as a collective that could meet their individual needs, as well as their struggle  against private, neoliberal, petty political interests:

  • Is common property possible in neoliberal capitalism?
  • How can a collective that was established as a response to the  feeling of “endangerment”, and constituted through self-defense channel its positive aspirations towards overall improvement?
  • What are the possible strategies and range of a collective struggle?
  • Although legitimate, should a collective struggle also become legal?
  • Does the law and legal system exist only to preserve, strengthen and authorize particular financial interests? 
  • Can financial interests have the exclusive right to decide about the future progress and reshaping of the city? 
  • Which is the basic level of self government, and can citizens have a say without interference of political parties?

There are a lot of questions. Trying to open a debate about these and similar issues, we wish to show the potential of civic self–organization and collective struggle for protection and enlargement of rights and influence of citizens who are gathered around the struggle for the Fifth park and similar initiatives. Also, we wish to open a debate about who has the right to the city as well as who should be a decision maker in the city.

The exhibition “The Fifth Park – Fight for the Everyday” will feature interviews with participants of the struggle for preservation of the Fifth park, interviews with  those who supported the struggle, video and photo documentation, theoretical papers, newspaper clips, timeline and  selectively chosen illustrations of actions and tools which citizens used in their struggle. 

The organizer of the exhibition: Kontekst collective. 

The exhibition was open until June 14, 2010.

The exhibition The Fifth Park – Fight for the Everyday was supported by:

Swiss Cultural Program in Western Balkan
Republic Serbia – Ministry of Culture
City of Belgrade – Secretariat for Culture