Modifying Error 404 | ERIAC presents: Panel discussion Current Events in Contemporary Roma Art, accompanied by a musical performance

2022-08-08 21:00

Cinema Square

Monday, August 8
Cinema Square, 9 p.m.
Modifying Error 404 | ERIAC presents: Panel discussion Current Events in Contemporary Roma Art, accompanied by a musical performance
Participants: Zoran Tairović, Alina Șerban, Sead Kazanxhiu, Suzana Milevska, Danijel Piller, Darko Piller, Ferenc Snétberger
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Alina Șerban – actress, playwright and Romania’s first Roma female director, as well as President of the cultural non-profit association Untold Stories. For the past 13 years, Alina has been using film and theatre against all forms of discrimination in order to create and claim space for marginalised stories, support gender equality, combat violence against women and promote minority rights. Her career has wide visibility in the international press, including Agency France Press, Variety, Le Monde, Le Figaro, Screen Daily, and Cine Europa. Alina is a graduate of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art-London, New York University – Tisch and the National University of Theatre and Film of Romania. Alina became the first Roma Director at The National Theatre of Bucharest and directed the first short film about Roma slavery from a Roma perspective. She won and was nominated for many rewards for her acting skills, and represented Romani at The Cannes International Film Festival.
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Ferenc Snétberger is a Hungarian jazz guitarist born in a Roma family. He studied at Bela Bartók Jazz Conservatory in Budapest. He plays in orchestras founded by him, but also with famous international jazz music stars. Today, he is best known for his art of improvising and his crossing of stylistic borders. His music is inspired by the Roma tradition of his home country, Brazilian music and flamenco as well as classical guitar playing and jazz. He has composed film music and "For My People" for guitar and orchestra. The German Holocaust Remembrance Day concluded the Snétberger celebration in plenary by the German Bundestag. He made numerous albums as a leader, co-leader and sideman and has toured all over Europe as well as Japan, Korea, India and the United States. He received several prestige acknowledgements such as the Hungarian Order of Merit, Franz Liszt award and the Kossuth Prize. He founded the Snétberger Music Talent Center, an international music school for disadvantaged children and young people, mainly minorities of Sinti and Roma origin.
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Sead Kazanxhiu is a visual artist from Baltëz-Fier in Albania, currently living and working in Tirana. He works across various mediums, including painting, installations, video, and performance. Kazanxhiu’s work as an artist, and as a cultural producer more generally, reflects his position as an Albanian Roma citizen. Profoundly aware of the ways that social and political hierarchies within the nation-state reinforce unequal privileges and prevent participation, Kazanxhiu’s practice foregrounds and addresses issues of politics, activism, prejudice, exclusion, and the environment. His image-making represents the efforts of a single artist devoted to restoring the dignity of a cultural group that has been forcefully and unjustly marginalized within the structures of European democracy. 
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Suzana Milevska, PhD, is a curator and theorist of art and visual culture, based in Skopje, North Macedonia. Her theoretical research projects employ postcolonial and feminist institutional critique of representational regimes of a hegemonic power in arts and visual culture. She is interested in the deconstruction and decolonization of contentious cultural heritages in art institutions, collections, and public spaces. Her curatorial projects focus on collaborative and participatory art practices, feminist projects by women artists looking at visual microhistories in state and family photographic archives, and community-based projects in solidarity with marginalized and disenfranchised communities.
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The Pillers is an internationally renowned violin and accordion formation of the Austrian-Serbian Roma musicians Darko and Danijel Piller. Danijel studied at the Prayner Conservatory in Vienna. Darko studied at the Richard Wagner Conservatory and is currently considered the youngest professor in Vienna. In 2017, they won the prestigious world music award ‘Onet le Châteaugot’ in France.
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Zoran Tairović, born in Novi Sad, Serbia, is an academic painter and a multimedia artist with a doctoral degree in interdisciplinary studies in applied arts management, an activist and Director of the Intercultural Theatre. Winner of prestigious world awards for painting, author of the first Roma opera and musical, and also many award-winning documentaries. He has participated with his artistic performances in many important festivals and events in Serbia and around the world. Zoran’s achievements are wide-ranging and tireless, including published literary works, music compositions, art exhibitions, works in public spaces, lectures, curatorial work, videos and films. Professionally, Zoran has excelled in several spheres, with positions as the founder of the Albert Hall Museum for Conceptual Art in Bódvalenke, Hungary, as a Member of the Presidency, as founder and director of, a film festival with Roma thematic, FROM. President of the Committee for Culture of the League of Roma, and ex-adviser to the Vice President of the Government of the Republic of Serbia for Roma issues.