Bukta Imre (Imre Bukta), one of the most influential figures in contemporary Hungarian art with real international weight, lives and works in the village of Mezőszemere in Heves County. His newest paintings center on the animals that once defined the Hungarian countryside—farm creatures and wild field dwellers—and, inevitably, on us humans too. The canvases fuse layered childhood memories with the crisp realism of now, creating images that feel both intimate and unsparing.
Animals, People, Memory
These works aren’t nostalgia pieces. They’re vivid, painterly studies where the rural past meets present-day textures, light, and labor. The animals—familiar yet fading—become mirrors for how a landscape changes, how routines vanish, and how people adapt or don’t. The brushwork advances technical innovation while keeping a storyteller’s pulse.
Free Show, Singular Mood
From March 5 to April 25, the Godot Gallery (Godot Galéria) hosts a free exhibition filled with Bukta’s painterly experiments and an atmosphere you can practically smell: hay, damp soil, diesel, weathered wood. It’s rural Hungary, remembered and re-seen—alive, endangered, and deeply human.





