Translocal Institute for Contemporary Art

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The Institute for Contemporary Art is a transnational research centre focused on East European art and ecology and operates across the fields of art history, contemporary art and ecological thought. The institute collaborates with universities and art spaces both in Central Europe and across the continent.

Contents

Founded in 2013 in Budapest, the institute has been operating since 2018 from London. Its co-directors are Drs. Maja and Reuben Fowkes

Aims

The original idea for Translocal reflects the experience of 'being intensely present in a plurality of localities while also adopting a perspective that goes beyond any particular local or national frame,' and the understanding that to preserve a 'position of criticality and mobility you cannot be closed into one geopolitical space.' [1]

Activities

The institute programs include an Experimental Reading Room involving both a series of Anthropocene Response lectures by prominent theorists and Reading Group seminars dealing with Art and the Anthropocene.

The River School was based on engaging with the Danube River as a transforming natural environment through a series of workshops, symposia, exhibitions and excursions to urban and natural wilderness.

Publications

The institute has released the following books and exhibition catalogues:

Library

The Institute library is specialised on art and ecology, as well as East European art history, and a resource for international researchers working in these fields.

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References

  1. Drabble, Barnaby, ed. (2019). Along ecological lines : contemporary art and climate crisis. [England]: Cornerhouse Books. p. 42. ISBN   0-9932192-5-X. OCLC   1097575806.
  2. Maja and Reuben Fowkes, eds, River Ecologies: Contemporary Art and Environmental Humanities on the Danube (Budapest: Translocal Institute, 2015)
  3. Maja and Reuben Fowkes, Loophole to Happiness (Budapest: Translocal Institute, 2011)
  4. Maja and Reuben Fowkes, Revolutionary Decadence (Budapest, 2009)
  5. Maja and Reuben Fowkes, eds, Revolution I Love You (Budapest / Thessaloniki / Manchester, 2008)
  6. Maja and Reuben Fowkes, eds, Revolution is not a Garden Party (Manchester, 2006)
  7. Maja and Reuben Fowkes, Unframed Landscapes (Zagreb, 2004)