Category Archives: International Alternative

Dan Perjovschi “The Crisis Is (Not) Over”

MACRO – Museo d’Arte Contemporanea Roma – presents in the Enel Gallery the latest work by the Romanian artist Dan Perjovschi: an ironic, caustic, contemporary fresco that reflects on the infinite contradictions of
the modern world through the freedom of sign and word.

Perjovschi will be the first artist to work directly on the skin of the new MACRO, and visitors will be able to watch him as he creates his work. In a performance lasting a number of days, and entirely visible to the public, Perjovschi will be creating a large satirical work brought to life by paradoxical drawings and epigrams.

Dan Perjovschi (Sibiu, Romania, 1961) is an artist celebrated around the world for his work in the greatest international museums, including MoMA in New York and Tate Modern in London.

He will be creating an enormous “fresco” especially for the MACRO premises. It will consist of drawings and comic-strip illustrations that take an ironic look at politics, society, and culture in the contemporary world. The concept of the work is based on the paradigm of the global economic crisis and on the paradox in which our post-modern turbo-consumerist society is attempting to defuse the risks of recession.

Together with the installation, of which the “making of” will be visible to the public in a sort of continuous performance lasting a number of days, Dan Perjovschi will be presenting five dioramas made between 2006 and 2009, during his trips to a number of European cities: Venice, Florence, Berlin-Brussels (“Bexperience”), London and Stockholm. These tales in words and pictures reveal the artist’s impressions of the real world.

The exhibition of works by Dan Perjovschi, “The crisis is (not) over. Drawings and dioramas”, curated by Teresa Macrì, will thus provide an opportunity to see the work in progress of an artist as he investigates new dimensions of space and original interpretations of the world around him.

Even though his analysis of contemporary principles and social values is pitiless, Perjovschi’s investigations have a thread of irony and sarcasm running through them, allowing them to capture the strident contradictions of reality.

Perjovschi grew up in Nicolae Ceausescu’s Communist Romania, and thus in a world of cultural censorship and repression, but he belongs to the generation that freed itself from the dictatorship after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. He started working in Bucharest in 1991 as a draughtsman for the Romanian magazine “22”. His favourite artistic language is thus drawing, enlivened by puns and epigrams, and by the paradoxical interpretation he gives to socio-political events and to the new class wars, as well as to the contradictions of the art system and the anomalies of cohabitation in a globalised world. In an almost performative manner, his form of representation often ends up in large mural installations but also, with surprising effects, in videos, video animations, dioramas, notebooks, and photographs.

Perjovschi makes use of all the potential offered by the space, creating new dimensions in the premises he works in: walls, windows, floors, and ceilings inside and outside museums, institutions, and galleries, in which he makes his fables float, following the lines of the architecture that contains them, and transforming every work of his into a site-specific project.

Dan Perjovschi was born in Sibiu (Romania) in 1961. He lives and works in Bucharest. He trained as an artist at the University of Arts George Enescu in Iasi, Romania, and has put an solo exhibitions in the world’s leading museums.
His shows at the Tate Modern London, at the Kunstraum, Innsbruck, at the Moderna Museet, Stockholm, and at the Kunsthalle in Budapest took place in 2006. The following year, together with the solo “I Am not Exotic – I Am
Exhausted” exhibition at the Kunsthalle in Basel, his “What Happened to Us?” at MoMA, New York, was also worthy of note. In 2008 he was at the Ludwig Forum für Internationale Kunst in Aachen, Germany, and in 2009 he was invited to the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven, Holland, and to the Salzburger Kunstverein in Salzburg. In 2010 Perjovschi worked at the San Francisco Art Institute, at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto and at the Novi Sad Museum of Contemporary Art in Serbia. His group exhibitions include those at the biennales in Istanbul, Bucharest, and Seville in 2006, the Venice Biennale in 2007, the Moscow Biennale in 2007 and again in 2010, the Biennale of Sydney in 2008, and the one in Lyon in 2010. His works have been shown in important group exhibitions in international museums, including the “This Place Is My Place” show in 2007 at the Kunstverein, Hamburg, and “Brave New Worlds” at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. In 2009 came “The Making of Art” at the Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt, and in 2010 “The Promises of the Past” at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. In Italy his works were shown in 2008 at the Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, in “Arte, Prezzo e Valore – Arte contemporanea e Mercato”, at MART, Rovereto, in “Eurasia”, and at the Centro d’Arte Contemporanea di Villa Manin in Udine in the “God & Goods” exhibition. In 2009 he was at Castello di Rivoli in the “What Is to Be Done?” exhibition. Perjovschi won the George Maciunas Award in 2004.

The “Dan Perjovschi. The Crisis Is (Not) Over. Drawings and Dioramas” exhibition is promoted by Roma Capitale,
Assessorato alle Politiche Culturali e Centro Storico – Sovraintendenza ai Beni Culturali

MACRO

Via Nizza, corner of Via Cagliari, Rome

Opening times:
Tuesday – Sunday: 11 a.m.-10 p.m. (the ticket office closes at 9 p.m.). Closed
Mondays

Tickets: MACROTICKET:
MACRO + MACROTestaccio, Full: € 11.00; Reduced: € 9.00. Validity: 7 days

(the MACRO ticket
also gives free admission to MACRO TESTACCIO within a period of 7 days)

For residents of the
city of Rome: Full €10.00; Reduced €8.00

MACRO Communication Office

Massimiliano Moschetta –
Nicolò Scialanga

T +39 06 671070443

stampa.macro@comune.roma.it

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Call for applications – The Core Program: Artist and Critical Studies Residencies

The Core Program awards artist and critical studies residencies to highly motivated, emerging visual artists and critical writers who have completed their academic training but have not yet fully developed a professional career.

Photo: Jenny Antill

About the program
Established in 1982 within the Glassell School of Art of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Core artist residencies encourage intensive and innovative studio practice as well as the elaboration of an intellectual framework to understand that practice. In 1998, the Core critical studies residencies were established to provide an opportunity for writers to pursue independent curatorial and writing projects and to promote the discourse necessary for both
artists and critics to sustain their practices. Throughout the year, residents engage in ongoing dialogue with each other and meet with pre-eminent artists, critics, curators, and art historians.

Program specifics
Each resident receives a stipend, health insurance, and private studio/office space. The residency term is nine months, from September to May, and is renewable for a second term.

For application instructions, please visit core.mfah.org.

Deadline: April 1, 2011
The Core Program
Glassell School of Art
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
P.O. Box 6826, Houston, TX 77265-6826
5101 Montrose Blvd., Houston, TX 77006-6534
Phone: 713-639-7500 | Fax: 713-639-7709
core.mfah.org

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ICI announces summer Curatorial Intensive training program

Recognizing the need to support curatorial talent and provide low-cost practical training in the current economic climate, Independent Curators International (ICI) initiated the Curatorial Intensive—the first major short-course training program for emerging curators in the United States. Last year ICI organized two iterations of the Curatorial Intensive, bringing 31 curators from 14 countries and 13 states to New York to develop ideas for exhibitions and strengthen their curatorial thinking.

This summer, 10-14 curators from around the world will be selected from an open competition to participate in the next Curatorial Intensive for a rigorous 8-day schedule of workshops, discussions, critiques, and presentations, as well as site visits to local institutions, private collections, and artists’ studios.
Teachers and advisors for this program include independent curators Cecilia
Alemani and Regine Basha; Kate Fowle, Executive Director, ICI; Sofia Hernandez Chong Cuy, Curator of Contemporary Art, Coleccion Patricia Phelps de Cisneros; Matthew Higgs, Director and Chief Curator, White Columns; and Christian Rattemeyer, Associate Curator, Department of Drawings, MoMA.

After the New York phase of the project is complete, ICI will continue working with participants long-distance to finalize their proposals for publication on ICI’s website, so broad publics, as well as the hundreds of institutions with
which ICI works, can view the final proposals.

Application Guidelines
Please visit ICI’s website to apply for the Curatorial Intensive online. Applications must include a 300-word description of an exhibition idea that the applicant would like help in developing. This description should cover an exhibition concept and any artists that the applicant is considering for inclusion. Also required is a current resume, a short letter of intent that outlines why the applicant wants to participate in the program, and an example of a recent exhibition that has made an impact on the applicant.

Fees and Scholarships
The program fee is 1,500 USD. Participants are responsible for covering travel and accommodation expenses. ICI also offers generous scholarship packages, subsidizing or eliminating the program fees and travel expenses of four program
participants.

About the Curatorial Intensive
The Curatorial Intensive is ICI’s short-term, low-cost training program that offers emerging curators the chance to develop exhibition ideas and make connections to professionals in the field. It provides the opportunity for peer-group education, forging new networks between aspiring curators internationally. The Curatorial Intensive takes place twice annually in New York, and in other locations in conjunction with institutional partners worldwide.

The Curatorial Intensive was developed by ICI’s Executive Director, Kate Fowle, who joined the organization after working as the International Curator at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing. Prior to her time in China, Fowle spent 6 years in San Francisco at the California College of the Arts, where she was the director of the MA Program in Curatorial Practice, which she founded in 2002 with Ralph Rugoff.

The Curatorial Intensive is made possible, in part, by grants from the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, the Dedalus Foundation, the Helena Rubinstein Foundation, and the Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation; and by generous
contributions from Toby Devan Lewis, James Cohan, and the supporters of ICI’s Access Fund.

For more information, visit ICI’s website, or contact us at
education@ici-exhibitions.org or 1-212-254-8200.

About Independent Curators International
ICI produces exhibitions, events, publications, and training opportunities for diverse audiences. In 35 years, ICI has organized 116 traveling exhibitions, profiling the work of more than 3,700 artists. The resulting networks include
590 museums, university art galleries, and art centers in 48 states and 25 countries. Working across disciplines and historical precedents, the organization is a hub that provides access to the people, ideas, and practices that are key to current developments in the field, inspiring fresh ways of seeing and contextualizing contemporary art.

Curatorial Intensive

Program Dates: July 10-18, 2011

Application Deadline: March 18, 2011

www.ici-exhibitions.org
www.twitter.com/curatorsintl
www.facebook.com/curatorsintl

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Young amateur theatre – Shakespeare Festival 2011

This call is for young amateur companies wich would like to participate  to the Festival by proposing theatre, dance or music shows around Shakespeare’s world.

The 12th edition of Shakespeare Festival, a Meetings of Youth Theatre  from different backgrounds, will take place from July the 25th to August  the 2nd in Tournon sur Rhone – Tain l’Hermitage, Ardeche, Drome, France.
It gathers young people from Theatre du Sycomore and other young  amateurs from different backgrounds around actions facilitating the  meeting, sharing and cultural exchange.

Young amateur theatre – Shakespeare Festival 2011, 25 July – 2 August, Ardeche-Drome, France ( Deadline 15.02.2011 )

For more information
http://www.caleidoscop.org/Members/Marius/news-2011/young-amateur-theatre-shakespeare-festival-2011-25-july-2-august-ardeche-drome-france

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Karl Zechenter “Frontiers as a Game for Social Change”

“The revolution will not be televised – instead it’ll come with a game pad” – The computer-game Frontiers by the Austrian artist group gold extra lets its players experience European border zones performing the roles of refugees or border guards respectively. The game allows for a new perspective in an artistic and gaming context: Frontiers modifies the shooter-genre and lets its players face the question just how much reality they can afford within a computer-game. Purposefully put between the functionality of games and the approach of fine arts, Frontiers is presented e.g. in the permanent exhibition at ZKM Karlsruhe. One of the producers of the game, Karl Zechenter, speaks in his lecture about researching and developping the game, the context of political games and the techniques of modding as seen in Frontiers.

Thursday, February 10, 2011, 19:00
Lecture at Pavilion

Frontiers as a Game for Social Change
Karl Zechenter (A), gold extra

“Frontiers” is exhibited in the frame of “Utopia of Exotic”, curated by Andre Craciun at Pavilion UniCredit, 09 December 2010 – 27 February 2011.

Karl Zechenter (*1972) lives in Salzburg (A), studied literature and politic sciences and works as a movie director and curator.

PAVILION UNICREDIT

center for contemporary art & culture

Sos. Nicolae Titulescu 1 (Piata Victoriei)
Bucharest  011131 Romania
T: + 4 031 103 4131
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Call for X-OP residency at Art School MAA, Helsinki

Art School MAA invites an artist, writer or curator for a one-month residency stay in Helsinki for the month of March 2011.

The residency guest is expected to contribute to the teaching program of ‘X-OP European Studies’ with a single lecture or a workshop. X-OP European Studies is a special international study program of Art School MAA, since September 2009, with a focus in critically thinking of Europe, European Union, and possibilities and challenges of internationalism for visual artists. Participants in the group vary from 5 to 10.

The teaching plan should reflect an interest in thinking of the position and political responsibility of artists as active members in the contemporary societies, and the task of art education toward this claim.

We offer accommodation in the guest apartments of HIAP – Helsinki International Artist-in-residency Programme in the Suomenlinna-island, where also Art School MAA is located. Living expenses will be covered. We also provide with connections to the local art scene and aim at helping with facilitating the artistic production during the residency.

Please send your application electronically to:

x-op@taidekoulumaa.fi

The application should include

- introduction to your artistic practice

- motivation letter for a residency in Helsinki

- teaching proposal in X-OP European Studies

- curriculum vitae

Application deadline is February 1st 2011.

For further questions please contact x-op@taidekoulumaa.fi

X-OP – eXchange of art operators and producers is a gradually growing network of artists, researchers, operators, producers and centers with the aim to establish European platform for creation of art and exchange. With its places, spaces and user oriented technological infrastructure it fosters mobility of artists, theoreticians and executives. It is built to strengthen pan-European and global collaboration, common production and interdisciplinary approach to art.

More about X-OP project is on http://www.x-op.eu/

The X-OP project is multi-annual project, from 2008 to 2011, supported by European Commission – Program Culture.

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Residence d’artistes – l’Atelier Calder

Depuis 1989, l’Atelier Calder est un lieu de résidence et de création artistique. Situé à Saché en Indre-et-Loire, cet ancien atelier du sculpteur américain Alexander Calder poursuit une politique d’accueil dont l’ambition est de permettre aux artistes de réaliser des projets spécifiques, de poursuivre un travail de recherche ou d’expérimentation.

Durant six mois, les artistes bénéficient d’un soutien technique et financier qui favorise la création de projets artistiques.

Régulièrement, l’Atelier Calder s’associe à des lieux de diffusion (centre d’art, musées, monuments historiques …) afin d’organiser des expositions à la suite des résidences permettant au public de découvrir les œuvres produites à Saché. Lieu d’échange et d’ouverture, l’Atelier Calder favorise des rencontres entre ses résidents et les acteurs culturels
régionaux (école des beaux-arts, les centres d’art, FRAC, musées..), des groupes scolaires grâce aux actions de médiation et avec le public dans le cadre de visites d’atelier. L’Atelier Calder bénéficie du soutien du Ministère de la Culture – Direction Régionale des Affaires Culturelles (DRAC Centre), de la Région Centre, du Centre National des Arts Plastiques (CNAP), et de la Calder Foundation.

Conditions de séjour
Les artistes sont accueillis en résidence pour six mois, deux périodes de résidence sont possibles : de janvier à juin et de juillet à décembre. L’atelier offre une surface de 300m2 doublée d’un sous-sol. L’étage inférieur est équipé d’un outillage générique qui s’ouvre sur une grande esplanade, permettant le déchargement de matériaux ou le travail en
extérieur. L’étage supérieur, autre espace de travail, avec ses grandes fenêtres vitrées offre un magnifique panorama sur la vallée de l’Indre, et sert à dessiner, à stocker, à la mise en place des œuvres.
L’artiste en résidence vit dans la maison située près de l’atelier. D’une surface d’environ 450 m2, elle est entièrement équipée et composée d’un vaste séjour-cuisine, de deux chambres, de deux salles de bains et d’un long couloir servant de bureau et de bibliothèque. Un véhicule est également mis à la disposition de l’artiste.

Conditions financières
Chaque artiste bénéficie d’une allocation de recherche et de séjour du Centre National des Arts Plastiques (CNAP) ainsi que d’un budget d’aide à la production de l’Association pour l’animation de l’Atelier Calder.

Candidatures
Le choix des artistes est effectué par le conseil d’administration après consultation d’un comité artistique composé du Président de l’Association pour l’animation de l’Atelier Calder et de professionnels (critiques d’art, conservateurs, membres du Ministère de la Culture).
La sélection se fait sur dossiers. Ceux-ci doivent être composés d’un CV, d’une lettre de motivation, d’un projet écrit et de documents présentant le parcours de l’artiste (catalogues, photos, vidéos, CD roms…). Ces documents sont à adresser au Président de l’Association pour l’Animation de l’Atelier Calder, BP 59, 37190 Saché.
Pour tous renseignements complémentaires :
Tél. : 02 47 45 29 29

Résidence d’artistes
http://www.atelier-calder.com/setresidence.html
Atelier Calder
BP 59
F-37190 Sache
France
tel: +33 247 452 929 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              +33 247 452 929      end_of_the_skype_highlighting
residence@atelier-calder.com
http://www.atelier-calder.com

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Grants – European Cultural Foundation – ECF

We support arts and culture across wider Europe, by investing in creativity and boundary crossing innovation.
Grants are at the core of our work. The connecting power of culture is essential for creating open, inclusive and democratic societies: for ‘building Europe’. We are looking for projects that have the potential to inspire people to transcend boundaries in this process.

Our grants programme stimulates transnational cultural collaboration, artistic expression and the mobility of artists and cultural actors. Our various grants schemes relate to different ECF focus areas and to specific regions of the Europea continent.

All of our activities revolve around the three strategic guiding principle outlined below.

Applications that tie in with these principles will receive a higher score in the assessment procedure.

We are interested in:

1.Diversity within our societies: projects that reduce exclusion and conflict by bringing people together; projects that target new audiences and create new places for showcasing culture.

2.Connecting Sources of Knowledge – we think sharing and connecting knowledge is vital in creating an open Europe.

- cross sectoral and cross generational online and offline collaborations: projects that try out innovative and creative partnerships to develop/produce new work, broaden knowledge sharing and public participation, as well as experiment with new technologies.

3. Linking Policy and Practice – we are interested in projects that help build this open Europe by contributing to cultural policy development locally, nationally, regionally and at European level.

Impacting on European cultural policy: projects that actively contribute to policy and practice; that connect a local perspective to the European level; also projects that bring cultural and political players together in new ways, and that raise awareness and help prove the value of cultural policy.

Eligibility Criteria

Collaboration grants fund transnational, cross sectoral activities by artistic and cultural organisations working together or with organisations from other sectors. Applications must be in line with all the eligibility criteria. Please read these carefully, as proposals which do not meet the criteria will not be considered.

1. Who is eligible?

- Lead applicant: independent artistic or cultural organisation based in Euro
- Partnering applicant: organisations from the cultural or other sectors.

2. What is eligible?

There are six different eligibility criteria. All of them are equally important to us, which is why applications must be in line with all eligibility criteria. Please read them carefully. Proposals that do not meet these criteria will not be considered.

Partnership working methodology

Transnational collaboration in Europe is the key phrase for this grants scheme. Projects are selected first and foremost on both their transnational and collaborative aspects. We need to see the transnational collaboration reflected in your entire application form. This means that project partners must be involved in all aspects of the project; working
together on the planning, the development and the realisation. This also implies that all partners should contribute financially to the project (note that we also consider in?kind contribution as financial support).

Cultural focus

The project should have a strong cultural objective and a concrete end product. In this sense, we support a variety of activities: the creation of artistic work, media projects or cultural policy development, including capacity building of cultural actors.

European dimension

The project must be organised by a cultural organisation in Europe (following the Council of Europe’s definition, which comprises 47 countries). As we also encourage cooperation with the southern European  region, projects partnering with Mediterranean countries are also eligible, as long as their content relates centrally to European cross?border cooperation. (Indeed, this is true for all projects we support.) By ‘Mediterranean countries’ we refer to Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Palestine, Syria and Tunisia.

Sustainability

The project must have a clear end?result that can be evaluated. Ideally, the project is a starting point for sustainable cooperation between the partners.

Time frame

Project activities should only start after we have made our funding decision (please check the exact planning for this grant scheme on the ECF grants website section). The project must be completed 18 months after the contract has been signed.

Financial

ECF can support up to 80% (max) of the total budget. We encourage applicant organisations and their partners to demonstrate their own contributions and to apply to other funders. This should be shown in the budget outline.

ECF provides an average collaboration grant of Euro 15 000. The maximum grant awarded is Euro 30 000.

ECF specifically welcomes the involvement of local funding partners, as we believe this helps embed the project within the local context.

ECF may select your project even if your remaining budget has not yet been secured when you are applying. Payment of the grant will be conditional on an agreed percentage of other funding having been secured at least one month before the start date of your project.
Collaboration grants for independent cultural and artistic organisations
http://www.eurocult.org/grants/collaboration-grants

deadline: 01/03/11

Kontakt:
European Cultural Foundation
Esther Claassen
Jan van Goyenkade 5
1075 HN Amsterdam
The Netherlands
tel: +31 (0)20 573 38 68 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              +31 (0)20 573 38 68      end_of_the_skype_highlighting
fax: +31 (0) 20 675 2231
esther@eurocult.org
http://www.eurocult.org

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Expo: “Stop the demolition of Cinema Komsomol”

The event opens one major theme, and the occasion is the old cinema Komsomol/Kosmos*.

The city council of Plovdiv recently voted the removal of the cinema building and its replacement by a multistory garage and a commercial-administrative building – may be the next Mall. This is happening in the very central part of Plovdiv, in immediate closeness to an old, once bourgeois residential neighborhood with narrow streets and
emblematic architecture.

The building of the cinema itself is a valuable example of modern architecture. Cinema Komsomol was designed in 1960 by architect Liubomir Shinkov and arch. Liubomir Bonev and was completed in 1964. Although too large in comparison to the surrounding secesión or simply plain small houses the building still impresses with its proportionate volumes and specific details.

A few are the architectural details sealed in the mind of every Plovdivian; the curving staircase in the lobby, the pleated “origami” facade on one side followed by a glass wall opening a view to that beautiful staircase from outside. The emblematic value of the cinema is undeniable for the generations who remember the crowds of visitors at the square in front of the building.

Once the largest and the most modern cinema in Plovdiv with 900 seats amphitheater it was devoid of function in the mid 90′s. Nearly 15 years the cinema has been idle until the end of 2010, when the city council pronounced it completely unnecessary for the Plovdivians and their generations. The City council voted a change of purpose and status of the current property . A great cinema building was pronounced best to turn into a garage. From a public building with cultural purpose it became a private municipal property and a garage on paper.

Penka Popova and George Serbezov
24 January – 28 February

supported by Open Arts Foundation
more info: http://openarts.info/?p=873
http://daspasimkinokosmos.blogspot.com/

artnewscafe /// Plovdiv, Bulgaria, 38 Otets Paisiy str. www.artnewscafe.com

Penka Popova and George Serbezov react to the last events and by invitation of artnewscafe and Open Arts Foundation put together a documental exposition while aiming to provoke a discussion and save the building in the very end. Everybody is welcome to join , support or discuss the matter.

The presentation on at artnewscafe will address questions which are extremely important and very much neglected in the public domain. What has been happening with the urban space of Plovdiv in recent years? What is our response to these changes ? What is our relationship with the places we inhabit? What are the priorities and official policies of the
city and what future they draw? What happens when a parking space is more important than clean air and cultural activities? Who makes the decisions for us and why don’t we participate in the process? How many office buildings, shopping malls, food chains and garages are sufficient in a city like Plovdiv? What does the demolition of a building means for an entire neighborhood?

Bring and share with us your findings on cinema Komsomol/Kosmos !

In artnewscafe, Plovdiv is exposed the entire collection of documents, video, archival and new photos, all obtained during the “info excavations” at the archival center, the municipal institution and in the conversations with one of
the authors of the building arch. Liubomir Shinkov as well as with other experts and architects. You will be able to look at the documented views and decisions of the authorities concerning the case. An audio file of the discussion at the session of the city council leading to the fatal decision will be available.

The exposition presenting old and new photographs, plans and other documentation will be on view every day from January 24th to February 28th in artnewscafe

*The name of the cinema was changed in the 90s to “Kosmos”

—SARIEV GALLERY
www.sariev-gallery.com

—ARTNEWSCAFE
www.artnewscafe.com

—OPEN ARTS Foundation
www.openarts.info

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The Monsters Crawl Out At Night – festival of home-made music

“The Monsters Crawl Out At Night“ is a festival of homemade music built to represent lo-fi bands and singers/songwriters of different sensibilities and unusual approaches. Hidden in their rooms, untill now, these creatures will show themselves in full glory, without making too much noise, celebrating lo-budget production, because the essence of music is always the same – regardless of how you create it or what you use to create it. From space-folk and hard-core, via gangsta rap to electroclash, the lo-fi scene is rich and interesting, and perfect for the life in times of recession. Not only the concerts, but the puppet performance will be held, as well.

Performing: Ex>Misha, Kopy Kat Killah, Halbstar & Umbra, Katie, Midica and Xhape.
27. January, 22h (Kulturni Centar GRAD, Bra?e Krsmanovi? 4, Beograd)

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