Family Morning will visit the contemporary art exhibition “They Began to Speak”, which explores themes such as the body, the environment, and the Indigenous peoples of the Nordic countries.
On Wednesday, 19 March two valuable portraits by the Baltic German artist Gustav Adolf Hippius (1792‒1856) arrived in Estonia. The portraits of the Hageri pastor David Friedrich Ignatius and his wife Magdalena Christina belonged to the German-Baltic Society (Deutsch-Baltische Gesellschaft, DBGes). Because Hippius’s paintings are of great cultural and art historical importance for Estonia, it was decided to donate them to the Art Museum of Estonia.
Family Morning will visit the contemporary art exhibition “They Began to Speak”, which explores themes such as the body, the environment, and the Indigenous peoples of the Nordic countries.
The exhibition The Mei Sisters: Avant-Garde and the Everyday Life by the sisters Kristine (1895–1969), Lydia (1896–1965) and Natalie (1900–1975) Mei will open at the Kumu Art Museum on 14 March, bringing the creative legacy of three unique female artists to the public on a large scale for the first time. The exhibition is curated by Kai Stahl, Eha Komissarov and Ulrika Jõemägi.
During the ecosomatic tours, we will explore our perceptions of the boundary between ourselves and our environment through bodily exercises and dialogue.
During the ecosomatic tours, we will explore our perceptions of the boundary between ourselves and our environment through bodily exercises and dialogue.
During the ecosomatic tours, we will explore our perceptions of the boundary between ourselves and our environment through bodily exercises and dialogue.