… team’s participation in the Getty Foundation-funded project Understanding 1989 in East-Central European Art further strengthened the international dimension of the study. Ongoing since 2022, the research has included a conference titled The Flowers of Decay– The Art of Hungary in the 1980s , interviews with key figures from the decade, and an extensive review of 1980s art criticism. This work culminated in an anthology analysing the debates that shaped the Hungarian art scene …
… of the 40th anniversary of the foundation of Artpool and its concurrent relocation to the Central European Research Institute of Art History of the Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest. The study volume related to the conference, edited by Emese Kürti and Zsuzsa László, is published by Transcript, one of Europe's leading independent scientific publishers. How do artist archives survive and stay authentic in radically changed contexts? The volume addresses the challenge of continuity, …
Director Dávid Fehér is Director of the Central European Research Institute for Art History of the Museum of Fine Arts, curator of 20 th century and contemporary art at the Museum of Fine Arts, and assistant professor at the Institute of Art History, Eötvös Loránd University. He defended his PhD dissertation on the art of László Lakner at Eötvös Loránd University in 2018. His field of research is Central and Eastern European art history after …
… Department. She is writing her dissertation on the development and critique of the notion of Eastern European art at the Doctoral School of Art Throry at ELTE-BTK. She is a member of the editorial team of ArtMargins Online, the board of tranzit.hu, the NEP4Dissent research network and the Hungarian Section of AICA. Her fields of research include transnational and decentralized approaches to Central and Eastern European art history and exhibition history, neo-avant-garde, conceptualism, …
… . In the issue entitled “Regional Resonances: Transnational Aspirations in Central and Eastern European Art of the 1970s", the papers of Hana Buddeus, Zsuzsa László and Alina Șerban present an interconnected history of previously unexplored cross-border collaborations and friendships. The second part of the special issue, with essays by Emese Kürti, Cristian Nae and Małgorzata Miśniakewicz, will be published in the first half of 2025 in ArtMargins Print, published by MIT …