Over de rol van kunst in een globaliserende samenleving

Framer Framed

Tímea Junghaus

Tímea Junghaus

Tímea Junghaus is an art historian and contemporary art curator based in Budapest, Hungary. She is of Roma/Sinti origin. Since 2010 she is the research fellow of the Institute for Art History, at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. Her curatorial initiatives include the founding and exhibitions of the Budapest based János Balázs Roma Gallery (2004), the Roma component of the Hidden Holocaust- exhibition in the Budapest Kunsthalle (2004), and the First Roma Pavilion at the 52nd Venice Contemporary Art Biennale (2007).

Her recent curatorial works include the Archive and Scholarly Conference on Roma Hiphop (2011) The Romani Elders and their Public Intervention for the Unfinished Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Murdered Under the National Socialist Regime in the frame of the 7th Berlin Biennale (2012), Roma Body Politics (2015) and (Re-)Conceptualizing Roma Resistance (2016).  Junghaus is the founding director of the European Roma Cultural Foundation an independent foundation, which established Gallery8 – Roma Contemporary Art Space (www.gallery8.org). She has researched and published extensively on the conjunctions of modern and contemporary art with critical theory, with particular reference to issues of cultural difference, colonialism, and minority representation.


Agenda


Project overzicht: PATTERNS & Impossible Dialogues (2016)
Overzicht van het project en programma PATTERNS / Impossible Dialogues.
Impossible Dialogues - Controversiële herinneringen, tegenstrijdige belangen
Presentatie van een interdisciplinair onderzoeksproject, samengesteld door curatoren Katia Krupennikova, Inga Lāce en Margaret Tali.