Anda Rottenberg

Anda Rottenberg (born 23 April 1944) is a Polish art historian, art critic, writer, former director of the Zachęta National Gallery of Art in Warsaw and member of the International Association of Art Critics (AICA), International "Manifesta" Foundation and the International "Germinations" Foundation.

Anda Rottenberg
Anda Rottenberg, 2014
Born (1944-04-23) 23 April 1944
Novosibirsk, Russia
OccupationArt historian, writer
Years active1963 – present
Notable work
Sztuka w Polsce 1945-2005 (en. "Art in Poland 1945-2005"), Proszę bardzo! (en. "You're welcome!")

Biography

Anda Rottenberg was born in 1944. Her mother was Russian from Petersburg and her father was a Polish Jew from the town of Nowy Sącz. All of his family died during the Holocaust.[1]

Rottenberg grew up in Legnica. In 1963, she moved to Warsaw, where she began studying history of art at the University of Warsaw.

She wrote two books - Sztuka w Polsce 1945-2005 (en. "Art in Poland 1945-2005") and an autobiography Proszę bardzo! (en. "You're welcome!"). The main reason for writing the latter book was her anger at the police who were unable to find the body of her son (he was a drug addict and died in unknown circumstances).[2] In her autobiography, Rottenberg also wrote about her mother, who survived the siege of Stalingrad during World War II and was sentenced to prison for stealing a few spoons of food: she met there her future husband, Rottenberg's father.[3]

Anda Rottenberg received the Officer's Cross Order of Polonia Restituta (2001), the Commander's Cross Order of Polonia Restituta (2011), Aleksander Gieysztor Prize (2013), and Medal for Merit to Culture – Gloria Artis (2014).

gollark: Yes, well.
gollark: And just randomly tries different things until I say that they look less wrong.
gollark: Oh, and he is apparently entirely incapable of generalization or remembering things from more than 15 seconds ago.
gollark: He doesn't understand some things, which is fine I guess, but he also doesn't seem to understand the things he needs to understand to understand those things either, and seems to think he's done with things when the arbitrary computer marking thing™ says so even when it's repeatedly blatantly wrong, and wants me to just give him answers so he'll apparently learn from them.
gollark: Trying to explain "algebraic proof" to Zachary is so intensely frustrating.

References

  1. Anda Rottenberg, "Sparaliowana myśl o aborcji" (Polish). Archived 2014-05-05 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Katarzyna Zechenter, "Motherhood and the Transmission of Memory in Texts by Jewish-Polish Writers". In: U. Phillips (ed.), Polish Literature in Transformation, Berlin: LIT 2013, p. 158.
  3. Anda Rottenberg, Proszę bardzo, Warszawa: W.A.B. 2009, p. 346.
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