Difference between revisions of "Ján Budaj"

From Monoskop
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 8: Line 8:
 
; Publications
 
; Publications
 
* editor, ''[[Media:Budaj_Jan_ed_Bratislava_nahlas.pdf|Bratislava nahlas]]'', Bratislava: SZOPK, 1988, 62 pp, [http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.711383925614404.1073741828.209665329119602&type=3 JPGs]. [http://www.zmenazdola.sk/blogy/smatana/bratislava-nahlas] {{sk}}
 
* editor, ''[[Media:Budaj_Jan_ed_Bratislava_nahlas.pdf|Bratislava nahlas]]'', Bratislava: SZOPK, 1988, 62 pp, [http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.711383925614404.1073741828.209665329119602&type=3 JPGs]. [http://www.zmenazdola.sk/blogy/smatana/bratislava-nahlas] {{sk}}
 +
 +
; Literature
 +
* Zora Rusinová, [[Media:Rusinova_Zora_2001_Jan_Budaj.pdf|"Ján Budaj"]], in ''Umenie akcie 1965-1989'', ed. Zora Rusinová, Bratislava: Slovenská národná galéria, 2001, pp 149-156. {{sk}}
  
 
; See also
 
; See also

Revision as of 22:22, 26 March 2017

Ján Budaj (1952 Bratislava) is a Slovak politician. Before 1989 Budaj was a dissident, co-creator of the independent art movement, publisher of underground publications, collaborator with Charta 77 [Charter 77] and the Polish political opposition. In the 1970s he organized the Dočasná spoločnosť intenzívneho prežívania [Temporary Society of Intense Experiencing, or HDSiP] that pursued conceptual interventions and other forms of public appearances, such as The Week of Fictional Culture in Bratislava. In the 1980s Budaj became an pro-environment activist; he was one of the leaders of the Velvet Revolution in 1989 and co-founder of the VPN opposition movement [Verejnosť proti násiliu; Public against Violence]. After 1989 he became a politician and a deputy to the Slovak Parliament (1998–2002). (Source)

Recent exhibitions
Publications
Literature
  • Zora Rusinová, "Ján Budaj", in Umenie akcie 1965-1989, ed. Zora Rusinová, Bratislava: Slovenská národná galéria, 2001, pp 149-156. (Slovak)
See also
Links