EUtopia Painting / 3,7 x 5 m / acrylic on canvas / consist of 8 pieces / 2015I made a big, huge painting of Europe, well not Europe but something similiar. In fact it is European map, butvery strange and awkward. It is relief map, size about 3,7 x 5 meters, where Europe is represent as an island completelyisolated. Later, above that map I shoot a movie. It is film about how Europe nowadays becoming something else... Thisvideo shows Europe as a self-sufficient form of excistence, as an Eutopia island which will soon become self-containment region in psychological way. Something is very disturbing, about how we perceive Europe today. Thisvideo is my projection of idea of Europe. In text below I use a lot of Slavoj Zizek thoughts on Europe nowadays. The20th century is over. A totalitarian regime is incapable of surviving in the long run. If we want to maintain the image ofourselves we have in the West, then we have to revisit the immense questions relating to the expansion of democraticfreedoms and to the process of self-emancipation. It is here where Europe is most threatened. But I am convinced thatwe need Europe more than ever. Just imagine a world without Europe. You would only have two poles left - the USA,with its brutal neoliberalism, and so-called Asian capitalism, with its authoritarian political structures. You would losethe most valuable part of the European legacy, where democracy and freedom entail a collective action without whichequality and fairness would not be possible. We feel too guilty in Europe - our multicultural tolerance is the effluent ofa bad conscience, of a guilt complex that could cause Europe to perish. The greatest threat to Europe is its inertia, itsretreat into a culture of apathy and general relativism. But are the refugees entering Europe not also offering themselvesto become cheap precarious workforce, in many cases at the expense of local workers, who react to this threat byjoining anti-immigrant political parties? For most of the refugees, this will be the reality of their dream realized. Therefugees are not just escaping from their war-torn homelands; they are also possessed by a certain dream. We can seeagain and again on our screens. Refugees in southern Italy make it clear that they don’t want to stay there - they mostlywant to live in Scandinavian countries. And what about thousands camping around Calais who are not satisfied withFrance but are ready to risk their lives to enter the United Kingdom? And what about tens of thousands of refugees inBalkan countries who want to reach Germany at least? They declare this dream as their unconditional right, anddemand from European authorities not only proper food and medical care but also the transportation to the place oftheir choice. There is something enigmatically utopian in this impossible demand: as if it is the duty of Europe torealize their dream, a dream which, incidentally, is out of reach to most of Europeans. How many South and EastEuropeans would also not prefer to live in Norway? One can observe here the paradox of utopia: precisely when peoplefind themselves in poverty, distress and danger, and one would expect that they would be satisfied by a minimum ofsafety and well-being, the absolute utopia explodes. The hard lesson for the refugees is that “there is no Norway,” evenin Norway. They will have to learn to censor their dreams: Instead of chasing them in reality, they should focus onchanging reality. One must thus broaden the perspective: Refugees are the price of global economy. In our global world,commodities circulate freely, but not people: new forms of apartheid are emerging...