Sarajevo, Bosnia & Herzegovina

One-week intensive workshop on contemporary art from Bosnia and Herzegovina

when 25 June 2018 - 30 June 2018
language English
duration 1 week
credits 5 EC
fee EUR 280

The first Kuma International Summer School focuses on the post-war artistic production from Bosnia and Herzegovina, including design, photography, film and theatre.
Students will look at how artists from the region have been affected by the political turmoil of the 1990s and how they have processed the fall of Yugoslavia, the 1992-1995 war and its consequences through their art practices. Students will also have the unique chance to meet with local artists, explore the city’s museums and art galleries and visit artists’ studios. Addressing contemporary visual art produced in the context of conflict and trauma, Kuma’s first summer school and its local and international staff will provide a glimpse into the impact of war on local artists' aesthetics and narrative. At the same time, the school will look at the phenomenon of a new generation of visual artists and cultural workers belonging to the Bosnian diaspora who have started to come back to their country of origin out of a need to reconnect with their homeland and elaborate their traumatic war experience through art.

Course leader

Claudia Zini

Target group

Participation is open to graduates and postgraduates from the relevant disciplines, as well as art historians, curators, artists and museum professionals, and all people interested in training and developing new skills while experiencing a new and exciting learning environment in Sarajevo, the vibrant capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Course aim

Kuma International believes that studying the war and post-war Bosnian cultural production can offer valuable insights about the nature of conflicts. It also raises important questions such as: what can art contribute to our understanding of war and conflict? Can the production as well as the viewing of art inspire non-verbal reconciliation of past atrocities? Which role can artists have in the memorialization of the past? Will their work prevent further genocide and mass violence in the region and promote reconciliation?

Credits info

5 EC
The first Kuma International Summer School is organized in partnership with the WARM Foundation from Sarajevo which is working on the world’s contemporary conflicts and is dedicated to war reporting, war art and war memory. Every year they organize a WARM festival which presents the best in journalism, documentary film, art exhibitions and research from conflicts around the world. The next WARM festival will run between June 27th and July 1st 2018 in Sarajevo. The full program will be soon available on the WARM website. Kuma's students will have free access to all the festival’s activities (movie screens, exhibitions, talks, and much more).

Fee info

EUR 280: The fee includes all museum entrances, a guided tour of the city and a welcome dinner.

Scholarships

Scholarships for local students are available.