Film Festival: Duska - Jos Stelling 10-03-2008 / 20:30 Örökmozgó Filmmuseum 11-03-2008 / 16:00 Merlin
Duska is the imaginative story of Bob, who has the best part of his life behind him. He is addicted to film, has visited several festivals as a film critic and is now working on his own screenplay. His muse and inspiration is the attractive, young and unattainable cashier from the movie theatre across the street. But when Bob’s desire for the girl finally becomes reality and she ends up at his house, a man named Duska suddenly appears at his door. They had met once at a Russian film festival, and Bob had invited him to visit if he was in the neighbourhood. That was the worst thing he could have done; Duska is not about to leave Bob alone, resulting in an original tragikomedy full of suprising twist…
Holland Tsunami theatre group SPACE 11-03-2008 - 12-03-2008 / 20:00 Keleti Railway station 12-03-2008 / 22:00 Keleti Railway station 19-03-2008 - 20-03-2008 / 20:00 LABOR, Zsolnay factory, Pécs
‘We are facing a rescue operation unparalleled until this moment. We must achieve a full evacuation of 16 million people within a month time. This means over 170.000 people per day. The problem still stands that we don’t know where to leave them. Only a one country is willing to receive Dutch refugees, especially because there is a very limited chance that they will be able to return to their homeland.'
Correct? The Price of Political Correctness: A Roundtable Discussion Gáspár Miklós Tamás, Herman Vuijsje 11-03-2008 / 18:00 Merlin
Political correctness is a hot topic in Hungary today. Is there too much of it, creating taboos in certain areas of life, thus preventing action in those areas? Or, to the contrary, is Hungary at a stage where more rather than less political correctness is needed, given the rise of intolerance and hatred between various groups in Hungarian society?
Debating the issue with the author will be Philosopher Gáspár Miklós Tamás.
Film Festival: Stages - Mijke de Jong 11-03-2008 / 20:30 Örökmozgó Filmmuseum 12-03-2008 / 17:00 Merlin
Following his parents’s divorce, Isaac, seventeen, lives alone with his mother. An introvert by nature, he passes the time by polishing his Samurai sword, listening to his walkman, and slipping into the apartments of absent strangers. His parents, Roos and Martin, meet regularly to keep a connection with one another. When Roos confides her concerns about Isaac, Martin seems to have little interest in his son’s life. Roos remains alone with the serious psychological problem of her son, and she cannot count on any help from the father.
EUROPA VOSTRA Etablissement d'en Face 07-03-2008 - 13-04-2008 Trafo Gallery
Opening: 7 March, 6 p.m.
EUROPA VOSTRA, literally Your Europe, is the working title of a project that Etablissement d'en Face initiated in Brussels one year ago. The idea behind it is to critically examine the tendencies that characterise today’s Europe, and to expand upon them.
Precisely that! Han Schuil, Jurriaan Molenaar 06-03-2008 - 12-04-2008 acb Contemporary Art Gallery
Opening: 6th of March, 19.00
Molenaar paints relatively plain architecture in striking perspectives. His quiet canvases show a balanced interaction between openness and closeness. Most characteristic is his sober use of colors; the buildings always find themselves in a veil of filtered light, turning the paintings into carefully wrapped sensations of mental space.
UtopiaTransfer Aernout Mik, Atelier van Lieshout, Bik van der Pol, Falke Pisano, Krijn de Koning, Société Réaliste 05-03-2008 - 06-04-2008 Budapest Historical Museum Municipal Picture Gallery / Museum Kiscell
Opening: 4 March, 6 p.m.
The term ‘utopia’ comes from Thomas More’s famous work, Utopia. More used it to mean both an ideal society and a society that does not yet exist.
UtopiaTransfer is a group show intended to represent different artistic approaches to the notion of ‘utopia’, using the sources and methods of utopian thought and reflecting the consequences of either the continuation or the rejection of this intellectual tradition.
Dutch-Flemish Film Festival 01-03-2008 - 12-03-2008 Örökmozgó Filmmuseum 01-03-2008 - 12-03-2008 Merlin
From absurd comedy to historical parable, from thrillers to drama, the programme of the Dutch–Flemish Film Festival offers a variety of genres and topics. The latest films of the two regions will be shown: seven Dutch and six Flemish feature films, plus five documentaries. The opening film will be the Dutch–Flemish production Waiter (Ober), screened on 29 February 2008 at the Uránia Film Theatre. The rest of the festival will be hosted by the Örökmozgó Film Museum from 1–12 March 2008.
Annemiek de Beer and Maurice van Tellingen Annemiek de Beer, Maurice van Tellingen 29-02-2008 - 29-03-2008 Deák Erika Gallery
Opening: 28 February, 2008, 18.00-20.00
Interiors make for one of the core themes of the work of Maurice van Tellingen, interiors that usually manifest themselves in the form of a small looking box. Van Tellingen refers to these items as spatial paintings, and the comparison with seventeenth-century Dutch genre painting is obvious—it places him in a long tradition of artists that have represented interior scenes in the Netherlands.
De Beer follows a unique path in regards to colour and structure as well, using withdrawn, fixed schemes that nevertheless have a fresh, silky character. Gradually becoming visible in her work is an interest in the traditions of Japanese painting, with its linear and structural clarity and, above all, its elegant simplicity.
Trains with Children - An Exhibition of Documents 22-02-2008 - 14-03-2008 Central Library of the Municipal Szabó Ervin Library, Small Gallery
Opening: 22 February, 3 p.m.
After World War I, trains carried over 50,000 weak and hungry children from Hungary to the Netherlands and Belgium. Responding to the call of the churches, thousands of Dutch and Flemish families temporarily accepted into their homes young girls or boys orphaned or destitute in war-ravaged Hungary. Children normally spent four or five months with their foster parents, but a two or three-year stay was not uncommon, and a number of them were eventually adopted. The decades to come showed the children to be better than the diplomats at maintaining these international contacts.
Two Dutch Photographers Bertien van Manen: Give me your image, Hans van der Meer: European Fields: The Landscape of Lower League Football 22-02-2008 - 06-04-2008 Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art
Hans van der Meer and Bertien van Manen are both in the vanguard of contemporary Dutch photography. The exhibition in the Ludwig Museum presents their work in one space, thus offering wider opportunities comparison of two independent artists in the light of one another.
Visibility Works workshop Inga Zimprich, Katarina Zdjelar, Marjolijn Dijkman, Metahaven (Daniel van der Velden, Gon Zifroni, Vinca Kruk) 21-02-2008 - 13-03-2008 Hungarian University of Fine Arts, Barcsay Hall
Opening: 20 February, 19.00
The aim of the program 'Visibility Works', hosted by the Hungarian University of Fine Arts, is to encourage students, professors and the general public to think aloud and work together. The exhibition and workshop series will be held in the exhibition space of the university, which will be transformed into a meeting point, a classroom, a professors' study, a studio and an office for the occasion.
Biking Around the World (My City: Amsterdam) Herb van Drongelen 19-02-2008 - 16-03-2008 Millenáris red and black Gallery
Opening: 18 February, 17.30
My City Amsterdam, one half of a cultural exchange program between Budapest and Amsterdam. During the three-day event, Amsterdam will present itself to the city of Budapest with a musical program, photo exhibitions, readings and lectures.
Herb van Drongelen, who in six years cycled 110,000 kilometers through 69 countries on 6 continents will exhibit the photos of his journey on Millenáris and speak about his experiences on the A38 Ship.
Wim Delvoye 16-02-2008 - 23-03-2008 Ernst Museum
Love it or hate it: Wim Delvoye, enfant terrible of the contemporary scene, makes art that demands notice. His provocative works, which make emphatic use of antagonisms, flout conventions and dogmas. His raw honesty and grotesque humour will make you laugh and wonder.
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