Difference between revisions of "Borka Pavićević"

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'''Borka Pavićević''' is the founder and director of the [[Center for Cultural Decontamination]] (since 1994).
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'''Borka Pavićević''' (Борка Павићевић, 5 June 1947, Kotor, Montenegro, Yugoslavia - 30 June 2019, Belgrade, Serbia) was the founder and director of the [[Center for Cultural Decontamination]] (since 1994).
  
 
She graduated (1971) and obtained a master’s degree at the Academy for Theatre, Film, Radio and Television, in Belgrade (1976).
 
She graduated (1971) and obtained a master’s degree at the Academy for Theatre, Film, Radio and Television, in Belgrade (1976).
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Dramatist, Theatre “Atelier 212,” Belgrade (10 years) and BITEF, Belgrade’s annual international festival of avant-garde theater (20 years).  Dramatist in Zenica, Split, Skopje, Ljubljana, Subotica and Belgrade (1978-1991). Founder, “New Sensibility” theatre at old Belgrade brewery (1981). Participated in artistic movement “KPGT,” acronym for the word “theatre” in Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Slovenia and Macedonia (1984-1991). Artistic director, Belgrade Drama Theatre, removed after public and political statements (1993).
 
Dramatist, Theatre “Atelier 212,” Belgrade (10 years) and BITEF, Belgrade’s annual international festival of avant-garde theater (20 years).  Dramatist in Zenica, Split, Skopje, Ljubljana, Subotica and Belgrade (1978-1991). Founder, “New Sensibility” theatre at old Belgrade brewery (1981). Participated in artistic movement “KPGT,” acronym for the word “theatre” in Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Slovenia and Macedonia (1984-1991). Artistic director, Belgrade Drama Theatre, removed after public and political statements (1993).
  
She is the recipient of the Otto Rene Castillo Award for Political Theatre, New York (2000); the Hiroshima Foundation Prize for Peace and Culture (2004); Osvajanje slobode (“Winning of Freedom”) prize, awarded by the Maja Maršićević Tasić Foundation to a woman “whose acts affirm the principles of human rights, rule of law, democracy and tolerance” (2005); Routes Award given by ECF, Amsterdam (2009/2010); The Government of the Republic of France, the Legion d’Honneur (2001). [https://www.czkd.org/en/member/borka-pavicevic-en/ (2025)]
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She is the recipient of the Otto Rene Castillo Award for Political Theatre, New York (2000); the Hiroshima Foundation Prize for Peace and Culture (2004); Osvajanje slobode (“Winning of Freedom”) prize, awarded by the Maja Maršićević Tasić Foundation to a woman “whose acts affirm the principles of human rights, rule of law, democracy and tolerance” (2005); Routes Award given by ECF, Amsterdam (2009/2010); The Government of the Republic of France, the Legion d’Honneur (2001). [https://www.czkd.org/en/member/borka-pavicevic-en/]
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; Publications
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* Srdjan Jovanovic Weiss, Vladimir Kulic, [https://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/2/jovanovicweiss_kulic.php "Nationalism and Catharsis. The Center for Cultural Decontamination, Belgrade"], ''Cabinet'' 2, Spring 2001. Conversation with Borka Pavićević and Ana Miljanić. {{en}}
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* Latinka Perović, [https://pescanik.net/borka-pavicevic-1947-2019-skica-za-biografiju/ "Borka Pavićević (1947-2019): skica za biografiju"], ''Peščanik.net'', 5 Sep 2019.
  
 
; Links
 
; Links
 
* [https://www.czkd.org/ CZKD]
 
* [https://www.czkd.org/ CZKD]
 
* [https://sr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Борка_Павићевић Wikipedia-SR]
 
* [https://sr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Борка_Павићевић Wikipedia-SR]

Revision as of 14:40, 12 January 2025

Borka Pavićević (Борка Павићевић, 5 June 1947, Kotor, Montenegro, Yugoslavia - 30 June 2019, Belgrade, Serbia) was the founder and director of the Center for Cultural Decontamination (since 1994).

She graduated (1971) and obtained a master’s degree at the Academy for Theatre, Film, Radio and Television, in Belgrade (1976).

Dramatist, Theatre “Atelier 212,” Belgrade (10 years) and BITEF, Belgrade’s annual international festival of avant-garde theater (20 years). Dramatist in Zenica, Split, Skopje, Ljubljana, Subotica and Belgrade (1978-1991). Founder, “New Sensibility” theatre at old Belgrade brewery (1981). Participated in artistic movement “KPGT,” acronym for the word “theatre” in Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Slovenia and Macedonia (1984-1991). Artistic director, Belgrade Drama Theatre, removed after public and political statements (1993).

She is the recipient of the Otto Rene Castillo Award for Political Theatre, New York (2000); the Hiroshima Foundation Prize for Peace and Culture (2004); Osvajanje slobode (“Winning of Freedom”) prize, awarded by the Maja Maršićević Tasić Foundation to a woman “whose acts affirm the principles of human rights, rule of law, democracy and tolerance” (2005); Routes Award given by ECF, Amsterdam (2009/2010); The Government of the Republic of France, the Legion d’Honneur (2001). [1]

Publications
Links