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POLITIKIN ZABAVNIK KOMPLET PRVIH 570 BROJEVA (nedostaju dva broja) Izdavac - Politika , 1952-62. godine Ocuvani veoma dobro za ovo izdanjei ovu starost , bez ikakvih ostecenja Samo par brojeva minimalno osteceno , pisano na par politikin zabavnik , komplet

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Dečje novine - Dragan Bjelogrlic - Nindza Kornjace Veoma retko i raritetno izdanje iz 1991. godine. Teme: Na tragu prirode. Siroko Srce. Priroda i drustvo. Kalendar istorijskih dogadjaja. Odabrane price, pesme... Grigor Vitez. Mitska bica nasih predaka. Mitovi i legende - Antlantida, el Dorado. Kultura ponasanja. Sa nasim reporterom po Svetu. Kompjuterski leksikon. Pronalasci za civilizaciju. Strip pokretna konjusnica. Spomenak. Stubac Zaljubac. Skoloskop. Astrologija. Sport - Robert Prosinecki natrazeniji fudbaler evrope, nasi najbolji u skoku u vis. Saobracaj. Eureka: Smeh divljeg Zapada. Misaone igre: Ukrstene reci, osmosmerka, skriveni crtez, lavirint, rebus uoci razliku, morske ribe u osmosmerci...

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Komplet svih 20 brojeva prvog pravog (po meni i jedinog) news magazina u Srbiji - `Evropljanin`-a. Tačan presek društva s kraja devedestih, bogato ilustrovan i za to vreme neverovatno kvalitetno štampan. Zadnjih 6 brojeva su bili zabranjeni za distribuciju u Srbiji, kupovani su `ispod ruke`. Dream team Srpskog novinartva: Bujošević, Tirnanić, Tijanić, Prpa, Smajlović, Žanetić, Ćuruvija, Mamula i mnogi drugi. Nepunih mesec dana po izlasku poslednjeg broja osnivač i izdavač Slavko Ćuruvija je ubijen. Tekstovi koji i dan danas provociraju. Stanje je solidno, vidljivi znaci korišćenja, sasvim čitljivo. Plaćanje - lično ili uplata na tekući račun + troškovi dostave Ne šaljem pouzećem niti u inostranstvo. Za sva pitanja stojim na raspolaganju

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Tajne japanske astrologije KIGAKU Znati kako upravljati sopstvenim telom i zdravljem, znati kako urediti odnose sa ljudima, i znati kako usmeriti sreću i sudbinu, tri su umeća koja će biti sudbonosna za vreme koje je pred nama. Rak, nova bolest sida, stres, duševna nestabilnost, u nastupajućem vremenu najviše će pretiti našem telu i duhu. Da izbegnemo bolesti i sačuvamo stabilnost duha, poslužiće nam znanje o devet zvezda – kjusei, koji se jednostavno naziva KIGAKU. Ljudi ne mogu ni da žive ni da rade sami. U svim sredinama u kojima provode vreme sa nekim, harmonija je veoma važna. Nebeska energija, primljena rođenjem, prati nas kroz čitav život i u svim njegovim vidovima. Energija drugihje takođe uvek sa njima, tako da, kada se susrećemo sa ljudima, potiranje te energije, njeno pojačavanje ili jednostavno mimoilaženje, određuje godina i vreme kad smo se rodili. Da li smo izabrali dobre životne saputnike, dobre saradnike, da li se družimo sa pravim ljudima i kakve su nam zajedničke sudbine predodređene, može nam otkriti jedna od nauka „devet zvezda“ – KIGAKU. Da pronađete najboljeg partnera za ljubav, brak, druženje, putovanje, zajednički rad, zabavu, pomaže vam drevna japanska knjiga KIGAKU. 1100 Din

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Blic žena nedeljnih, brojevi od prvog do hiljaditog, komplet Ringier Axel Springer. Blic press 2004-2024 Detaljno stanje preko Kupindo poruka

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Raskovnik sto brojeva-časopis za knjizevnost i kulturu sela 100 brojeva Razni izdavaci, od 1969 do 2000 godine Osim broja 22 koji ima trag posivelosti(videti fotografiju), ostali brojevi očuvani, nisu čitani

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Prodajem 797 izuzetno dobro očuvanih Politikinih zabavnika: 1978. - 1 primerak; 1997. - 1 primerak; 1998. - 1 primerak; 2002. - 1 primerak; 2003. - 7 primeraka; 2004.- 2 primerka; 2005. - 3 primerka; 2006.-3 primerka; 2007.-24 primerka; 2008.-kompletna godina od 52 primerka; 2009.-kompletna godina; 2010.-kompletna godina; 2011.-kompletna godina; 2012.-kompletna godina; 2013.-kompletna godina; 2014.-kompletna godina;2015.-kompletna godina; 2016.-47 primeraka; 2017.-49 primeraka;2018.-50 primeraka; 2019.-50 primeraka; 2020.-kompletna godina; 2021.-39 primeraka; 2022.-kompletna godina; 2023.-kompletna godina Cena je 50000 dinara. Cena kolekcije kompletiranih godina (od 2008. do 2015.) iznosi 40000 dinara. Cena pojedinačne kompletne godine je 5000 dinara. Ne prodajem pojedinačne brojeve.

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ovo je lot od 32 broja ruskog knjizevno - umetnickog casopisa PEREZVONI (zvona) tacnije 31 sveska - brojevi 7 i 8 su izasli kao dvobroj ruska emigracija u latviji - riga izdavac : salamander naslovna strana : ilustracija M. Dobuzhinsky format : 29,5 x 22,5 cm, tezina oko 4 kg stanje lose. nedostaju pojedine reprodukcije, fleke nepoznato mi je koliko je brojeva izaslo. ovde (od 1 do 43) nedostaju brojevi : 1,3,9,12,14,18,20,23,25,26,30 i 33. rusija, emigracija,periodika samo srbija ove casopise ne saljem u inostranstvo serbia only I do not send these magazines abroad ---------------------------------- Било је потребно да прође стотину година да бисмо почели да се занимамо за Русе који су после 1918. дошли у наш град. Њихов утицај на развој друштва, науке, образовања и културе био је велики и зато је важно да сада, када је јавност заинтересована за ову тему, сазнамо праве чињенице о руској емиграцији у Србију. Велику победу у Првом светском рату Србија је несразмерно скупо платила јер се процењује да смо изгубили чак око 60 одсто мушке популације, између 1,1 и 1,3 милиона људи, односно трећину укупног становништва. Таква изнурена, рањена и сељачка Србија ушла је 1918. године неспремна у државну заједницу са Словенијом и Хрватском, које нису претрпеле ратна разарања и биле су привредно напредније. Сматра се да је око два милиона Руса напустило своју земљу после Октобарске револуције и пораза у грађанском рату. Око 40.000 дошло их је у Краљевину Срба, Хрвата и Словенаца, највише у Београд и друге веће српске градове. Краљ Александар је руске емигранте дочекао раширених руку због посебног односа са убијеним руским царем Николајем, који му је био кум. Уосталом, и краљ и принц Ђорђе били су руски кадети, а прича се да је Олга, једна од кћерки цара Николаја, била обећана југословенском монарху за супругу. Какав је однос руска царска породица имала према Александру Карађорђевићу говори и чињеница да је Марија Фјодоровна, мајка цара Николаја, завештала југословенском монарху икону Пресвете Богородице Филермоса, коју је насликао свети апостол Лука, шаку Светог Јована Крститеља и делић Часног крста. Те светиње предате су краљу Александру 1928. године после смрти руске царице у Копенхагену, а чуване су у посебној крипти на Белом двору. О структури руских емиграната сведоче подаци које је објавио Николај Степанов, дипломирани историчар Државног универзитета у Нижњем Новгороду. Он наводи да је само на једном од бродова који је упловио у Боку било 30 генерала, професора, доктора. Према Степанову, више од половине придошлих Руса били су војна лица и државни службеници, око 30 одсто радило је у привреди, а 14 одсто су били предавачи, доктори, писци, свештенство и уметници, уз пет одсто административног кадра. Према овим подацима, њих 13 одсто имало је високу стручну спрему, а само три одсто било је без икаквог образовања. Веома брзо је на чело универзитетских катедри у Краљевини дошло чак 28 руских професора. Руски професори чинили су четвртину наставног кадра Београдског универзитета, а на Пољопривредном и Медицинском факултету чак половину. Основали су интерну клинику Медицинског факултета. Својој новој домовини Руси су дали дванаест акадмика Српске академије наука, попут Георгија Острогорског, једног од највећих византолога двадесетог века. Руски уметници обновили су балет и оперу Београдског народног позоришта, а најзначајнији су балерина Нина Кирсанова и сценограф Владимир Ждерински. Прву глумачку школу отворио је редитељ Јуриј Ракитин. Утицаји Ђорђа Лобачева на развој српског стрипа, Константина Константиновича Егера на развој мачевања, или сликара Степана Фјодоровича Колесникова на наше сликарство, били су непроцењиви. У Београду је радило више од педесет руских архитеката, међу којима су најзначајнији Николај Краснов, Сергеј Смирнов, Василиј Баумгартен, Јуриј Коваљевски, Роман Верховски, Валериј Сташевски и Василиј Андросов. Они су пројектовали велики број јавних зграда које постоје и данас, попут зграда Главне поште, Владе Србије, Министарства иностраних послова, старог Генералштаба, Белог двора, Патријаршије, Руског дома, Цркве Александра Невског и Цркве Свете Тројице. У Београду су издавани и превођени модерни руски писци као што су Борис Пиљњак, Данил Хармс, Иљф и Петров, који су били забрањени у СССР-у. За претежно неписмену земљу, чија половина становништва није знала да чита и пише, то свакако није била мала ствар. Рецимо, у Србију је дошло између 1.200 И 1.500 инжењера, а имали смо их око 500. Први декан машинског факултета био је академик Владимир Фармаковски. Први шеф пилота домаће авио-компаније „Аеропут“, претече ЈАТ-а и „Ер Србије“, био је Владимир Стрижевски, а за ту компанију летели су многи руски пилоти попут Михаила Јарошенка, Виктора Никитина и Леонида Бајдака. Бајдак је заједно са Тадијом Зондермајером 1927. године летео од Париза преко Београда до Бомбаја. Лет је у том тренутку био најдужи на свету, а организован је да би се јавност заинтересовала за акције компаније како би била купљена четири путничка авиона. Зондермајер је 1926. године био учесник последњег двобоја револверима у Србији, а противник му је био тада млади писац Милош Црњански. Руси су издавали своје возачке дозволе јер их Србија до њиховог доласка није имала, основали су такси службу и водили су све такси станице у Београду. ---------------------------------------------- White Russian émigrés were Russians who emigrated from the territory of the former Russian Empire in the wake of the Russian Revolution (1917) and Russian Civil War (1917–1923), and who were in opposition to the revolutionary Bolshevik communist Russian political climate. Many white Russian émigrés participated in the White movement or supported it, although the term is often broadly applied to anyone who may have left the country due to the change in regimes. Some white Russian émigrés, like Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries, were opposed to the Bolsheviks but had not directly supported the White Russian movement; some were apolitical. The term is also applied to the descendants of those who left and who still retain a Russian Orthodox Christian identity while living abroad.[citation needed] The term `émigré` is most commonly used in France, the United States, and the United Kingdom. A term preferred by the émigrés themselves was first-wave émigré (Russian: эмигрант первой волны, emigrant pervoy volny), `Russian émigrés` (Russian: русская эмиграция, russkaya emigratsiya) or `Russian military émigrés` (Russian: русская военная эмиграция, russkaya voyennaya emigratsiya) if they participated in the White Russian movement. In the Soviet Union, white émigré (белоэмигрант, byeloemigrant) generally had negative connotations. Since the end of the 1980s, the term `first-wave émigré` has become more common in Russia. In East Asia, White Russian is the term most commonly used for white Russian émigrés, even though with some being of Ukrainian and other ethnicities they are not all culturally Russians. Most white émigrés left Russia from 1917 to 1920 (estimates vary between 900,000 and 2 million), although some managed to leave during the 1920s and 1930s or were expelled by the Soviet government (such as, for example, Pitirim Sorokin and Ivan Ilyin). They spanned all classes and included military soldiers and officers, Cossacks, intellectuals of various professions, dispossessed businessmen and landowners, as well as officials of the Russian Imperial government and of various anti-Bolshevik governments of the Russian Civil War period. They were not only ethnic Russians but belonged to other ethnic groups as well. Most émigrés initially fled from Southern Russia and Ukraine to Turkey and then moved to other Slavic countries in Europe (the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, and Poland). A large number also fled to Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Finland, Iran, Germany and France. Some émigrés also fled to Portugal, Spain, Romania, Belgium, Sweden, Switzerland, and Italy. Berlin and Paris developed thriving émigré communities. Many military and civil officers living, stationed, or fighting the Red Army across Siberia and the Russian Far East moved together with their families to Harbin (see Harbin Russians), to Shanghai (see Shanghai Russians) and to other cities of China, Central Asia, and Western China. After the withdrawal of US and Japanese troops from Siberia, some émigrés traveled to Japan. During and after World War II, many Russian émigrés moved to the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Peru, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, South Africa and Australia – where many of their communities still exist in the 21st century. Many, estimated as being between the hundred thousands and a million, also served Germany in the Wehrmacht or in the Waffen-SS, often as interpreters. White émigrés were, generally speaking, anti-communist and did not consider the Soviet Union and its legacy to be representative of Russia but rather of an occupying force. They consider the period of 1917 to 1991 to have been a period of anti-Christian occupation by the Soviet regime. They used the pre-revolutionary tricolor (white-blue-red) as their flag, for example, and some organizations used the ensign of the Imperial Russian Navy. A significant percentage of white émigrés may be described as monarchists, although many adopted a position of being `unpredetermined` (`nepredreshentsi`), believing that Russia`s political structure should be determined by popular plebiscite. Many white émigrés believed that their mission was to preserve the pre-revolutionary Russian culture and way of life while living abroad, in order to return this influence to Russian culture after the fall of the USSR. Many symbols of the White émigrés were reintroduced as symbols of the post-Soviet Russia, such as the Byzantine eagle and the Russian tricolor. A religious mission to the outside world was another concept promoted by people such as Bishop John of Shanghai and San Francisco (canonized as a saint of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad) who said at the 1938 All-Diaspora Council: To the Russians abroad it has been granted to shine in the whole world with the light of Orthodoxy, so that other peoples, seeing their good deeds, might glorify our Father Who is in Heaven, and thus obtain salvation for themselves. Many white émigrés also believed it was their duty to remain active in combat against the Soviet Union, with the hopes of liberating Russia. This ideology was largely inspired by General Pyotr Wrangel, who said upon the White army`s defeat `The battle for Russia has not ceased, it has merely taken on new forms`. White army veteran Captain Vasili Orekhov, publisher of the `Sentry` journal, encapsulated this idea of responsibility with the following words: There will be an hour – believe it – there will be, when the liberated Russia will ask each of us: `What have you done to accelerate my rebirth.` Let us earn the right not to blush, but be proud of our existence abroad. As being temporarily deprived of our Motherland let us save in our ranks not only faith in her, but an unbending desire towards feats, sacrifice, and the establishment of a united friendly family of those who did not let down their hands in the fight for her liberation. The émigrés formed various organizations for the purpose of combatting the Soviet regime such as the Russian All-Military Union, the Brotherhood of Russian Truth, and the NTS. This made the white émigrés a target for infiltration by the Soviet secret police (e.g. operation TREST and the Inner Line). Tens of White army veterans (numbers vary from 72 to 180) served as volunteers supporting Francisco Franco during the Spanish Civil War. Some white émigrés, labeled `Soviet patriots,` adopted pro-Soviet sympathies. These people formed organizations such as the Mladorossi, the Evraziitsi, and the Smenovekhovtsi. After 1933, there were attempts to copy the NSDAP and cozy up to the German National Socialists, thus the short-lived parties such as the ROND (Russian Popular Liberation Movement) came into existence in Germany. One of the most notable forms of activities by Russian émigrés was building monuments to Russian war dead of World War I, which stood in marked contrast to the Soviet Union, which did not build any monuments to the 2 million Russians killed between 1914 and 1917, as the war had been condemned by Lenin as an `imperialist war`. Besides for the war dead, other monuments were put up. In Brussels, Seattle, and Harbin, monuments were built to honor the executed Emperor Nicholas II while a monument was put up in Shanghai to honor Alexander Pushkin, Russia`s national poet. In fact, a monument to Pushkin would have been built in Paris had not a dispute arisen with the Ministry of Fine Arts over its precise location. The popularity of monuments for the war dead reflected not only sadness over the war dead, but also a way to bring together the often badly divided émigré communities shattered across Europe, Asia and North America. Monuments for the war dead were often a way to symbolically recreate Russia abroad with example at the monument for those Russians killed while serving in the Russian Expeditionary Force (REF) in France at village of Mourmelon-le-Grand having a hermitage built near it together with transplanted fir trees and a Russian style farm to make it look like home. To built community consensus around the war memorials, the design of the memorials were deliberately kept simple with no sculpture which could be given a symbolic meaning, thereby ensuring that no particular interpretation of the war could be put forward other than grief over the war dead. The design of Orthodox churches at the war memorials was done in the style of medieval Orthodox churches in Novgorod and Pskov as this architectural style was seen as politically neutral and hence able to bring the communities together better. Both left-wing and right-wing émigré who otherwise passionately disagreed came together to honor the war dead of World War I, which was virtually the only occasions when overseas Russian communities could all come together, explaining why such memorial services were so important to the émigré communities. The neo-classical style which typically adorned war memorials in Imperial Russia was consciously avoided as building a war memorial in that style was viewed as expressing support for restoring the monarchy. The sense of loss was not only for those the war monuments honored, but due to the sense of loss caused by defeat with a columnist in an émigré newspaper in Paris writing about the dedication of a memorial to the REF in 1930: `We lost everything - family, economic situation, personal happiness, the homeland...Are our sufferings good to anyone? In truth-we have nothing, we have lost everything. Weep, weep`. Such monuments were also a way of commanding respect from the host communities with an émigré newspaper saying in 1930: `Peoples honor heroes. To the living: care, to the dead: memory. We in a foreign land do not have a tomb of an `unknown soldier`, but we do have thousands of suffering people. They are our honor and our justification (opravdanie) before the world. Their wounds and suffering are for Russia. They remain true to honor and obligation. That is our Russian passport`. This was especially the case in France, the home of the largest overseas Russian community, where services honoring the events of World War I were a major part of French life after 1918, and where by honoring the Russian war dead allowed the Russian émigrés in France to take part in the ceremonials, letting the émigrés feel like a part of the wider French community. In 1927, the Orthodox Metropolitan Evlogii when he spoke at the war monument in Valenciennes: `Blood spilled on the soil of beautiful and glorious France is the best atmosphere to unite France forever with a Russia national and worthy`. The fact that the crosses of the Russians buried in France were painted white-the color of the French war dead and allies-while the crosses of the German war dead were painted black was widely noticed within the Russian community in France as a sign that the French regarded them as allies. In Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia, war memorials to the Russian war dead were presented in Pan-Slavic terms, as a symbol of how Russians had fought together with the Czechs and Serbs in the war. Serbian King Alexander of Yugoslavia was a Russophile who welcomed Russian émigrés to his kingdom, and after France, Yugoslavia had the largest Russian émigré community, leading to Yugoslavia to have almost as many war memorials to the Russian war dead as France. War memorials in Yugoslavia usually also honored both Serbian war dead and the members of the Czechoslovak Legions who died in the war, giving them a decidedly pan-Slavic feel. A planned Orthodox church to honor the Russian prisoners who died in an Austrian POW camp outside Osijek would have featured busts of the Emperor Nicholas II, King Peter I and King Alexander to emphasis how the Houses of Romanov and Karađorđević had been allied in the war, linking the Russian and Serbian experiences of the war. Between 1934 and 1936, an ossuary containing the bones of Russian soldiers killed all over the world was built in the Novo Groblje cemetery in Belgrade, which used to illustrate the theme of Serbian-Russian friendship, and which King Alexander contributed 5,000 dinars to meet the construction costs. When the memorial was opened in 1936, the Patriarch Varnava of the Serbian Orthodox Church declared in a speech opening it: `The Russians bore great sacrifices on our account wishing to defend Serbs at a time when powerful enemies attacked tiny Serbia from all sides. And the great Slavic soul of the Russians did not allow it to be looked upon with indifference that a fraternal Slavic people should perish`. Karel Kramář, a wealthy conservative Czechoslovak politician and a Russophile worked together with Russian émigrés to build an Orthodox church in Prague which Kramář called in his opening speech `a monument of Slavic connection` and to `remind Russians not only of their former sufferings but also about the recognition on the side of the Slavs`. A service at the Russian war memorial in Terezin in 1930 turned into `a Russian-Czech political demonstration in a manifestation of Slavic mutuality` with the theme that the Russians had died so that the Czechs might be free. Prague had a large community of Russian émigrés, and by constantly linking the Russian experience of World War I to the experiences of the Czechoslovak Legions was a way of asserting that the Russians had helped to make Czechoslovakia possible. In Germany, right-wing émigrés found much to their own frustration that right-wing German veterans shunned their offers to participate in Totensonntag (`Day of the Dead`) as German conservatives did not wish to honor the sacrifices of those who had fought against Germany, and it was left-wing German veterans, usually associated with Social Democratic Party, who welcomed having Russians participate in Totensonntag to illustrate the theme that all peoples in the nations involved in the First World war were victims.[18] In Germany, November 11 was not a holiday as no one wanted to honor the day that the Reich lost the war, and Totensonntag played the same role in Germany that November 11 played in the Allied nations, as the time to honor the war dead. The anti-war and internationalist message at the Totensonntag ceremonies organized by the SPD did not sit well with right-wing Russian émigrés found themselves rather out of place at these ceremonies. The city of Harbin in China was founded by the Russians in 1896, becoming known the `Moscow of the Orient` due to its Russian appearance, and after the Revolution its Russian population was further reinforced by émigrés, through the majority of the Russians living in Harbin were people who had come before World War I. About 127,000 people living in Harbin in 1920 came from Russia, making it one of the largest Russian-speaking cites in East Asia. Many of the Russians in Harbin were wealthy, and the city was a center of Russian culture as the Russian community in Harbin made it their mission to preserve the pre-war Russian culture in a city on the plains of Manchuria with for instance Harbin having two opera companies and numerous theaters performing the traditional classics of the Russian stage. The economic success of the Russians in Harbin often surprised foreign visitors who assumed that they should be poor, leading one visitor in 1923 to comment that Russian “ladies as well gowned as at the Paris races [who] strolled with men faultlessly garbed by European standards”, leading him to wonder how they achieved this `deceptive appearance`. The extent of Russian economic dominance of Harbin could be seen that “Moya-tvoya`, a pidgin language combining aspects of Russian and Mandarin Chinese which developed in the 19th century when Chinese went to work in Siberia was considered essential by the Chinese merchants of Harbin. White émigrés fought with the Soviet Red Army during the Soviet invasion of Xinjiang and the Xinjiang War of 1937. During World War II, many white émigrés took part in the Russian Liberation Movement. The main reason that pushed the Whites to support the German power with action was the concept of a `spring offensive`, an armed intervention against the USSR that must be exploited in order to continue the civil war. The latter was perceived by many Russian officers as an ongoing case that was never finished since the day of their exile.[26] During the war, the white émigrés came into contact with former Soviet citizens from German-occupied territories who used the German retreat as an opportunity to either flee from the Soviet Union, or were in Germany and Austria as POWs and forced labor, and preferred to stay in the West, often referred to as the second wave of émigrés (often also called DPs – displaced persons, see Displaced persons camp). This smaller second wave fairly quickly began to assimilate into the white émigré community. After the war, active anti-Soviet combat was almost exclusively continued by NTS: other organizations either dissolved, or began concentrating exclusively on self-preservation and/or educating the youth. Various youth organizations, such as the Scouts-in-Exile became functional in raising children with a background in pre-Soviet Russian culture and heritage. The white émigrés formed the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad in 1924. The church continues its existence to this day, acting as both the spiritual and cultural center of the Russian Orthodox community abroad. On 17 May 2007, the Act of Canonical Communion with the Moscow Patriarchate reestablished canonical ties between the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad and the Russian Church of the Moscow Patriarchate, after more than 80 years of separation. White émigrés, called `White Russians` in East Asia, flooded into China after World War I and into the early 1920s. Most of the Russians went to Manchuria (especially in Harbin, which at the time had the largest population of Russians of any city outside Russia) and treaty ports such as Shanghai, but a few ended up in Beijing. In 1924, the Chinese government recognized the government of the Soviet Union and the majority of White Russians in China who refused to become Soviet citizens were rendered stateless, thus subject to Chinese law unlike other Europeans, Americans, and Japanese living in China who enjoyed the principles of extraterritoriality. Nor were White Russians born in China eligible to be Chinese citizens. Although some of the White Russians arrived with their fortunes intact, most were penniless and due to ethnic prejudices and their inability to speak Chinese, were unable to find jobs. To support themselves and their families, some of the younger women became prostitutes or taxi dancers. They were popular with both foreign men, there being a shortage of foreign women, and Chinese men. A League of Nations survey in Shanghai in 1935 found that 22% of Russian women between 16 and 45 years of age were engaging in prostitution to some extent. The White Russian women mostly worked in the `Badlands` area adjoining the Beijing Legation Quarter on the east, centered on Chuanban Hutong (alley). The American explorer Roy Chapman Andrews said he frequented the `cafes of somewhat dubious reputation` with the explorer Sven Hedin and scientist Davidson Black to `have scrambled eggs and dance with the Russian girls.` Some did find professional work, teaching music or French. Other women took work as dressmakers, shop assistants and hairdressers. Many men became career soldiers of the Shanghai Russian Regiment, the only professional/standing unit within the Shanghai Volunteer Corps. By slow degrees, and despite the many difficulties, the community not only retained a good deal of cohesion but did begin to flourish, both economically and culturally. By the mid-1930s there were two Russian schools, as well as a variety of cultural and sporting clubs. There were Russian-language newspapers and a radio station. An important part was also played by the local Russian Orthodox Church under the guidance of St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco. Approximately 150,000 White Russians, including princes, princesses, generals and senior officers, fled to the Ottoman Empire in the wake of the Revolution. Istanbul, which had a population of around 900,000 at that time, opened its doors to approximately 150 thousand White Russians. The parties to the war migration in 1917 were neither Crimean Turks nor Caucasian Muslims. This time, those who took refuge in Istanbul were the `nobles` and soldiers of Tsarist Russia, who had fought the Ottomans for centuries. The immigration, which started with small groups at the end of 1917, grew with the loss of Crimea to the Bolsheviks in 1920. Tens of thousands of people who left their titles, money and palaces in Russia and came to Istanbul tried to hold on to life by dispersing all over the city. Some sold books, some handcrafted souvenirs and some flowers. The place, formerly known as Hristaki Passage, became known as Çiçek Pasajı after the Russian flower girls took up residence. Russian refugees. Those who arrived in 1919 were better off economically. The first arrivals found some jobs in the French and British representations, commissions, or alongside them in civil service, translator, or even military or security units in Istanbul.

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Hrpa dobro očuvanih domaćih listova iz početnog perioda ilegalne agresije NATO pakta na SRJ 1999. Komplet sadrži ukupno 46 komada, od toga 43 dnevne novine, dva nedeljna časopisa i jedno specijalno izdanje: VEČERNJE NOVOSTI (20 primeraka) - 25, 27, 29, 30. i 31. mart; 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 13, 15, 16, 18, 19, 20. i 23. april. VEČERNJE NOVOSTI - SPECIJALNO IZDANJE `50 dana NATO agresije na SRJ`; GLAS JAVNOSTI (14 primeraka) - 26, 27, 29, 30. i 31. mart; 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 12, 22, 24. i 27. april. BLIC (6 primeraka) - 6, 8, 15, 17, 19. i 21. april. SPORTSKI ŽURNAL - 11. april. SPORT - 11. april. DANAS - 26. mart. Nedeljnik POLITIKA MAGAZIN - 11. april 1999. Nedeljnik AUTO SVET - 19. april. Na 4 naslovne strane “Večernjih novosti” postoje manje žvrljotine hemijskom olovkom (kada kažem “manje” onda to i mislim!), sve ostalo je u realno više nego dobrom stanju za novine stare skoro 24 godine. DOBRO POGLEDAJTE SVE SLIKE. ___________________________________________________________________________________________ TAGS: Srbija, Serbia, SR Jugoslavija, NATO pakt, S.A.D., SAD, Amerika, međunarodni terorizam, Novi svetski poredak, cionizam, neokolonijalizam, antihrišćanstvo, demokratija, ratni zločini, bombardovanje, Kosovo i Metohija, iredentizam, nasilna secesija, secesionizam, islam, džihad, arnauti, šiptari, balisti, narko mafija, trgovina ljudskim organima, Albanija

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PLAYBOY BEOJ 2O / AVGUST 2OO8 ? IZDANJE ZA SRBIJU I CRNU GORU MARKO VIDOJKOVIĆ, izvršni urednik BEOGRAD R e f e r e n c e SVETLANA CECA RAŽNATOVIĆ - INTERVJU !!!!!!!!! STRANINJIĆA BANA - ČARI SILIKONSKE DOLINE POUKE O KRESANJU !!!!!!!!! 2O PITANJA - DRAGAN STOJKOVIĆ PIKSI TOP 1O PARTIZANKI - ONE SU IMALE MUDA PORODICA SOPRANO STRIP - DIK LONG ............................................................ FOTOGRAFIJE U BOJI LATINICA 112 STRANA LEPO OČUVAN PRIMERAK !!!!!!!! KOLEKCIONARSKI PRIMERAK !!!!!!!!! R e t k o !!!!!!!! Ekstra !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11

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Kao na slikama Prisutan miris starih knjiga Extra retko 1971 Katalin Ladik počela je svoju karijeru u Novom Sadu u periodu delovanja novosadske neoavangarde ranih sedamdesetih, da bi se devedesetih preselila u Budimpeštu. Raspon stvaralaštva Katalin Ladik kreće se od književnosti preko glume do interpretacije eksperimentalnih zvučnih kompozicija i radio-igara, fonetične i vizuelne poezije, hepeninga, performansa, akcije pa sve do mail arta. Objavila je 20 samostalnih zbirki poezije i jedan roman, od kojih su na srpski prevedeni Erogen zoon, Ikarova senka i Kavez od trave i roman Mogu li da živim na tvom licu (SFO (Re)konekcija, 2021). Svoje izložbe, performanse, hepeninge, muzičke performanse i koncerte realizovala je u okviru najznačajnijih institucija savremene kulture domaće i međunarodne scene, kao što su: Akademie der Bildenden Künste Wien „Aspekte – Gegenwärtige Kunst aus Jugoslawien” (Bosch+Bosch grupa), Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam „Vizuele poëzie”, Muzej savremene umetnosti „Verbo-Voko-Vizuelno”, Galerija suvremene umjetnosti „Nova umjetnička praksa 1966–1978”, Centre National Georges Pompidou „Rencontres internationales de poesie sonore”, Kassel, Neue Galerie, DOCUMENTA, New York, Washingto, Dubrovačke letnje igre, a trenutno se njen rad predsatavlja na svim značajnim evropskim izložbama. Rad ove umetnice, prevashodno njena verbo-voko-vizuelna istraživanja (zvučni performansi, video i audio kasete i ploče), (tekstualni) performansi tela, baš kao i obiman i značajan književni kao i rad u oblasti alternativnog teatra, priznati su i prepoznati i u međunarodnim okvirima. Njenu umetničku ličnost svrstavaju u red već gotovo mitskih ličnosti avangardi na čitavom centralnoevropskom prostoru. Za svoj umetnički rad dobila je Nacionalno priznanje za vrhunski doprinos kulturi Republike Srbije 2009, kao i Nagradu za mir i umetničku hrabrost Lennon Ono Grant for Peace 2016. Svoje prve pesme objavila je u časopisu Simpozion na mađarskom jeziku (1962) a njena prva zbirka Balada o srebrnom biciklu (Ballada az ezüstbicikliröl) sa gramofonskim, zvučnim zapisima, objavljena je 1969. godine, potom Bludna metla, Erogena zona, Kavez od trave i Ikarova senka. U prevođenju na srpski joj je pomagala književnica Judita Šalgo, takođe poznata po svojim performativnim izvođenjima poezije. „Judita Šalgo mi je pomogla u prevodu pesama, a Bogdanka Poznanović me potakla na video-dokumentaciju mog stvaralaštva. Ona je negde 1980-ih nabavila videorekorder za Akademiju umetnosti gde je bila profesorka na Odseku medija i potakla me da snimimo neki moj rad za video. Ja sam sabrala neke motive i elemente svojih performansa iz prethodnog desetljeća koji su mi se činili pogodnima za kameru i video, pa sam ih izvela na stepeništu hodnika Akademije, a video nazvala Poemim. To je ostalo kao jedini dokument onog vremena.“ Pored uticaja Bogdanke Poznanović, koja je tada osnovala na novosadskoj Akademiji umetnosti prvi studio za nove medije, knjigu Bore Ćosića Mixed Media smatrala je jako važnom za njen umetnički razvoj. Bila je članica grupa Bosch + Bosch od 1973. do 1976, u okviru koje je ipak imala svoju teritoriju zvuka i zvučnog performansa i izvodila vizualne i konceptualne radove. Novoosnovanom Novosadskom pozorištu – Újvidéki Színház pridružila se 1974. i kao članica stalnog ansabla radila do 1992. igrajući u predstavama najznačajnijih mađarskih reditelja, kao što je Jančo Mikloš i predstava Bajer aspirin – pesnička monodrama koju je za nju napisao Oto Tolnai. Tokom godina igrala je glavne i sporedne uloge u raznim TV filmovima i igranim filmovima (jedan od poznatijih je i film Lordana Zafranovića Ujed anđela). Bila je urednica pesničke rubrike književnih časopisa Elet es Irodalom (1993–94) i Ciganifuro (1994–99). Između 1993. i 1998. predavala je u muzičkom i pozorišnom obrazovnom centru Hangar. Katalin najveći trag ostavlja u svojoj foničnoj i voko-vizelnoj poeziji, ali se najviše pamte njeni performansi i body art u kojima koristi svoje telo kao instrument, često provocirajući intervenciju publike ritualno igrajući različite ženske uloge. Performativno izvođenje njenih „Šamanskih pesama“, dok je ogrnuta samo životinjskom kožom uz svetlost sveće, bio je jedan od najradikalnijih ženskih umetničkih izraza avangardne scene na tadašnjem jugoslovenskom kulturnom prostoru. „U početku sam na te radove gledala kao na poetske večeri – znači, prikazivanje poezije počev od njenog čitanja pa sve do govorenja u obliku fonične i gestualne poezije, što je na neki način bio uvod putem kojega sam ljudima dala ključ ka otvorenoj, proširenoj poeziji. Videla sam da ljudi poeziju smatraju samo onom linearnom, koju eventualno recituje glumac ili sam autor, ali govorenje ili pevanje, a kamoli fonična poezija, tada nije postojala.“ Performansi Ja sam javna žena, Blackshave, Rupa koja vrišti, Poem, Spuštanje Novog Sada niz reku Dunav,Mandora, Tesla samo su neki od najvažnijih, a spacifičnost njenog rada vidi se i u tome što je neke izvodila potpuno različito u drugim kontekstima. Katalin Ladik, performans – Zagreb, 1970. Katalin Ladik, performans – Zagreb, 1970. Katalin Ladik, Sanja Iveković i Vlasta Delimar bile su prve konceptualne umetnice novih medija a njihove umetničke strategije uticale su na poetiku različitih generacija umetnica, od Marine Abramović do nama danas savremene ženske scene. Ali, i one same još aktivno učestviju u kreiranju iste i sve više su prisutne na međunarodnoj sceni Sama Katalin je iznenađena koliko su mladi umetnici zainteresovani za njen rad: „Uskoro idem u Švajcarsku gde ću na Muzičkoj akademiji u Baselu održati radionicu na temu novih eksperimentalnih partitura i improvizacije s kompozitorima. I mene samu čudi kako se mlađe generacije zanimaju za mene i moje stvaralaštvo.“ Zanimljivo je pratiti njen odnos prema ženskoj i feminističkoj kulturi. Sama kaže da u početku nije znala puno o feminističkim teorijama, a one koje su do nje dopirale nisu joj bile bliske. Ali svoju umetničku pobunu pokazuje kroz tipično ženske motive iskazujući ne samo odnos prema patrijarhalnim matricama nego i prema represivnom umetničkom kontekstu čak i među svojim istomišljenicima. Inače, konceptualne umetnice prve problematizuju poziciju autorke u umetničkom polju delovanja. „Stoga sam izražavala svoj bunt kroz one sitne stvari koje radi svaka žena, s uverenjem da to također može da bude predmet umetnosti ili način umetničkog izražavanja. Kada sam počinjala, pišući na mađarskom sredinom 1960-ih, nisam poznavala teoriju feminizma – ne znam ni da li je postojao neki pregled na srpskom. Teorija nije programatski postojala u mom radu, već sam krenula od ličnog iskustva i započela svojevrsno oslobađanje od porodice i radnog mesta kao neki vid protesta u 1970-ima.„ Feministkinje su prepoznale njenu umetnost kao važnu elaboraciju pobunjene žene tako da je bila i gost najveće feminističke međunarodne konferencije u jednoj komunističkoj zemlji Drug-ca 1978. u Beogradu: „To je bio moj prvi susret s njima i drugim aktivnim feministkinjama iz Zagreba, s kojima sam ostala u kontaktu. Drug-ca Žena me lično obogatila, i tada sam shvatila da feminizam nije ono što sam smatrala američkim feminizmom usko usmerenim protiv muškaraca, već da se radi o prostom zalaganju za prava žena.“ Retrospektivna izložba njenih radova u Muzeju savremene umetnosti Vojvodine 2010. upravo je i nazvana Moć žene prema njenim dominantnim umetničkim postulatima. Na konferenciji K.A.T. „Umetnost u obrazovanju: interakcije“, u produkciji Saveza feminističkih organizacija (Re)konekcija u Novom Sadu (2017), mogli smo da vidimo njene trenutne umetničke preokupacije internet prostorom koje je nazvala „Alisa u zemlji kodova“. Katalin Ladik danas, Foto: Sanja Anđelković Fotografija Sanja Anđelković Katalin Ladik bavi se intrigantnim pitanjem, koje je osnovano na materijalu proširene poezije same umetnice. U unutrašnjoj naraciji svake vizuelne poezije nalazi se promena. Neobičajna medijska tranzicija odnosi se na ove objekte (vizuelnu poeziju i konkretnu poeziju), zatim na živo izvođenje i audio snimanje tih živih nastupa. Veza između vizuelnog i zvučnog je suština odnosa između poezije Katalin Ladik i njene proširene poezije, „otelovljenog perfomansa“. „Lepota se pojavljuje kao rezultat na površini, na licu dela, ali radost stvaranja se dešava na obrnutom, na naličju materijala. Energija koja se oslobađa ograničenja, raskalašno se pokazuje i prevladava. Ne poštuje pravila, pretvara se u radost i bol. To se ne možete videti s lepe, tj. prednje strane, samo sa „pogrešne“ strane tj. naličja umetničkog dela” – objašnjava autorka. [Újvidék]: [Fórum Könyvkiadó], [1971]. First edition. In publisher’s illustrated wrappers, designed by Gábor Ifjú. Printed on differently colored papers. 89, (7) p. Inscribed first edition of Katalin Ladik’s book of surreal poems. Katalin Ladik (b. 1942) is a Yugoslavian-born (today Serbia) Hungarian radical female performance artist, poet, and writer. Besides other prizes, in 2016 she was awarded by the LennonOno Grant for Peace together with Ai Weiwei, Anish Kapoor, and Olafur Eliasson. She was an exhibitor at “documenta 14” in 2017. Katalin Ladik (born Novi Sad, 25 October 1942) is a Hungarian poet, performance artist and actress. She was born in Novi Sad, Kingdom of Yugoslavia (Hungarian: Újvidék), and in the last 20 years she has lived and worked alternately in Novi Sad, Serbia, in Budapest, Hungary and on the island of Hvar, Croatia. Parallel to her written poems she also creates sound poems and visual poems, performance art, writes and performs experimental music and audio plays. She is also a performer and an experimental artist (happenings, mail art, experimental theatrical plays). She explores language through visual and vocal expressions, as well as movement and gestures. Her work includes collages, photography, records, performances and happenings in both urban and natural environments. Contents 1 Biography 2 Awards 3 Poetry 4 Prose 5 Publications 5.1 Volumes in original language 5.2 Translated volumes 5.3 E-books 5.4 Audiobooks 6 Discography 6.1 Sound poetry 6.2 Music (experimental music, jazz) 7 Poetry readings, sound poetry performances 7.1 Online Audio 7.2 Live performances 8 Performance art 8.1 A list of performances, happenings, actions 8.2 1960s-`70s 8.3 1980s-`90s 8.4 2000s 8.5 2010s 8.6 2020s 9 Workshops with performances (selection) 10 Concerts, musical performances (selection) 11 Speech-music performances 12 Theatre 12.1 As an actress 12.2 As a director 13 Films 13.1 Feature films 13.2 Short films 13.3 Recitatives 13.4 Television interviews 13.5 Documentary 13.6 Writer’s Credit 14 Radio plays 14.1 Writer and performer 14.2 Performer 15 Artworks in permanent public and private collections 16 Exhibitions 16.1 Solo exhibitions 16.2 Group exhibitions 17 See also 18 References 19 Sources 19.1 Resources 19.2 Literature 20 External links Biography[edit] Katalin Ladik studied at the Economic High School of Novi Sad between 1961 and 1963. She then joined the Dramski Studio (Drama Studio) acting school in Novi Sad, between 1964 and 1966. Between 1961 and 1963, she worked as a bank assistant. During this time, in 1962, she began to write poetry. From 1963 to 1977 she worked for Radio Novi Sad. She joined the newly established Novi Sad Theatre in 1974, becoming a member of its permanent ensemble in 1977 and working there until 1992.[1] She primarily acted in dramatic roles. Over the years, she also played major and minor roles in various TV-films and movies. She led the poetry sections of literary magazines Élet és Irodalom (1993–94) and Cigányfúró (1994–99). Between 1993 and 1998 she taught at Hangár musical and theatrical education center. She is a member of the Hungarian Writers` Union, the Hungarian Belletrists Association, the Association of Hungarian Creative Artists and the Hungarian PEN Club. Awards[edit] Katalin Ladik has earned various awards, including the Kassák Lajos Award (1991), the award of Mikes Kelemen Kör (Mikes International – Association for Hungarian Art, Literature and Science in the Netherlands) (2000), the József Attila Prize (2001), the Mediawave Parallel Culture Award (2003), the National Award for Culture of the Republic of Serbia (2009), and the Laurel Wreath Award of Hungary (2012). Katalin Ladik has earned various awards, including the Kassák Lajos Award (1991), the award of Mikes Kelemen Kör (Mikes International – Association for Hungarian Art, Literature and Science in the Netherlands) (2000), the József Attila Prize (2001), the Mediawave Parallel Culture Award (2003), the National Award for Culture of the Republic of Serbia (2009), and the Laurel Wreath Award of Hungary (2012). In 2015, she received the Klára Herczeg Award in senior category from the Studio of Young Artists’ Association (Hungary).[2] In 2016, she was awarded with the Lennon Ono Grant for Peace.[3] Her awards for acting include the Oktobarska nagrada grada Novog Sada (October Award of the City of Novi Sad), a collective award to the cast of Radio Novi Sad in 1967; first place at Smotra vojvođanskih profesionalnih pozorišta (Festival of Professional Theatres in Vojvodina) in 1978, for the role of Masha in Three Sisters, directed by György Harag, performed at the Novi Sad Theatre. The same role earned her the first place of Udruženje dramskih umetnika Srbije / Association of Dramatic Artists of Serbia, in 1979. Katalin Ladik also received the Magyar Televízió Elnöki Nívódíja / Award of the President of Hungarian Television for Acting Excellence for acting in András Rajnai’s TV film series, Televíziós mesék felnőtteknek (Television Tales for Adults) in 1980. In 1986, she was awarded first place at Smotra vojvođanskih profesionalnih pozorišta / Festival of Professional Theaters in Vojvodina for the role of Skinner in Howard Barker’s The Castle, directed by David Gothard, performed at the National Theatre in Subotica. 2017 Artisjus Literary Award for her poetry volume „A víz emlékezete” („The Memory of Water”) 2017 Janus Pannonius Filius Ursae Award for her literary oeuvre for „being defiant, provocative, and confrontational towards the actual literary canons” 2019 Ferencváros Pro Urbe Award [4] 2020 „My Country” („Hazám díj) Award in recognition of her lifetime achievement [5] 2021 Medal of culture for lifetime achievement, ie. for overall creativity/work awarded by Miloš Crnjanski Centre 2021 Novi Sad` International Literary Award, which is awarded by the 16th International Novi Sad Literary Festival organized by the Society of Writers of Vojvodina 2022 Hungarian Order of Merit Officer`s Cross, one of the highest Orders in Hungary 2022 Prize in Fiction (Poetry) category of the Society of Hungarian Authors 2022 Alföld Literary Prize Poetry[edit] Katalin Ladik became known after 1962 through her surreal and erotic poems. In addition to a number of books in Hungarian, volumes of her poetry were published in Yugoslavia, France, Italy and the United States. Her poems also appeared in various magazines and anthologies worldwide, translated into Spanish, German, Polish, Bulgarian, Slovakian, Hindi, Chinese, Indonesian, Romanian, Macedonian, Rusyn and Slovenian. `She is able to embody the sense of poetry as action. I saw one of her readings in Bratislava at Ars Poetica Festival and she was the only poet able to electrize the audience without any translation. (...) She manages to pass linguistic barriers but, again, any translation of her poetry is at least difficult to be made (or should I say “performed`). Her activity covers a wide area that includes performance and sound poetry, with a force that captures any kind of audience no matter how illiterate in contemporary poetry they can be.` Poetry Depot Prose[edit] Her first novel, entitled Élhetek az arcodon? (Can I Live on Your Face?) was published in 2007 by Nyitott Könyvműhely. It is considered to be an eminent work in Hungarian Avant-garde literature. It is partly autobiographical, partly self-reflecting. The novel alternates between reality and fiction, prose and poetry, sometimes switching to a prose poem style. Its main target audience is that part of the artists’ community who are receptive to esoteric allusions. The book is about three women: the Editor, who lives in Budapest, the Artist, and the Glasswoman who lives in Novi Sad, all of whom bear the same name. The shared name determines their lives. Initially, they are unaware of one another, but throughout the book their lives get gradually intertwined. After they get to know one another, they begin to live each other`s life, which changes everything for them forever. One of the peculiarities about the book is the uniquely rich textual documentation (letters, newspaper articles, posters) and the large number of photos. Publications[edit] Volumes in original language[edit] Ballada az ezüstbicikliről (Ballad of Silver Bike) | poems | Hungarian | with gramophone recording | Forum, Novi Sad, 1969 Elindultak a kis piros bulldózerek (The Small, Red Bulldosers Have Taken Off) | poems | Hungarian | Forum, Novi Sad, 1971 Mesék a hétfejű varrógépről (Stories of the Seven-Headed Sewing Machine) | poems | Hungarian | Forum, Novi Sad, 1978 Ikarosz a metrón (Icarus on the Subway) | poems | Hungarian | Forum, Novi Sad, 1981 A parázna söprű – Bludna metla (The Promiscuous Broom) | poems | Hungarian-Serbian bilingual | Forum, Novi Sad, 1984 Kiűzetés (Exile) | poems | Hungarian | Magvető, Budapest, 1988 Jegyesség (Engagement) | poems | Hungarian | Fekete Sas - Orpheusz, Budapest, 1994 A négydimenziós ablak (The Four-Dimensional Window) | poems | Hungarian | Fekete Sas, Budapest, 1998 Fűketrec (Grass-Cage) | poems | Hungarian | Orpheusz, Budapest, 2004 Élhetek az arcodon? (Can I Live on Your Face?) | prose | Hungarian | Nyitott Könyvműhely, Budapest, 2007 Belső vízözön (Deluge Inside) | poems | Hungarian | Parnasszus, Budapest, 2011 Ladik Katalin legszebb versei (The Most Beautiful Poems of Katalin Ladik) | poems | Hungarian | AB-ART, Bratislava, 2012 A víz emlékezete (The Memory of Water) | poems | Hungarian | Kalligram, Budapest, 2016 Idővitorla (Time Sailing), Selected Poems (1962-2022) | poems | Hungarian | Forum, Novi Sad, 2022 Béranya versek (Surrogacy Poems) | poems | Hungarian | Tipp-Cult Kft, Parnasszus Könyvek, P-Art, Budapest, 2022 Translated volumes[edit] Poesie Erotiche (Erotic Poems) | poems | Italian | selected and translated by: Giacomo Scotti | La Sfinge, Naples, 1983 Erogen Zoon | poems | Serbian | translated by: Katalin Ladik, Selimir Radulović, Judita Šalgo, Arpad Vicko | Književna Zajednica Novog Sada, Novi Sad, 1987 Stories of the Seven-Headed Sewing Machine | poems | English | translated by: Emöke Z. B’Racz | New Native Press, Sylva, 1992 Poèmes (Poems) | poems | French | selected by: Tibor Papp | translated by: Katalin Kluge, Tibor Tardos | CiPM / Spectres Familiers, Marseille, 1999 Ikarova senka (Icarus’ Shadow) | poems | Serbian | translated by: Katalin Ladik, Selimir Radulović, Judita Šalgo, Arpad Vicko, Draginja Ramadanski | Orpheus, Novi Sad, 2004 Stories of the Seven-Headed Sewing Machine | poems | English | translated by: Emöke Z. B’Racz | Burning Bush Press, Asheville, 2005 Engagement | poems | English | translated by: Emöke Z. B’Racz | Burning Bush Press, Asheville, 2006 Kavez od trave (Grass-Cage) | poems | Croatian | translated by: Kristina Peternai | Matica hrvatska, Osijek, 2007 Poems | English | Cultural Centre of Vojvodina, `Miloš Crnjanski`, Novi Sad, 2022 Mogu li da živim na tvom licu : romaneskna životna priča (Can I Live on Your Face: novelistic life story) | prose | Serbian |(Re) konekcija, Novi Sad, 2021 Raspjevane žeravice: izbrane pjesme 1962-1982 (Singing embers: selected poems 1962-1982) | poems| Croatian | DAF, Zagreb, 2022 E-books[edit] Fűketrec (Grass-Cage) | poems | Hungarian | Mikes International, The Hague, 2003 | downloadable, pdf format Fűketrec (Grass-Cage) | poems | Hungarian | Magyar Elektronikus Könyvtár (MEK), 2003 | downloadable, multiple formats A négydimenziós ablak (The Four-Dimensional Window) | poems | Hungarian | Magyar Elektronikus Könyvtár (MEK), 2004 | downloadable, multiple formats Ikarosz biciklijén (On Icarus’ Bicycle) | poems | Hungarian | Magyar Elektronikus Könyvtár (MEK), 2004 | downloadable, multiple formats Kiűzetés ~ Jegyesség (Exile ~ Engagement) | poems | Hungarian | Magyar Elektronikus Könyvtár (MEK), 2004 | downloadable, multiple formats A négydimenziós ablak (The Four-Dimensional Window) | poems | Hungarian | Mikes International, The Hague, 2004 | downloadable, pdf format Kiűzetés ~ Jegyesség (Exile ~ Engagement) | poems | Hungarian | Mikes International, The Hague, 2004 | downloadable, pdf format Ikarosz biciklijén (On Icarus’ Bicycle) | poems | Hungarian | Mikes International, The Hague, 2004 | downloadable, pdf format Engagement | poems | English | Firefly Inx, Asheville, 2012 | downloadable, pdf format[permanent dead link] Stories of the Seven-Headed Sewing Machine | poems | English | Firefly Inx, Asheville, 2012 | downloadable, pdf format[permanent dead link] Milyen ízű vagyok? (How Do I Taste?) | poems | Hungarian | A hónap könyve, Szentendre, 2012 | buyable, pdf format Audiobooks[edit] 2020: Liquid mirror (Folyékony tükör) presented by Vera Sípos 00:00:00 – Folyékony tükör 1; 00:55:47 – Folyékony tükör 2 Audiobooks by contemporary authors published online by DIA, the Digital Literature Academy of PIM [6] Discography[edit] Sound poetry[edit] Ballada az ezüstbicikliről (The Ballad of the Silver Bicycle) | SP | supplement for book with same title | Forum, Novi Sad, 1969 Phonopoetica | SP | Galerija Studentskog kulturnog centra, Belgrade, 1976 Poésie Sonore Internationale (International Sound Poetry) | audio cassette | anthology of sound poetry, Paris, 1979 La Nouvelle Revue d’Art Moderne, Special 2. (The Magazine of Modern Art) | audio cassette | Rencontres Internationales de Poésie Sonore (International Sound Poetry Festival), Paris, 1980 Adriano Spatola: Baobab Femme | audio cassette | anthology for sound poetry magazine, Publiart Bazar Reggio Emilia, 1982 Yugoslavian Sound Poetry | audio cassette | anthology of sound poetry, 1987 Hangár / Hangar | audio cassette | anthology of sound poetry, Amsterdam – Budapest, 1987 Aki darazsakról álmodik (Who is Dreaming About Wasps) | LP | recording of the radio play `Furcsa, aki darazsakról álmodik` (Strange Is the One Who Is Dreaming About Wasps) | Radio Novi Sad, 1988 Spiritus Noister: Nemzeti zajzárványok / National Noise-Inclusions | audio cassette | Bahia Music, Budapest, 1996 Vajdasági Magyar Zenei Esték / Vojvodina Hungarian Music Evenings 1988 | CD | JMMT, Novi Sad, 1998 Vízisámán / Water Shaman | CD | Budapest, 1999 Spiritus Noister – Kurt Schwitters: Ursonate | music CD | Hungaroton, Budapest, 2003 Vodeni anđeo / Water Angel | music CD | Nova Misao, Novi Sad, 2011 Phonopoetics | Vinyl, LP | Alga Marghen (Milano), in co-production with acb Gallery (Budapest) Milano, 2019 [7] Water Angels | Vinyl, LP | Alga Marghen (Milano), in co-production with acb Gallery (Budapest) Milano,, 2021 [8] Music (experimental music, jazz)[edit] As vocalist, Katalin Ladik collaborated with prominent Croatian, Serbian and Hungarian composers, such as Dubravko Detoni, Branimir Sakač, and Milko Kelemen (1971–73, ensemble ACEZANTEZ); Ernő Király (1963-2002); Dušan Radić (Oratorio Profano, 1979); Boris Kovač (1986-1990); Deže Molnar ( 1989–91); Zsolt Sőrés a.k.a. Ahad, and Zsolt Kovács (1996-, Spiritus Noister). Ernő Király | LP | Udruženje Kompozitora Vojvodine, Novi Sad, 1978 Boris Kovač: Ritual Nova I | LP | Symposion Records, Overstrand, 1986 Boris Kovač: Ritual Nova II | CD | Recommended Records, London, 1989 Ernő Király - Spectrum | CD | Autobus, Paris, 1999 Deže Molnar: Weird Garden | CD | vocals on Track 1 (Water Clock) | Studentski Kulturni Centar Novi Sad, 2010 I Belong to the Band Bakers Of The Lost Future | CD | vocals on Track 3 (Poets Of The Absurd On Chalk) | Inexhaustible Editions, Budapest, 2016 Poetry readings, sound poetry performances[edit] Online Audio[edit] Fűketrec (Grass-Cage) | sound poetry | Hungarian | Magyar Elektronikus Könyvtár (MEK), 2003 | downloadable, mp3 format A négydimenziós ablak (The Four-Dimensional Window) | sound poetry | Hungarian | Magyar Elektronikus Könyvtár (MEK), 2004 | downloadable, mp3 format Ikarosz biciklijén (On Icarus’ Bicycle) | sound poetry | Hungarian | Magyar Elektronikus Könyvtár (MEK), 2004 | downloadable, mp3 format Kíűzetés - Jegyesség (Exile - Engagement) | sound poetry | Hungarian | Magyar Elektronikus Könyvtár (MEK), 2004 | downloadable, mp3 format Live performances[edit] 2011 Négy fekete ló mögöttem repül (Four Black Horses Fly Behind Me); Jégmadár (Icebird); excerpts from Belső vízözön (The Deluge Inside) | poetry reading | Dzsudi Remake evening, Merlin Theatre, Budapest | Video on YouTube Performance art[edit] Most of Katalin Ladik`s performances balance on the borderline between performance art and theatre: the performance of sound poems is accompanied by theatrical body action and in many cases, the surrounding space is structured similarly to a traditional theatre. Those who examine her poetry often refer to her sound poetry performances. On the other hand, no detailed analyses have been produced about the dramaturgical characteristics of her performances, and the relations of sign systems between her poetry and performances. It is a well-reasoned choice, however, to locate her in the context of female performance artists, as Katalin Ladik uses her body and person as the medium of her art in her performances, which occupies a special position within the history of Western art. A list of performances, happenings, actions[edit] 1960s-`70s[edit] 1968 Budapest, Szentendre - Hungary | UFO | Tamás Szentjóby, Miklós Erdély, Katalin Ladik | happening 1970 Belgrade - Serbia | Pozorište Atelje 212, Podrum teatar (Theatre Atelje 212, Theatre in the Basement) | performance Zagreb - Croatia | Žanr Festival eksperimentalnog filma (Genre Experimental Film Festival - GEFF) | performance Budapest - Hungary | József Attila Művelődési Ház (Cultural Centre József Attila) | with Jenő Balaskó | literary performance Belgrade - Serbia | Dom Omladine (Youth Centre) | performance Temerin - Serbia | performance 1971 Bačka Topola - Serbia | UFO Party | performance Samobor - Croatia | Samoborski Fašnik (Carnival in Samobor) | Eros sa ovogu svijeta (Eros of This World) | UFO Party | performance Biograd - Croatia | UFO Party | performance Zagreb - Croatia | Studentski Centar (Student Centre) | performance Belgrade - Serbia | Dom Omladine (Youth Centre) | performance Zagreb - Croatia | Teatar Poezije Zagreb (Poetry Theatre Zagreb) | Četvrta dimenzija kutije (Fourth Dimension of the Box) | performance 1972 Osijek - Croatia | Annale Komorne Opere i Baleta (Annual Festival of Chamber Opera and Ballet) Zagreb - Croatia | Teatar ITD (Theatre ITD)| performance Novi Sad - Serbia | Tribina Mladih (Youth Tribune) | performance Belgrade - Serbia | Studentski Kulturni Centar (Student Cultural Centre) | Festival Expanded Media | performance Balatonboglár - Hungary | Kápolna Galéria (Kápolna Gallery) | Group Bosch+Bosch | performance 1974 Belgrade (Serbia), Student Cultural Centre / Studentski Kulturni Centar, Festival Expanded Media /performance/ 1975 Zagreb (Croatia), Student Centre Gallery / Galerija Studentskog Centra: `Eksperimenti u jugoslovenskoj umjetnosti` (Experiments of Yugoslav Art) (Group Bosch+Bosch) /performance/ Belgrade (Serbia), Student Cultural Centre / Studentski Kulturni Centar, Festival Expanded Media: `Ljubavi, Singer` (Loves, Singer) /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Youth Tribune / Tribina mladih: `Change Art` /action/ Novi Sad (Serbia): `Spuštanje Novog Sada niz reku Dunav` (Floating Novi Sad Downstream the Danube) /action/ 1976 Belgrade (Serbia), Student Cultural Centre / Studentski Kulturni Centar, Festival Expanded Media: `Change Art` /action/ Zagreb (Croatia), Gallery of Contemporary Art / Galerija Suvremene Umjetnosti /performance/ 1977 Zrenjanin (Serbia), Cultural Centre / Kulturni Centar: `Poezija, fonična i vizuelna poezija Katalin Ladik` (Poetry, Phonic and Visual Poetry by Katalin Ladik) Kraków (Poland): `Phonopoetica` /performance/ Zagreb (Croatia), Information Centre / Informativni Centar: `Phonopoetica` (with Vujica R. Tucić) /performance/ Amsterdam (Netherlands), Stedelijk Museum: `Tekst in Geluid` (Text in Sound) /performance/ Belgrade (Serbia), Student Cultural Centre / Studentski Kulturni Centar: `Phonopoetica` /performance/ 1978 Kranj (Slovenia), Prešeren Theatre / Prešernovo Gledališče /performance/ Sarajevo (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Youth Theatre / Pozorište Mladih, Festival Malih i Eksperimentalnih Scena (Festival of Small and Experimental Theatre): `Četvrta dimenzija – krik` (Fourth Dimension – Scream) /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Youth Tribune / Tribina mladih: `Pesnički maraton` (Poetry Marathon) /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Sonja Marinković Student Club / Studentski Klub ‘Sonja Marinković’: `Čudak je ko čekiće sanja` (Weird Is the One Who Dreams About Hammers) /performance/ Würzburg (Germany), Hand Press Gallery / Handpresse Galerie: `Randkunst-Kunstrand` /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), National Library / Narodna biblioteka: `Umetnost se ne ponavlja, ne ponavlja, ne ponavlja...` (Art Does Not Repeat Itself, Not Repeat Itself, Not Repeat Itself...) /performance/ Zagreb (Croatia), Gallery of Contemporary Art / Galerija Suvremene Umjetnosti: `Nova umjetnička praksa 1966-1978` (New Art Practice 1966-1978) /performance/ 1979 Subotica (Serbia), Youth Centre / Dom Omladine: `Az éneklő varrógép – The Singing Sewing Machine` (with Zsolt Király) /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Youth Tribune / Tribina Mladih: `The Screaming Hole – A sikoltozó lyuk` /performance/ Amsterdam (Netherlands): `One World Poetry` /performance/ Utrecht (Netherlands), Gallery ‘T Hoogt / ‘T Hoogt Galerie: `One World Poetry` /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Youth Tribune / Tribina Mladih: `Mesék a hétfejű varrógépről` (Stories of the Seven-headed Sewing Machine) /performance/ 1980s-`90s[edit] 1980 Paris (France), Pompidou Centre / Centre Georges Pompidou: `Rencontres Internationales de Poésie Sonore` (International Sound Poetry Festival) /performance/ Le Havre (France), Cultural Centre of Le Havre / Maison de la Culture du Havre: `Rencontres Internationales de Poésie Sonore` (International Sound Poetry Festival) /performance/ Rennes (France), Cultural Centre of Rennes / Maison de la Culture de Rennes: `Rencontres Internationales de Poésie Sonore` (International Sound Poetry Festival) /performance/ New York City (USA), Washington Square Church, The New Wilderness Foundation: `International Sound Poetry Festival` /performance/ Baltimore (USA), School 33 Art Center, The Merzaum Collective`s Desire Productions Present: International Festival of Disappearing Art(s) /performance/ Gyula (Hungary), Castle Theatre / Várszínház, Knights’ Hall / Lovagterem: `Alice` /performance/ Belgrade (Serbia), Salon Museum of Contemporary Art / Salon Muzeja Savremene Umetnosti, Exhibition of Group Bosch+Bosch: `Orman koji ubrizgava (Injecting Closet)` /performance/ 1982 Budapest (Hungary), Cultural Centre Jókai, Studio ‘K’/ Stúdió ‘K’ Jókai Művelődési Központ: `Ladik Katalin újvidéki költő és előadóművész szerzői estje` (An Evening with Novi Sad Poet and Performer, Katalin Ladik) /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Cultural Centre Petőfi Sándor / Petőfi Sándor Művelődési Ház: `Telepi esték – Ladik Katalin szerzői estje` (Evenings in Telep – with Poet Katalin Ladik) (with Ottó Tolnai, Zsolt Király) /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Young Artists’ Club / Fiatal Művészek Klubja: `Ladik Katalin szerzői estje` (An Evening with Katalin Ladik) (with Miklós Erdély, László Beke and Zsolt Király) /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Cultural Centre Jókai, Studio ‘K’ / Stúdió ‘K’ Jókai Művelődési Központ: `Ladik Katalin szerzői és előadói estje` (An Evening with Katalin Ladik) (with Miklós Erdély, László Beke and Zsolt Király) /performance/ Belgrade (Serbia), Museum of Contemporary Art / Muzej Savremene Umetnosti: `Verbo-Voko-Vizuelno` (`Phonopoetry` with Judita Šalgo) /performance/ Osijek (Croatia), Students’ Youth Centre / Studentski Centar Mladih, Osiječko ljeto (Summer in Osijek): `Čudak je ko čekiće sanja` (Weird Is the One Who Dreams About Hammers) /performance/ Belgrade (Serbia), Youth Centre / Dom Omladine: `Ikar u metrou” (Icarus on the Subway) (with Judita Šalgo, Selimir Radulović) /performance/ Belgrade (Serbia), Youth Centre / Dom Omladine, Beogradsko leto (Summer in Belgrade): `Ufo Party` /performance/ Kanjiža (Serbia), Literary Camp / Književna Kolonija: `Konkretna i vizuelna poezija` (Concrete and Visual Poetry) (with Vujica R. Tucić and Bob Cobbing) /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Address: Istarski kej 37. sp. 8. st. Rade Šević: `Sound Poetry Performance` (with Vujica R. Tucić and Bob Cobbing) /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Youth Tribune Gallery / Tribina Mladih Galerija: `Phonopoemim` – Exhibition Launch for Slavica Grkavac: tapiserije `Jokastin kompleks` (`Jocasta Complex` Tapestry) /performance/ Paris (France), UNESCO: `Guerre a la guerre` (War Against War) /performance/ Milan (Italy), UNESCO: `Guerra alla guerra` (War Against War) /performance/ Paris (France), UNESCO Pompidou Centre / Centre Georges Pompidou: `Polyphonix 5` /performance/ 1983 Vienna (Austria), Wiener Festwochen (Vienna Festival): `Mandora 1.` /performance/ Zagreb (Croatia), Gallery of Contemporary Art / Galerija Suvremene Umjetnosti: `Nova umjetnost u Srbiji 1970-1980` (New Art of Serbia 1970-1980) Belgrade (Serbia), Youth Centre / Dom Omladine: `Oluja-po motivima Šekspira` (Tempest – Based on Shakespeare) – Exhibition Launch for Slavica Grkavac: tapiserije `Jokastin kompleks` (`Jocasta Complex` Tapestry) /performance/ Belgrade (Serbia), Youth Centre / Dom Omladine: `Magic Bread` (with Paul Pignon) 1984 Glasgow (UK), Third Eye Centre, Poetsound 1984: `Mandora 1.` /performance/ Milan (Italy), (Cultural Association of) Cooperativa Intrapresa: `Milanopoesia` /performance/ Szeged (Hungary), József Attila University (Today: University of Szeged) / József Attila Tudományegyetem: `Mandora 1.` /performance/ Cogolin (France), Rencontres Internationales de Poésie Contemporaine (International Festival of Contemporary Poetry): `Mandora 1.` /performance/ Belgrade (Serbia), Cultural Centre / Kulturni Centar: `Mandora 1.` /performance/ 1985 Belgrade (Serbia), Magaza Theatre / Pozorište Magaza: `Mandora 2.` /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Cultural Cente of Lágymányos / Lágymányosi Művelődési Otthon: `Mandora 2.` /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Metropolitan Cultural Centre / Fővárosi Művelődési Ház: `Alice` /performance/ Zemun (Serbia), Festival Monodrame i Pantomime (Festival of Monodrama and Pantomimes): `Mandora` /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), ‘Sonja Marinković’Cultural Centre / Kulturni Centar ‘Sonja Marinković’, Youth Tribune / Tribina Mladih: `Mandora` /performance/ Stari Bečej (Serbia) /performance/ 1988 Szeged (Hungary), JATE Club: `Polyphonix` /performance/ Pécs (Hungary): `Alice` /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Vigadó Chamber Hall / Vigadó Kamaraterem, Hangár Est (‘Wall of Sound’ Evening): `Alice` /performance/ 1989 Spoleto (Italy): `O Fortuna` /performance/ Nové Zámky (Slovakia): `O Fortuna` /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia): `O Fortuna` /performance/ 1990 Novi Sad (Serbia), Sport and Activity Centre of Vojvodina / SPENS Sportski i Poslovni Centar Vojvodina: `Otkrovenje` (Revelation) (with Zoltán Pletl) /performance/ Vác (Hungary), Greek Chapel / Görög Templom, Ex-panzió 2. Festival: `Angyal/Angel` /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia): `Seraphine Tanz` /performance/ 1993 Szentendre (Hungary), Dalmát Cellar / Dalmát pince, UHF Kisújrevue /performance/ Szeged (Hungary), JATE Club: `Alice` /performance/ Vác (Hungary), Greek Chapel / Görög Templom, Expanzió 5. Festival /performance/ 1994 Szeged (Hungary): `Performancia` with Lukács Bitskey /performance/ Zebegény (Hungary): `A helyettesítő asszony (The Substitute)` /performance/ Pécs (Hungary): `A négydimenziós ablak (The Four-dimensional Window)` with Tamás Szalay /performance/ 1995 Marseille (France), International Poetry Centre / Centre International de Poèsie: `Kassák` /performance/ 1996 Marseille (France), Meyer Gallery / Galerie Meyer: `L’ agneau de Dieu et le double` (The Lamb of God and Its Double) /performance/ Ajaccio – Corsica (France): `L’ agneau de Dieu et le double` (The Lamb of God and Its Double) /performance/ 2000s[edit] 2002 Novi Sad (Serbia), Cultural Centre of Novi Sad / Kulturni Centar Novog Sada, INFANT (International Festival of Alternative and New Theatre): `Fűketrec / Grass-cage` 2003 Novi Sad (Serbia), Chamber Theatre of Music / Kamerno Pozorište Muzike, INTERZONE Festival: `Tesla – Project` /performance/ 2004 Monza (Italy) /performance/ Salerno (Italy) /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Chamber Theatre of Music / Kamerno Pozorište Muzike, INTERZONE Festival: `Tesla – Project` Budapest (Hungary), A38 Ship / A38 hajó: `Lomtalanítás` (Cleaning the House) /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art / Ludwig Múzeum – Kortárs Művészeti Múzeum: `Torony-Lomtalanítás` (Cleaning the Tower-House) /performance/ 2005 Terény (Hungary), Expanzió Festival: `Angel` /performance/ 2006 Budapest (Hungary), Serbian Theatre in Hungary / Magyarországi Szerb Színház / Srpsko Pozorište u Mađarskoj: `Tesla`, /audio-visual oratorio/ Otterlo (Netherlands), Kröller-Müller Museum: `Change Art` /action/ Amsterdam (Netherlands): `Tesla` /performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Sport and Activity Centre of Vojvodina / SPENS Sportski i Poslovni Centar Vojvodina, Inventors Association of Vojvodina, TeslaFest: `Tesla` /performance/ 2007 Nové Zámky (Slovakia), Art Gallery / Galéria Umenia: `Gyakorlatok üres húrokon – Kassák-kód` (Exercises on Empty Strings - Kassák Code) /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Erlin Club Gallery / Erlin Klub Galéria: `Fűketrec` (Grass-cage) /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Mu Theatre / Mu Színház: `Az Eszmélet szövedéke` (The Weave of Consciousness) (with Péter Bajka, Bern Atom Santi, Eszter Bereczky, Zsófia Varga) /performance/ Verőce (Hungary), Ekszpanzió XX Festival: `Tesla, Audio-visual Oratorio` /performance/ Szigliget (Hungary), Artist House of the Hungarian Public Foundation for Creative Art / Magyar Alkotóművészeti Közalapítvány Alkotóháza, József Attila Kör 18. irodalmi tábora (18th Literary Camp of the József Attila Circle): `Az Eszmélet szövedéke` (The Weave of Consciousness) (with Péter Bajka, Bern Atom Santi, Eszter Bereczky, Zsófia Varga) /performance/ 2008 Budapest (Hungary), Petőfi Literary Museum / Petőfi Irodalmi Múzeum, A Szépírók Társasága V. őszi irodalmi fesztiválja – Nők a férfi birodalomban (5th Autumn Literary Festival of the Hungarian Belletrist Association – Women in a Men`s World): `Diptichon` (with Endre Szkárosi), performance Belgrade (Serbia), ARTGET Gallery – Cultural Centre Belgrade / Galerija ARTGET – Kulturni Centar Beograda (World Poetry Day): `Tesla – Homo Galacticus` /performance/ Szigliget (Hungary), József Attila Kör 20. irodalmi tábora (20th Literary Camp of the József Attila Circle): `Trip-ti-chon` (with Veronika Czapáry), performance Budapest (Hungary), Irodalmi Centrifuga (Literary Centrifuge): `Trip-ti-chon` (with Veronika Czapáry), performance Bratislava (Slovakia), Ars Poetica Medzinárodny Festival Poézie /The 6th Ars Poetica International Poetry Festival /sound poetry performance[9] 2009 Visegrád (Hungary), The Roof Terrace of King Matthias Museum / A Mátyás Király Múzeum tetőterasza, Ekszpanzió XXI Festival: “Kerub` (Cherub) /performance/ 2010s[edit] 2010 Budapest (Hungary), Gallery A22 / A22 Galéria, Tibor Papp`s Exhibition Opening: `Óraköltemény` (Poem-Clock) /performance/ Subotica (Serbia), Kosztolányi Dezső Theatre / Kosztolányi Dezső Színház: `Tesla – Homo Galacticus` /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Millenáris Theatre / Millenáris Teátrum, Book Festival: `Szabadkőműves szex` (Freemason Sex) (with drMáriás) /performance/ Štaglinec (Croatia), `Voda` – `Water` Međunarodni Susret Umjetnika (International Art Festival): `Veliko spremanje` (Spring Cleaning) /performance/ Eger (Hungary), Small Synagogue Gallery of Contemporary Art / Kis Zsinagóga Kortárs Galéria, artAlom élőművészeti fesztivál (artAlom Performing Arts Festival): `Bukott angyalok` (Fallen Angels) /performance/ Szeged (Hungary) – Subotica (Serbia), Railway line, Kultúrcsempész Sínbusz Fesztivál (Culture-smuggler Railbus Festival): Megaphone-assisted readings by Gábor Virág, Slobodan Tišma, Gábor Lanczkor, Tamara Šuškić, Vladimir Kopicl, Katalin Ladik, Siniša Tucić, Roland Orcsik 2011 Budapest (Hungary), Kunsthalle (Palace/Hall of Art) / Műcsarnok: `Preparababrakabaré` /performance/ Marseille (France), Museum of Contemporary Art / Musée d`Art Contemporain, Poésie Marseille 2011, 8ème Festival (8th Marseille Poetry Festival, 2011): `Le Grand Ménage` (Spring Cleaning) /performance/ Târgu Mureș (Romania), National Theatre - Small Hall / Teatrul Naţional – Sala Mică, Testet öltött szavak rendezvény (Words Embodied – Event series): `Alice` /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Mu Theatre / Mu Színház, Ismeretlen kutatása improvizációs alkotóműhely (Searching the Unknown – Improvisational Workshop): `Hangmozdulat` (Sound Movement) (with Kati Dombi) /performance/ 2012 Budapest (Hungary), Hungarian Writers` Association / Magyar Írószövetség: XXIV. Ekszpanzió Festival, `Idézet` Szimpozion és Kiállítás (`Quotation` Symposium and Exhibition): `Ásó, kapa, nagyharang` (`Till Death` lit.: Spade, Hoe and Bell) /performance/ Komárom (Hungary), Fort Monostor – Film Museum / Monostori Erőd – Filmmúzeum, Mediawave 2012 Festival: `Nagytakarítás` (`Spring Cleaning`) /performance/ Łódź (Poland), MS2 – Lodz Museum of Art / MS2 – Muzeum Sztuki w Łodzi: `Alicja w krainie kodów` (Alice in Codeland) /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Address: 8th district, Pál street 6.: Gödör bújócska – irodalom, zene, film, tánc, színház, beszélgetés (Gödör Club Hide-and-seek – literature, music, film, dance, theatre, discussions) /sound poetry performance/ Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, City Hall Art Gallery, A B Series Workshop: `Nagytakarítás` (`Spring Cleaning`) /performance/ Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, Arts Court Theatre, A B Series: `Alice Kódországban` (`Alice in Codeland`) /performance/[10] 2013 Budapest (Hungary), Óbudai Társaskör, Kassák Museum, Kassák Year: `Alice Kódországban` (Alice in Codeland) /performance/[11] Hvar (Croatia), 17th International Festival of Radio Plays and Documentary Radio Dramas PRIX MARULIĆ, „Tesla. Homo Galacticus” /performance/ Székesfehérvár (Hungary), Vörösmarty Theatre Studio, Contemporary Art Festival: `Alice Kódországban` (Alice in Codeland) /performance/[12] Budapest (Hungary), Fuga, Autonómia Filmklub 5, „I Belong to the Band”: Katalin Ladik`s voice on „poets of the absurd on chalk”[13] 2014 Százhalombatta (Hungary), Katalin Ladik - Endre Szkárosi, Slam Poetry /performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Mika Tivadar Vigadó, JazzaJ, Katalin Ladik – Jean Michel van Schowburg, Katalin Ladik – Zsolt Sőrés, „Sounds to Go” (Hangok elvitelre) /performance/ [14] 2015 Eger (Hungary), Templom Gallery, artAlom Live Art Festival 2015: `Tranzit Zoon`, performance Gothenburg (Sweden), Gothenburg Book Fair `Tranzit Zoon`, performance Vienna (Austria), Campus AAKH Hof 7, Universität Wien, `Singende Schnittmuster – Singing Dress Pattern`, lecture-performance, multimedia slide-show 2016 Poreč (Croatia), Behind the Scenes with Katalin Ladik! Artists on Vacation: `The Sounds of a sewing machine`, Circe di Parenzo” /performance/,[15][16] Budapest (Hungary), MÜSZI, @Transart Communication, Katalin Ladik & Zsolt Sőrés „Alchemical Wedding” (Alkímiai nász) /performance/ Milano (Italy), FM Centre for Contemporary Art, Non-Aligned Modernity. Eastern-European Art from the Marinko Sudac Collection. Katalin Ladik: “Tranzit Zoon” /performance/ [17] 2017 Athens (Greece), Oval Staircase, Megaron – the Athens Concert Hall, “All the In-Between Spaces”, Concept and direction by: Paolo Thorsen-Nagel. Katalin Ladik: “Follow me into mythology” /performance/ [18] Budapest (Hungary), Urania National Film Theatre, Janus Pannonius Grand Prize for Poetry 2017 Festivities of Hungarian Pen Club. Katalin Ladik: Sound Performance based on Concrete Poems of Augusto de Campos Limassol (Cyprus), Theatro Ena, SARDAM Mixed-media Literary Festival 5th edition, „Live Lecture” /solo sound poetry performance/ Nicosia (Cyprus), Artos Foundation, SARDAM Mixed-media Literary Festival 5th edition „Live Lecture” /solo sound poetry performance/ Limassol (Cyprus), SARDAM Mixed-media Literary Festival 5th edition, `Spring Cleaning`, performance/ Limassol (Cyprus), SARDAM Mixed-media Literary Festival 5th edition, „Wall(ed)”, aRttitude Site-specific dance performance, Katalin Ladik (live sound and voice). Budapest (Hungary), Trafó, „Alice in Codeland” /multimedia performance/ Vienna (Austria), Lobby of Hotel Prinz Eugen, Erste Bank Publication Presentation „Sound Poems” /live performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Museum of Contemporary Art Voivodina (MSUV), „K.A.T (Culture – Activism – Theory) Conference”, „Creative Transitions”/live lecture, multimedia and sound poetry performance/ Novi Sad (Serbia), Bulevar Books, „TraNSporteur multilingual poetry” /poetry reading/ Lodz (Poland), House of Literature, „Puls Literary Festival, 2017, Hungarian Day”, „Sounds in Lodz” / live lecture, multimedia performance and live sound poetry performance/ 2018 Berlin (Germany), neue Gesellschaft für bildende Kunst (nBgK), `Alice in Codeland`, multimedia performance Berlin (Germany), Akademie der Künste, „Underground und Improvisation”, „Follow me into Mythology” /live lecture and soloperformance/ Berlin (Germany), Akademie der Künste, „Underground und Improvisation”, „Desire of Touch” /Duoperformance with Natalia Pschenitschnikova/ Budapest (Hungary), Mersz Klub, „Túlélni a documenta 14-et” (Surviving documenta 14) /live lecture and soloperformance/ Budapest (Hungary), Hungarian University of Fine Arts, „Túlélni a documenta 14-et” (Surviving documenta 14) /live lecture with Emese Kürti/ Budapest (Hungary), Közkincs Könyvtár, `MŰVÉSZ + NŐ` (ARTIST + WOMAN), „Feminizmus és művészet ma?” (Feminism and Art Today?), „Túlélni a documenta 14-et” (Surviving documenta 14) /live lecture/ Belgrade (Serbia), Cultural Center of Belgrade, `Spoken Word, World Poetry Day` /poetry reading/ Belgrade (Serbia), Cultural Center of Belgrade, `Spoken Word, World Poetry Day`, `Alice in Codeland` /multimedia performance/ Zagreb (Croatia), „Showroom of Contemporary Sound”, „Transitions” /live lecture/ Rome (Italy), Falconieri Palace (Hungarian Academy in Rome), „Fountains of Rome - Mouth to Lung!” /live lecture and sound performance/ Budapest (Hungary), Három Holló – Drei Raben, „Antracit szájrúd (Antracit mouthpiece) /sound poetry performance/ Berlin (Germany), Akademie der Künste, `19. poesiefestival berlin 2018, Weltklang – Night of Poetry`, sound poetry performance Berlin (Germany), German Centre for Poetry (Haus f’ür Poesie), `lyrikline - Listen to the Poet`, poetry reading and live voice recordings for the archive 2019 Basel (Switzerland), Music Academy of Basel, Master Class in Free Impovisation, „Homo Ludens” (live lecture) Dresden (Germany), Lipsiusbau, „Alice in Codeland” / performance Rotterdam (the Netherlands), DE PLAYER, in collaboration with KRAAK, „BRAUBLFF #8 (Materie und Laut), Memory of Water / sound installation and sound poetry performance Brussels (Belgium), DE PLAYER, in collaboration with KRAAK, „BRAUBLFF #8 (Materie und Laut), „Memory of Water” / sound installation and sound poetry performance Madrid (Spain), Elba Benitez Gallery, „O-PUS” (solo exhibition curated by Adam Budak) / sound poetry performance Paris (France), Palais de Tokyo, The Liberated Voice, Sound Poetry, „Memory of Water” /sound installation 2020s[edit] 2020 London (UK), Café OTO, Tinted Window with issue No.2: Verbivocovisual dedicated to `Materializzazione del Linguaggio`, a 1978 Venice Biennale exhibition curated by Mirella Bentivoglio/ sound installation (Memory of Water) and performance (Tranzit Zoon) [19] Budapest (Hungary), Trafo Gallery, Nyitott műterem #21 (Open Studio), Zoom conversation with Emese Kürti Budapest (Hungary), acb Attachments, „Szerelmem, Sing-her!” (My Love, Sing-her!). Opening of solo exhibition „Sewn Sounds” (Bevarrt hangok) 2021 Veszprém (Hungary), Pannon Várszínház (Pannon Castle Theatre), „Alice Kódországban” (Alice in Codeland)/ performace Budapest (Hungary), Art9 Gallery, „Új szakralitás” (New sacrality) / sound poetry performance Budapest (Hungary), MAMŰ, Opening of the exhibition „Graphic Score” /sound poetry performance [20] Budapest (Hungary), Kassák Múzeum, „A víz emlékezete” („The Memory of Water”), Finissage of the exhibition „Poetry & Performance - Performance Art in Eastern Europe” /sound installation 2022 Budapest (Hungary), Godot Gallery, opening of the exhibition of drMáriás / sound poetry performance [21] Vienna (Austria), Alte Schmiede, „akustische Poesie” („Acoustic poetry”) / sound poetry performance [22] Bratislava (Slovakia), Slovak National Gallery, „Follow me into mythology” / sound poetry performance and live lecture Budapest (Hungary), Kassák Múzeum, „Szkárosi-emlékest” (Memorial evening), „Gyaloghíddal a csillaglejtőn” (Footbridge over the stargate )/sound poetry Berlin (Germany), Collegium Hungaricum, „The Poets’ Sounds” / sound poetry performance Cologne (Germany), Loft, „The Poets’ Sounds” / sound poetry performance London (UK), London Woolwich Works, LCMF (London Contemporary Music Festival) “Sad and Ruined” /sound poetry performance Belgrade (Serbia), „The Poets’ Sounds” / sound poetry performance Limassol (Cyprus), Art Studio 55, SARDAM-Literature Festival, sound poetry and „Tranzit Zoon” performance Workshops with performances (selection)[edit] 2018 Zagreb (Croatia), „Showroom of Contemporary Sound”, „Noćna pjesma morskih ježeva” („Night song of sea lizards”) /improvisation and sounding in visual and concrete poetry workshop for the students of the Department of Animation and New Media of the Fine Art Academy in Zagreb (OZAFIN), as a part of the project Re-Imagine Europe, co-funded by the Creative Europe programme of the European Union/ [23] 2021 Berlin (Germany), Lettrétage im ACUD Studio, Poets’ Sound Production Workshop 1, creation of the visual score „Drei Eier” Cologne (Germany), LOFT Cologne, Poets’ Sound Production Workshop 2, finalizing the visual score „Drei Eier” Berlin (Germany), Collegium Hungaricum Berlin, Poets’ Sound Production Workshop 3, rehearsal of the visual score based performance „Drei Eier” Concerts, musical performances (selection)[edit] 1969 Opatija (Croatia): Jugoslovenska muzička tribina (Yugoslav Music Tribune) (Ernő Király: Refleksija) 1970 Opatija (Croatia): Jugoslovenska muzička tribina (Yugoslav Music Tribune) (Ernő Király: Refleksija; Branimir Sakač: Bellatrix - Alleluja) Novi Sad (Serbia): Muzika i Laboratorija (Music and Laboratory) (with Ernő Király) Osijek (Croatia): Annale komorne opere i baleta (Annual festival of chamber opera and ballet) 1971 Zagreb (Croatia): Muzički biennale (Music Biennale – International Festival of Contemporary Music) (MBZ Radionica/Workshop II with Ernő Király, et al.; Chamber Music - Branimir Sakač: Bellatrix - Alleluja) Dubrovnik (Croatia): Dubrovačke ljetne igre (Dubrovnik Summer Festival) (ACEZANTEZ Ensemble) Radenci (Slovenia): Festival sodobne komorne glazbe (Contemporary Chamber Music Festival) 1972 Munich (Germany): (Cultural Program of the 1972 Summer Olympics) (ACEZANTEZ Ensemble) Radenci (Slovenia): Festival sodobne komorne glazbe (ACEZANTEZ Ensemble) (Contemporary Chamber Music Festival) Osijek (Croatia): Annale komorne opere i baleta (ACEZANTEZ Ensemble) (Annual festival of chamber opera and ballet) Novi Sad (Serbia), ‘Radivoj Ćirpanov’ Workers’ University / Radnički univerzitet ‘Radivoj Ćirpanov’ (ACEZANTEZ Ensemble) Belgrade (Serbia), Studentski kulturni centar (Student Cultural Centre) – Festival Expanded Media (ACEZANTEZ Ensemble) 1979-2012 Belgrade (Serbia), Dom Sindikata – BEMUS Belgrade Music Festival: “Oratorio Profano” (composer: Dušan Radić, conductor: Oskar Danon) Opatija (Croatia): Jugoslovenska muzička tribina (Yugoslav Music Tribune) Budapest (Hungary), Spiritus Noister Group, 1996, 2002, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 Budapest (Hungary), Italian Cultural Institute / Olasz kultúrintézet / Istituto Italiano di Cultura, Avantgárd művészetek a világban: mi lett a sorsuk? Nemzetközi tanácskozás (Avant-garde Arts in the World: What About Them? International conference): `Futurdadama (Futurdada Today)`, Spiritus Noister, 2001 Vienna (Austria), Spiritus Noister Group, 2004 Szentendre (Hungary), Spiritus Noister Group, 2009 Szekszárd (Hungary), Spiritus Noister Group, 2012 2016 Budapest (Hungary), Művelődési Szint (MÜSZI), „@Transart Communication 2016”, „Alchimist Wedding” /concert and live sound performance with Zsolt Sőrés/ Veszprém (Hungary), House of Arts, „Alkímiai mennyegző” („Alchimist Wedding”) /concert and live sound performance with Zsolt Sőrés/ Budapest (Hungary), Müpa, UH Fest, Spiritus Noister /concert and live sound performance with Endre Szkárosi, Zsolt Sőrés, László Lenkes/ Budapest (Hungary), Kassak Museum, „Dadarabok” /concert and live sound performance with Endre Szkárosi, Zsolt Sőrés, László Lenkes/[24] 2017 Budapest (Hungary), 2017: Muted and silent films with live music series, I Belong To The Band vs. Berberian Sound Studio 2018 Debrecen (Hungary), MODEM, Katalin Ladik: „Határidőnapló” („Diary Book”) /concert and live sound performance with Gyula Várnai/ Veszprém (Hungary), 2018, House of Arts, „Spring Reopening, We believe in life before death”, „Claes Oldenburg: I am for an Art” /concert and live sound performance with Gyula Várnai/ Basel (Switzerland), IGNM, Ackermannshof, Free Improvisation based on graphic scores of Ernő Király and Katalin Ladik Budapest (Hungary), FUGA Centre for Architecture, Design Week, Attila Dóra (bass clarinate), Katalin Ladik (vocal) Budapest (Hungary), Budapest Music Center (BMC), Wortlaute II, Transparent Sound New Music Festival, Ladik Katalin, „Ha múlna e láng” 2019 • Belgrade (Serbia), artist in residence at the Radio Beograd Electronic Studio, Katalin Ladik and Svetlana Maraš have created three new pieces (Electric Bird, White Bird and Ice Bird) [25] Speech-music performances[edit] Author „Drei Eier” (German, Serbian, Hungarian), presented by Sprechbohrer (Sigrid Sachse, Harald Muenz and Georg Sachse), „Drei Eier” (German, Serbian, Hungarian) [26] Theatre[edit] As an actress[edit] Jean-Paul Sartre: The Condemned of Altona; dir. István Lányi; Ifjúsági Tribün (Tribina Mladih / Youth Tribune); Novi Sad (Serbia); 1963 Imre Sarkadi: Elveszett Paradicsom (Paradise Lost); dir. Tibor Gellér; Petőfi Sándor Művelődési Egyesület (’Petőfi Sándor’ Cultural Association); Novi Sad (Serbia); 1963 Molière: The Imaginary Invalid (Béline); dir. Ljubica Ravasi; Srpsko Narodno Pozorište (Serbian National Theatre); Novi Sad (Serbia); 1966 (Exam Piece) Sándor Guelmino: Özvegy (Widow); dir. Tibor Vajda; Echo (az Újvidéki Rádió és az Ifjúsági Tribün színpada / the joint theatre of Radio Novi Sad and the Youth Tribune); Novi Sad (Serbia); 1969 Ferenc Tóth (text) – Ernő Király (composer): Jób (Job) (Performer – Recitative); dir. István Szabó, Jr.; Népszínház / Narodno Pozorište u Subotici (National Theatre in Subotica); Subotica (Serbia); 1972 István Örkény: Macskajáték (Cats` Play) (Ilus); dir. Tibor Vajda; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1974 Peter Weiss: How Mr. Mockinpott was cured of his Sufferings (First Angel/First Nurse); dir. Radoslav Dorić; Róbert Bambach; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1974 Ödön von Horváth: Tales from the Vienna Woods (Emma); dir. Róbert Bambach; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1975 Gergely Csiky: Mukányi (Ella); dir. Mihály Virág; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1976 Valentin Kataev: Squaring the Circle (Tanya); dir. Tibor Vajda; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1977 Molière: Dom Juan or The Feast with the Statue (Mathurine); dir. Dušan Sabo; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1978 Anton Pavlovich Chekhov: Three Sisters (Masha); dir. György Harag; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1978 Ödön von Horváth: Tales from the Vienna Woods (Emma); dir. Péter Telihay; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1978 Anton Pavlovich Chekhov: The Cherry Orchard (Charlotta Ivanovna); dir. György Harag; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1979 Ottó Tolnai: Végeladás (Clearance Sale) (Mrs Csömöre); dir. Mihály Virág; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1979 Gyula Hernádi: V.N.H.M. Szörnyek évadja (V. N. H. M. - Season of Monsters); dir. Miklós Jancsó; Summer Theatre in Gyula; Várszínház; (Hungary); 1980 Edward Albee: Everything in the Garden (Cynthia); dir. Tibor Vajda; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1980 Angelo Beolco (Il Ruzzante): La Betia; dir. Radoslav Dorić; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1981 Ottó Tolnai: Bayer Aspirin (The Actress); dir. Miklós Jancsó; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1981 Ferenc Deák: Nirvana (Csontos Vali); dir. István Szabó Jr.; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1981 Bertolt Brecht: Baal (Emilie); dir. Milan Belegišanin; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1983 Dezső Kosztolányi: Anna Édes ( Mrs Druma); dir. György Harag; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1983 Alexander Vvedensky: Jelka kod Ivanovih (Christmas at the Ivanov’s) (Mother Puzirjova); dir. Haris Pašović; Akademsko Pozorište “Promena” (“Change” Academic Theater); Novi Sad; (Serbia); 1983 Mihály Majtényi: Harmadik ablak (The Third Window) (Mrs Lódi); dir. György Hernyák; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1984 Alfred Jarry: Ubu Roi (Mama Ubu); dir. Tibor Csizmadia; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1984 Gyula Gobby Fehér: A Duna menti Hollywood (Hollywood by the Danube) – Multimedia Performance About the Life of Ernő Bosnyák (The Baron`s Lover); dir. Károly Vicsek; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1985 Ivo Brešan: Anera (Anera); dir. Dimitar Stankoski; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1985 Peter Shaffer: Equus (Hesther Salamon); dir. Tibor Vajda; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1985 Howard Barker: The Castle (Skinner); dir. David Gothard; Népszínház / Narodno Pozorište u Subotici (National Theatre in Subotica); (Serbia); 1986 Friedrich Dürrenmatt: The Visit (First Woman); dir. Radoslav Dorić; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1986 István Örkény: Forgatókönyv (Screenplay) (Mrs Littke); dir. Ljubisa Georgievski; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1986 István Örkény: Tóték (The Tót Family) (Mrs Tót); dir. Gábor Székely; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1987 Edward Albee: A Delicate Balance (Julia); dir. Mihály Virág; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1987 Jordan Plevnes: „R” (Katerina); dir. Ljubisa Georgievski; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1987 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Clavigo (Soffe); dir. Vladimir Milcin; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1988 Samuel Beckett: Happy Days (Winnie); dir. Radoslav Lazić; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1988 Henrik Ibsen: An Enemy of the People (Mrs Stockmann); dir. Želimir Orešković; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1989 Ferenc Molnár (Franz Molnar): Liliom (Mrs Muskát); dir. László Babarczy; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1990 Ede Tóth: A falu rossza, avagy a negyedik ablak (The Village Rogue; Or, the Fourth Window) (Mrs Tarisznyás); dir. Hernyák György; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1990 Ottó Tolnai: Paripacitrom (lit. Steed dung) (Krisztina); dir. Péter Tömöry; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1991 Marcel Achard: L`Idiote (A Shot in the Dark) (Chief Inspector`s Wife); dir. Tibor Vajda; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1991 Bertolt Brecht: Mother Courage and Her Children (Mother Courage); dir. Lajos Soltis; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1991 Józsi Jenő Tersánszky: Kakuk Marci (Her Ladyship); dir. Lajos Soltis; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1992 Jean Anouilh: The Orchestra (Cello); dir. Voja Soldatović; Újvidéki Színház (Novi Sad Theatre); (Serbia); 1992 Péter Nádas (text) – László Vidovszky (composer): Találkozás (Encounter) (Mária); dir. András Éry-Kovács; Shure Studio; Budapesti Kamaraszínház (Chamber Theatre in Budapest); (Hungary); 1997 Boris Vian: Vercoquin et le Plancton (Vercoquin and the Plankton) (Léon Charles Miqueut sous-ingénieur principal di CNU / Sub head-engineer at CNU); dir. Róbert Csontos; Kolibri Színház (Kolibri [’Hummingbird’] Theatre); Budapest (Hungary); 1997 Sean O´Casey: Bedtime Story (Landlady); dir. Pál Kanda; Függeten Színpad III társulata (3rd Company of Independent Theatre); Kolibri Pince (Kolibri [’Hummingbird’] Cellar Theatre); Budapest (Hungary); 1998 László Najmányi: Adieu Monsieur Bloom – Cabaret Noire (Nora Barnacle); dir. László Najmányi; Les Fleurs du Mal; `The Thinking Man`s Living Theatre`; Mu Színház (Mu Theatre); Budapest; (Hungary); 2003 László Najmányi: A száműzött Joyce / The Exiled Joyce (Nora Barnacle); dir. László Najmányi; Bloomsday Festival; Szombathely; (Hungary); 2003 Radoslav Zlatan Dorić: Ne daj Bože, da se Srbi slože / Ne adj isten, szerbek egyesülnek (God Forbid That the Serbs Should Agree) (Ruska); dir. Radoslav Zlatan Dorić; Magyarországi Szerb Színház / Srpsko Pozorište u Mađarskoj (Serbian Theatre of Hungary); Budapest; (Hungary); 2004 László Najmányi: Nova Necropola. Cabaret Noire (Nora Barnacle); dir. László Najmányi; Mu Színház (Mu Theatre); Budapest; (Hungary); 2004 László Najmányi: Az igazi Blum (The Real Blum /Bloom/) (Nora Barnacle); dir. László Najmányi; ReJoyce Festival; Szombathely; (Hungary); 2004 György Baráthy: Origami (I Woman); dir. György Baráthy; Artéria Színházi Társaság (Theatre Company “Artéria”); RS9 Studio Theatre; Budapest; (Hungary); 2005 Torkolat/Estuary (Unborn child), dir: Al Farman Petra (Freeszfe), Freeszemle, Király fürdő, Budapest (Hungary), 2022 Szabadkai szecesszió/Art Nouveau in Subotica based on George Tabori’s My Mother’s Courage (Mother), dir: Zlatko Paković, Kosztolányi Dezső Színház. Subotica, 2021 As a director[edit] The Last Chapter by Navjot Randhawa, performed by the‘Theatre of Roots and Wings’ and Punjab Sangeet Natak Akademi in P

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str. 136 , dim. 29,5 x 21,5 cm stanje LOSE KOMPLETNO Kao prvo zajedničko izdanje srpskih nadrealista izlazi almanah Nemoguće-L′impossible, objavljen u Beogradu 1930. godine, sa manifestom koji je potpisalo trinaestoro osnivača pokreta. Kolektivni aktivitet beogradskih nadrealista započinje u inspirativnoj atmosferi koju donose dva Manifesta nadrealizma Andrea Bretona. Pripadnici beogradskog nadrealističkog pokreta objavljuju priloge ili su urednici u avangardnim časopisima, izdaju glasila pokreta, osim tekstualnih priloga i različitih oblika primera proširivanja granica tradicionalnog postupka stvaranja, u publikacije uključuju i primere vizuelnе еkspеrimеntаciје, ali takođe objavljuju i romane, zbirke pesama, esejistiku i drugo. U godinama pre zvaničnog formiranja nadrealizma, u periodu od 1922. do 1930. godine, izlazi više časopisa u kojima sarađuju ili ih uređuju budući nadrealisti, i objavljuju priloge vezane za nadrealizam. U časopisu Putevi, koji izlazi od 1922. u Beogradu, sarađuju Marko Ristić, Dušan Matić, Aleksandar Vučo, Milan Dedinac i drugi. Nova serija časopisa pokrenuta je 1923. godine, a Marko Ristić i Miloš Crnjanski su urednici trobroja iz 1924. godine. Između ostalog, ovaj časopis donosi tri odeljka eseja Andre Bretona objavljenih u časopisu Littérature, u izboru i prevodu Marka Ristića. Godine 1924. Moni de Buli izdaje almanah Crno na belo. Časopis Svedočanstva izlazi u Beogradu 1924. i 1925. godine, a saradnici su Milan Dedinac, Dušan Matić, Mladen Dimitrijević, Rastko Petrović, Marko Ristić, Aleksandar Vučo i drugi. U časopisu Svedočanstva objavljen je tekst “Nadrealizam” Marka Ristića, kao prvi prilog kod nas o ovom fenomenu, a objavljen je neposredno posle pojave Nadrealističkog manifesta Andrea Bretona. Od januara do juna 1926. godine u Beogradu je izašlo pet brojeva časopisa Večnost, koji je uređivao Risto Ratković, u kome Moni de Buli objavljuje svoje nadrealističke tekstove. Đorđe Kostić, Oskar Davičo i Đorđe Jovanović osnivaju časopis Tragovi 1928. godine, a Zvezdan Vujadinović 50 u Evropi, u kome su sarađivali su Koča Popović, Dragan Aleksić, Dušan Matić, Velibor Gligorić, Ljubiša Jocić, Slobodan Kušić i drugi, a izlazio je do 1933. godine. Kao prvo zajedničko izdanje srpskih nadrealista izlazi almanah Nemoguće-L′impossible, objavljen u Beogradu 1930. godine, sa manifestom koji je potpisalo trinaestoro osnivača pokreta. Ova publikacija nadrealistima daje mogućnost kolektivnog aktiviteta, a osim priloga srpskih autora, ravnopravno donosi priloge francuskih nadrealista kao što su Andre Breton, Pol Elijar, Benžamin Pere, Luj Aragon, Rene Šar i Andre Tirion. U godinama pune nadrealističke aktivnosti, od 1930. do 1932. godine objavljeno je više značajnih publikacija, a neke od njih u ediciji Nadrealistička izdanja. Godine 1931. objavljeni su Nacrt za jednu fenomenologiju iracionalnogMarka Ristića i Koče Popovića i Pozicija nadrealizma Marka Ristića i Dušana Matića. Naredne godine izlazi knjiga Anti-zid Marka Ristića i Vana Bora, a Dušan Matić, Oskar Davičo i Đorđe Kostić objavljuju Položaj nadrealizma u društvenom procesu. Osim almanaha, druga publikacija, značajna kao platforma za ispoljavanje nadrealističkih stavova, bio je časopis Nadrealizam danas i ovde. Časopis izlazi u Beogradu 1931. i 1932. godine, a izašlo je ukupno tri broja, sledeći idalje ideju direktne saradnje na liniji Pariz–Beograd, objavljujući priloge kako beogradskih, tako i francuskih nadrealista. Osim zajedničkih, nadrealisti su objavili veći broj izuzetno značajnih publikacija, među kojima su Javna ptica (1926) Milana Dedinca, antiroman Bez mere (1928) Marka Ristića, Koren vida (1928) Aleksandra Vuča, knjiga za decu Aleksandra Vuča i Dušana Matića Podvizi družine „Pet petlića“ (1933),Turpituda (1938) Marka Ristića, sa crtežima Krste Hegedušića, koja je zaplenjena i uništena odmah po objavljivanju, kao i mnoge druge.

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Na prodaju kolekcija pretežno dnevnih i par nedeljnih izdanja koja su izlazila tokom NATO agresije na SRJ 1999. godine. Kolekcija sadrži: - Dnevni list „Politika“, izdanja za 25.03., 27.03.,13.04. - Dnevni list „Večernje novosti“, izdanja za 28.03.,29.03.,03.06. - Dnevni list „Blic“, izdanja za 25.03.,26.03.,19.04.,23.04.,24.04.,26.04.,27.04.,29.04.,30.04.,01.05.,02.05.,03.05.,05.05.,06.05.,07.05.,08.05.,09.05.,10.05.,11.05.,12.05.,13.05.,15.05.,04.06.,05.06.,10.06. - Dnevni list „Glas javnosti“, izdanja za 03.04.,04.04. - Dnevni list „Danas“, izdanja za 24.03.,03.04.,14.05. - Nedeljnik „Vreme“, izdanje za 3.04. - Nedeljnik „Nedeljni telegraf“, izdanje za 19.05. - Nedeljnik „Ratni svedok“, izdanje za 20.04. Ukupno 38 različitih izdanja, „Blic“,„Večernje novosti“i „Nedeljni telegraf“ su delom štampani u koloru, ostala izdanja crno/bela, svi primerci su u pretežno veoma dobrom stanju, negde je rešena ukrštenica, na jednoj naslovnoj „Blica“ ima mala žvrljotina, u principu generalna očuvanost je veoma dobra. Plaćanje lično ili uplata na tekući račun + troškovi dostave Ne šaljem pouzećem, niti u inostranstvo Za sva pitanja stojim na raspolaganju. tagovi: agresija NATO, rat 1999, Slobodan Milošević, Kosovo, Target, Bil Kinton, 24. mart 1999., ratno izdanje, ratna štampa

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Šumadinka - ukoriceni komplet 57 brojeva (po redu, od br.1 do br. 57) iz 1852. godine. Urednik i izdavač - Ljubomir P. Nenadović (književnik, diplomata i, kasnije, 1 od prvih 16 redovnih članova Srpske kraljevske akademije...) Vrlo dobro stanje.

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Moment 1-22-Casopis za vizuelne medije Decje novine,Gornji Milanovac,1983 do 1991 Format 28x21 cm Mek povez

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ukoricene 4 knjige svako tromesečje posebno

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ŽIVOT UMJETNOSTI 36 Časopis za pitanja likovne kulture i umjetnosti (Institut za povijest umjetnosti sveučilišta u Zagrebu, Zagreb, 1983, broš, 142 str., ilustrovano IV-03

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UMETNOST 22 Časopis za likovne umetnosti i kritiku (Jugoslavija, Beograd, 1970, broš, 217 str., ilustrovano) Na korici su primetni tragovi vremena i korišćenja. IV-03

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Komplet svih brojeva Playboy casopisa koji su izasli za srpsko trziste, 7 primeraka koji su izasli za hrvatko trziste i 46 primeraka na engleskom iz 77. ,78. ,79,80. i 81. Ocuvanost fantasticna.

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Prospekt Vauxhall Velox&Cresta,A4 poster,8 str.eng.

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Šumadinka - ukoriceni komplet 57 brojeva novina (po redu, od br.1 do br. 57) iz 1852. godine. Urednik i izdavač - Ljubomir P. Nenadović (književnik, diplomata i, kasnije, 1 od prvih 16 redovnih članova Srpske kraljevske akademije...) Vrlo dobro stanje

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Lična kolekcija Džuboks kompleta iz 1974 do marta 1986, od broja 3 do br. 196 sa izuzetkom brojeva 1, 2, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 145, 146 i 191 koji mi nedostaju. Prodaje se isključivo u kompletu. Opcije su ili lično preuzimanje ( Beograd ) ili slanje kurirskom službom, ( ta opcija će zbog težine pošiljke verovatno biti skuplja. Zainteresovani mogu zvati lično ili sms-om. Moguć je i dogovor.

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oko 100 komada

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Časopis živih = La Revue des vivants vlasnik A. Stanojević ; urednik Branko Teodosić Sadrži tekstove sledećih autora: KARL MARX, CVETKO BANJANIN, BRANKO TEODOSIC, M. SELIMOVIC... NASLOVNA STRANA CRTEZ G. GROSZA crveni deo naslovne strane je list koji se `otvara` i ispod njega je crtez grosza - moc `civilizacije` casopis je kompletan. str. od 65 do 82, dim.29 x 20 cm meki povez, stranice iskrzane, inace u dobrom stanju NARODNA BIBLIOTEKA SRBIJE NEMA OVAJ BROJ J E D I N I P O Z N A T I P R I M E R A K Georg Gros (nem. George Grosz; * 26. jul 1893, Berlin – † 6. jul 1959, Berlin) je bio nemački grafičar i slikar. U Parizu je nakon dodira s futurizmom i dadaističkim ekscesima prešao na političku i socijalnu karikaturu u satiričkim časopisima. Njegov likovni izraz je nemilosrdna kritika nemačkog militarizma i buržoaske klase. Od nemačkog haosa posle Prvog svetskog rata do prvih simptoma nacističkog terora svoju likovnu dokumentaciju objavljivao je u ciklusima grafike: „Bog je s nama“, „Lice vladajuće klase“, „Evo čoveka“ Od slika itiču se „Pomrčina sunca“ i „Nemačka, jedna zimska bajka“. 1932. iselio se u SAD, gde je radio crteže za knjige. Uspomene svog života objavio je 1931. u Nemačkoj, a 1946. u Njujorku pod nazivom `Malo da i veliko ne`. Gros je učestvovao u Spartakističkom ustanku 1919. nakon koga je kraće vreme bio član KP Nemačke; nju je napustio posle posete Sovjetskoj Rusiji 1922. gde ga je razočarao totalitarni karakter komunističke vlasti. Nemačku je napustio pred nacističkim progonima i utočište našao u SAD čiji je državljanin postao 1938. Posle drugog svetskog rata se vratio u Nemačku i živeo u Berlinu. Tamo je i umro od posledica pada niz stepenice nakon jedne noćne pijanke. Pojavljuje se kao lik u filmu Maks iz 2002. godine, gde ga tumači škotski glumac Kevin MekKid.

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Rade Drainac - Banket, Svetlost, Beograd 1930 godine Mek povez. Knjiga je u dobrom stanju. Donja ivica prednje i zadnje korice su malo zaprljane. Takođe u donjim ćoškovima dela listova postoje manje uši. Knjiga ima posvetu autora. 48 strana

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