Caterina Preda -
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About
    About me
    CV
Publications
    Books & chapters in books
    Special issues of journals
    Academic Articles
    Conference papers
    Other
Courses
Reasearch / Projects
    Art and Politics in Modern Dictatorships in SA & EE
    Artistul de stat
    Roma OVT
    GRSAP
    Artist collectives
    Transregional remembrance of dictatorships
    Understanding 1989 in East-Central European Art: War vs. Revolution
    Corneliu Petrescu
PolArt
Media
Blog
Caterina Preda -
  • About
    • About me
    • CV
  • Publications
    • Books & chapters in books
    • Special issues of journals
    • Academic Articles
    • Conference papers
    • Other
  • Courses
  • Reasearch / Projects
    • Art and Politics in Modern Dictatorships in SA & EE
    • Artistul de stat
    • Roma OVT
    • GRSAP
    • Artist collectives
    • Transregional remembrance of dictatorships
    • Understanding 1989 in East-Central European Art: War vs. Revolution
    • Corneliu Petrescu
  • PolArt
  • Media
  • Blog
Art and politics

Art or the memory of it (1)

April 25, 2010 by cpreda 3 Comments
Artistic memory represents one of my topics of interest of the moment. I am discovering several ways in which art is used to remember the dictatorial past as well as manners in which art memorizes the past (independently of a political order). Currently I am looking at the official memory of art through the establishment of museums in South America. Chilean president Michelle Bachelet ended her term by inaugurating (as Chirac did in 2006 with Musee du Quai Branly although with a higher symbolic weight in the Chilean case) the Museum of Memory and Human rights in Santiago de Chile. Such museums exist in several parts of Argentina (Museum of Rosario), including Buenos Aires where the infamous ESMA has been (partially) transformed in a museum. A museum of memory was opened in Uruguay and another one in Asuncion, Paraguay. A plan to open a museum has been also discussed in Peru in the aftermath of the regime of Fujimori and the repression launched against the Shining Path; there already is a small museum in Ayacucho as well as a permanent exhibition (Yuyanapaq) in Lima’s museum of art.

The museum in Santiago

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