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7:00 PM-9:30 PM

Girls / Museum

Film screening and discussion|What and who do we value in museums?

  • Goethe-Institut Nicosia, Nicosia

  • Language Dialogue: German, English
    Subtitles: English
    Discussion in English
  • Price Free admission
  • Part of series: GoetheKino

A young girl in stands in front of a large museum painting depicting intertwined nude human figures in an expressive, chaotic scene. © Shelly Silver 2020

A young girl in stands in front of a large museum painting depicting intertwined nude human figures in an expressive, chaotic scene. © Shelly Silver 2020

The Goethe-Institut Cyprus concludes its GoetheKino: Questions of her Own series with the screening of Girls / Museum, followed by a discussion with Evagoras Vanezis, art theorist, writer and curator, and Melita Couta, multidisciplinary artist, to create a meaningful link to the Cyprus context.

We are born into an already-constructed world. We each enter with new eyes into a culture that has already been shaped and structured based on the desires and power of others. Historical art museums are charged with preserving and interpreting the tangible evidence of civilization’s cultural trajectory and artistic achievement. The artworks they display have overwhelmingly been made, collected and contextualized by men. On the walls of their hushed galleries, there is no lack of depictions of women on display – mothers, wives, prostitutes, artist’s models and muses, all seen through the eyes of male artists.

Girls / Museum takes the viewer through the historical art collection of the MdbK/Museum of Fine Art Leipzig, guided by a group of girls, ages 7 to 19. Moving from artwork to artwork, century to century, the girls tell us what they see. Art is typically the reserve of anointed experts and girls rarely take or are given a central and unfettered place to speak from. From imaginative leaps of storytelling to curt pronouncements, from gender fluidity to power, inequality, precarity and war, Girls / Museum, in its quiet way, calls for questioning basic assumptions of what and who we value.

Directed by: Shelly Silver

Award: 3sat Documentary film award, Duisburger Filmwoche
 

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