Sulje

Sulje

Marika Agu, curator and archive project manager at the Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art, discusses about Estonian art with artists Alexei Gordin, Flo Kasearu, Camille Laurelli, Liina Pääsuke, Bita Razavi and Steve Vanoni.

Marika Agu, curator and archive project manager at the Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art, discusses about Estonian art with artists Alexei Gordin, Flo Kasearu, Camille Laurelli, Liina Pääsuke, Bita Razavi and Steve Vanoni.

Marika Agu, curator and archive project manager at the Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art, discusses about Estonian art with artists Alexei Gordin, Flo Kasearu, Camille Laurelli, Liina Pääsuke, Bita Razavi and Steve Vanoni.

Marika Agu, curator and archive project manager at the Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art, discusses about Estonian art with artists Alexei Gordin, Flo Kasearu, Camille Laurelli, Liina Pääsuke, Bita Razavi and Steve Vanoni.

Discussion – What is Estonian art and who does it?

The new permanent exhibition Landscapes of Identity: Estonian Art 1700–1945 in Kumu Art Museum brings up new questions about the management of museums, galleries, and art collections, when rephrasing artworks with racist titles. In Estonia, also the discussion around wages for artists and other freelancers has been heated up again, write Marika Agu and Kaarin Kivirähk from the Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

The new permanent exhibition Landscapes of Identity: Estonian Art 1700–1945 in Kumu Art Museum brings up new questions about the management of museums, galleries, and art collections, when rephrasing artworks with racist titles. In Estonia, also the discussion around wages for artists and other freelancers has been heated up again, write Marika Agu and Kaarin Kivirähk from the Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

The new permanent exhibition Landscapes of Identity: Estonian Art 1700–1945 in Kumu Art Museum brings up new questions about the management of museums, galleries, and art collections, when rephrasing artworks with racist titles. In Estonia, also the discussion around wages for artists and other freelancers has been heated up again, write Marika Agu and Kaarin Kivirähk from the Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

The new permanent exhibition Landscapes of Identity: Estonian Art 1700–1945 in Kumu Art Museum brings up new questions about the management of museums, galleries, and art collections, when rephrasing artworks with racist titles. In Estonia, also the discussion around wages for artists and other freelancers has been heated up again, write Marika Agu and Kaarin Kivirähk from the Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

Race and wages: Listening to the debates in Estonia

Coincidence or not, the beginning of 2021 in Estonia brought about an unprecedented consolidation of women leading in politics as well as the visibility of women’s stories in several exhibition spaces around the country, writes Marika Agu from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

Coincidence or not, the beginning of 2021 in Estonia brought about an unprecedented consolidation of women leading in politics as well as the visibility of women’s stories in several exhibition spaces around the country, writes Marika Agu from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

Coincidence or not, the beginning of 2021 in Estonia brought about an unprecedented consolidation of women leading in politics as well as the visibility of women’s stories in several exhibition spaces around the country, writes Marika Agu from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

Coincidence or not, the beginning of 2021 in Estonia brought about an unprecedented consolidation of women leading in politics as well as the visibility of women’s stories in several exhibition spaces around the country, writes Marika Agu from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

The World as It Could Be

As the coronavirus crisis deepens and people are locked into their homes – apartments, houses, cities, villages, countries – the perspective gradually changes. The exhibitions in Tallinn at the moment take into consideration the space, both private and public, starting from very intimate surroundings and broadening to public discussions on why authorities must take responsibility for the city space, writes Kaarin Kivirähk from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

As the coronavirus crisis deepens and people are locked into their homes – apartments, houses, cities, villages, countries – the perspective gradually changes. The exhibitions in Tallinn at the moment take into consideration the space, both private and public, starting from very intimate surroundings and broadening to public discussions on why authorities must take responsibility for the city space, writes Kaarin Kivirähk from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

As the coronavirus crisis deepens and people are locked into their homes – apartments, houses, cities, villages, countries – the perspective gradually changes. The exhibitions in Tallinn at the moment take into consideration the space, both private and public, starting from very intimate surroundings and broadening to public discussions on why authorities must take responsibility for the city space, writes Kaarin Kivirähk from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

As the coronavirus crisis deepens and people are locked into their homes – apartments, houses, cities, villages, countries – the perspective gradually changes. The exhibitions in Tallinn at the moment take into consideration the space, both private and public, starting from very intimate surroundings and broadening to public discussions on why authorities must take responsibility for the city space, writes Kaarin Kivirähk from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

A letter from Tallinn, the city from another dimension