Belarusian Artists Gain Visibility at Major Women-Focused Exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw 

News  |  22.11.2025

 

 

 

 

Belarusian Artists Gain Visibility at Major Women-Focused Exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw 


News 
| 22.11.2025

The film “3.14159” by the Belarusian collective Art Project Revolution has been included in the exhibition “The Woman Question: 1550–2025,” which opened at the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw (MSN). The collective's co-founder Dasha Brian announced this on her page.

The film “3.14159” by the Belarusian collective Art Project Revolution has been included in the exhibition “The Woman Question: 1550–2025,” which opened at the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw (MSN). The collective's co-founder Dasha Brian announced this on her page. 

SHARE:

The exhibition is curated by renowned researcher and art historian Alison M. Gingeras. The exhibition debunks the myth of the absence of women in art history and showcases the continuous, dynamic creativity of female artists over the past 500 years. The nine-part visual history includes nearly 200 works—from contemporary practices to paintings from the Renaissance, Baroque, and 19th-century periods. The artists are presented as those who have often been denied visibility and recognition by the art system.

The exhibition will run from March 21, 2025, to May 3, 2026.

The exhibition is curated by renowned researcher and art historian Alison M. Gingeras. The exhibition debunks the myth of the absence of women in art history and showcases the continuous, dynamic creativity of female artists over the past 500 years. The nine-part visual history includes nearly 200 works—from contemporary practices to paintings from the Renaissance, Baroque, and 19th-century periods. The artists are presented as those who have often been denied visibility and recognition by the art system.

The exhibition will run from March 21, 2025, to May 3, 2026.

Art project revolution in MSN

Participants of the collective Art Project Revolution at the opening of the exhibition “The Woman Question: 1550–2025” at the Museum of Modern Art (MSN) next to their film in the exhibition / Photo by Dasha Brian from her personal social media / November 20, 2025.

Parallel to this, another major program opened at the museum — “Miasto kobiet” (“City of Women”), which consists of four parts. One of them, “Inne jutra” (“Other Tomorrows”), is curated by the Belarusian researcher and curator Vera Zalutskaya.

According to the exhibition's description, “Other Tomorrows” addresses themes of identity and community in a time of political, ecological, and social crises. Seven international artists, through myths, local histories, and personal experience, create narratives where fantasy, technology, and imagination become tools for emancipation. The project brings to the forefront feminist, decolonial, and queer thought, in which imagination is transformed into political practice and a space of freedom.

Parallel to this, another major program opened at the museum—“Miasto kobiet” (“City of Women”), which consists of four parts. One of them, “Inne jutra” (“Other Tomorrows”), is curated by the Belarusian researcher and curator Vera Zalutskaya.

According to the exhibition's description, “Other Tomorrows” addresses themes of identity and community in a time of political, ecological, and social crises. Seven international artists, through myths, local histories, and personal experience, create narratives where fantasy, technology, and imagination become tools for emancipation. The project brings to the forefront feminist, decolonial, and queer thought, in which imagination is transformed into political practice and a space of freedom.

Reprinting of the material or excerpts from the material is permitted only with the written consent of the editorial team.

If you notice an error or would like to suggest an addition to the published materials, please let us know.

 

Reprinting of the material or excerpts from the material is permitted only with the written consent of the editorial team.

If you notice an error or would like to suggest an addition to the published materials, please let us know.

SHARE:

Similar Materials

From Utopia to Vulnerability: the Female Body in Belarusian Art of the 20th-21st Centuries
The Line | Analytics, 19.11.2025
Invisible Cultural Infrastructure: Women Sustaining the Curatorial Field in Belarus and In Exile
The Line | Interview, 10.11.2025
The National Art Museum of Belarus has a new director. The position is currently held by Iryna Matyas
News, 08.11.2025

 

 

 

CONTACTS

 

FOLLOW US 

INSTAGRAM       TELEGRAM       TIKTOK       FACEBOOK       YOUTUBE

 

© Chrysalis Mag, 2018-2026
Reprinting of materials or fragments of materials
 is allowed only with the written permission

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONTACTS

 

FOLLOW US 

INSTAGRAM       TELEGRAM       TIKTOK       FACEBOOK       YOUTUBE

 

© Chrysalis Mag, 2018-2024
Reprinting of materials or fragments of materials
 is allowed only with the written permission