Artists and cultural producers from Slovenia – worldwide! Browse the growing archive of their international activity, or find your spot on the interactive world map of events.
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"Dirty Thirty: Thirty Years of Making a Scene", the Stripburger collective presenting the three decades of working on and creating the alternative scene itself
International exhibition “Josip Plečnik, Central European Architect” presenting the work of Jože Plečnik (1872–1957), curated by Damjan Prelovšek, Vladimír Šlapeta, Boris Podrecca and Zdeněk Lukeš.
The exhibition aim at showing the similarities and differences in cultural tradition and everyday life of Slovenia and Slovakia. The two countries have similar names and are often confused for each other. Many cultural and lifestyle features are shared, too.
Jasmina Cibic joins Claire Morgan and Dafna Talmor in a compelling visual dialogue alongside more than fifteen Austrian and Austria-based artists in a group exhibition Touch Nature. Together, they confront the profound political, economic, ecological, and humanitarian consequences of the Anthropocene.
Slovenian‑born multimedia artist Eva Petrič presents her "Bird of Hope for Peace" on the site of the former Mauthausen concentration camp. Each of the thousand handmade lace roses represents a “circle of hope that cannot be broken.”
»Modern Freedom«, an exhibition of artists from the former Eastern Bloc countries, among them also Dušan Fišer and Jernej Forbici. The exhibition theme is war traumas and the experience of violence under 20th-century totalitarianisms.
The exhibition entitled "Coexistence in Diversity" presents painters Klementina Golija, Ina Loitzl and Klavdij Tutta. The diversity of the authors' poetics opens the space for dialogue and complementarity. The art exhibition begins with recitals by pianist Tim Jančar.
Slovenia is represented by the artist Gašper Kunšič whose practice draws on references from folk motifs, pop culture and imagery from the post-Yugoslav and a broader diasporic Balkan context. Moving between personal memory and collective imagination, he constructs new folklore worlds and their imaginings for those who do not belong.
The series DOMKUNST continues its artistic exploration of transformation with the exhibition “Metamorphoses”, which brings together works by various renowned artists, including Slovenian painters Oto Rimele, Sandi Červek, Lojze Logar, and Dušan Fišer.
The exibition invites visitors on a descent through the depths of the sea, from the sunlit surface waters to the darkest reaches of the ocean.
As part of the exhibition, Slovenian artist Robertina Šebjanič presents "Echinoidea Future – Adriatic Sensing", addressing changing biogeological conditions in sea urchin habitats shaped by anthropogenic pollution and low oxygen levels in seawater.
At the biennial contemporary art exhibition organised by ECC Italy in Venice, entitled "Confluences", the project "Jakov Brdar – SHE AND HE" is curated by the team of Polona Senčar, Milka Sinkovič, and Nives Marvin, featuring a Slovenian sculptor Jakov Brdar, positioning Piran (Slovenia) and the wider Mediterranean region within contemporary cultural and artistic currents.
Slovenian Pavillion features the exhibition "Soundtrack for an Invisible House" presenting Nonument Group (Neja Tomšič, Martin Bricelj Baraga, Nika Grabar, Miloš Kosec) curated by Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez and comissioned by Martina Vovk. The biennial theme is "In Minor Keys" curated by Koyo Kouoh.