Difference between revisions of "Cluj-Napoca"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
| (One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
| − | '''Initiatives''': [[AltArt]], [[D Media]] (*2002), [[Tranzit House]] (*1997). | + | '''Initiatives''': [[AltArt]] (*1998), [[D Media]] (*2002), [[Tranzit House]] (*1997). |
'''Past events''': [[Tranxindex]] conference (2002), [[Bodies in Between]] conference (2014), [[Clujotronic]] festival (2013, 2014), [[CAMP (festival)|CAMP]] Festival for Visual Music (2013). | '''Past events''': [[Tranxindex]] conference (2002), [[Bodies in Between]] conference (2014), [[Clujotronic]] festival (2013, 2014), [[CAMP (festival)|CAMP]] Festival for Visual Music (2013). | ||
Latest revision as of 19:06, 20 April 2025
Initiatives: AltArt (*1998), D Media (*2002), Tranzit House (*1997).
Past events: Tranxindex conference (2002), Bodies in Between conference (2014), Clujotronic festival (2013, 2014), CAMP Festival for Visual Music (2013).
Spaces: Fabrica de Pensule (*2009), Binar (*2006), White Cuib (*2016), Quadro (*2008)
Media: IDEA magazine, Ekphrasis journal.
Art workers: Rarita Zbranca (1975), István Szakáts (1968), Joanne Richardson (1968), László Újvárossy (1950), Laura Codreanu (1976), Mihai Jalobeanu (1941), Horea Avram (1969).
- Literature
- J. Delagrange, "Contemporary Art in Cluj: A Critical Overview", CAI, Jan 2021.
- Erin McElroy, Silicon Valley Imperialism: Techno Fantasies and Frictions in Postsocialist Times, Duke University Press, 2024, 296 pp. Publisher.
| Cities alternative base |
||
|---|---|---|
|
Amsterdam, Athens, Bergen, Berlin, Bratislava, Brussels, Budapest, Copenhagen, Kyiv, Ljubljana, London, New York, Oslo, Paris, Prague, Rotterdam, Seoul, Stockholm, Tokyo, Vienna, Warsaw, Zagreb | ||