Fama International

FAMA International [Federal Agriculture and Marketing Authority] is an independent media company based in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. FAMA was founded in 1990 by Suada Kapic as the first independent media company in the area. At the time, Yugoslavia was emerging from communism and entering into a civil war.[1] The authority was intended to be the CNN of south-eastern Europe and to disseminate information about regional developments to a wider audience.[1] Its primary concern was the Breakup of Yugoslavia and the Siege of Sarajevo, paying particular attention to the ethnic cleansing in Yugoslavia.

Projects

The FAMA Projects (created by FAMA Authors/Team in Sarajevo) are the world's largest independent collection of multi-media projects pertaining to the Siege of Sarajevo (1992-1996) and related events in reference to the Fall of Yugoslavia (1991-1999).

Miroslav Prstojevic wrote a survival guide for Sarajevo between the April's of 1992 and 1993. The guide was inspired by the Guide Bleu format of Michelin guidebooks. It also included survival photos, taken by Zeljko Pulić, that portrayed daily life during the siege. The visuals were curated by Ingo Gunther, while Aleksandra Wagner and Ellen Elias Bursac contributed the English translation of the guide. In 1994, Sansusha publishers and P3 art and environment published the Japanese edition[2].

The guide advised on issues related to survival during the siege and suggested "best practices" for weathering perilous conditions, such as a lack of essentials like food, electricity, and transportation. The guide's tongue-in-cheek humor aimed to sustain and strengthen readers, who were horrified or struggling with the violent realities of the conflict.

Harper's Magazine excerpted the guide in its November 1993 review[3].

Survival Art Museum '94

The Survival Art Museum paid homage to the victims' ingenuity while under siege. The museum displayed a diverse collection of artifacts, including jewelry, sculptures, posters, fashions, stoves, and comic books which are all examples of what FAMA calls "Survival Art." These exhibits were shown in Tokyo in a 1996 exhibition[4] that highlighted pieces like the highly reproduced Survival Map '92-'96 [5].

In 2015, there were reports that FAMA planned to build a larger museum in Bosnia and Herzegovina[6].

FAMA Collection

The FAMA Collection is an online collection of media and artifacts.[1]

Awards

FAMA received the 2017 Sixth April Award of Sarajevo[7]. The award is given to "outstanding individuals, groups and collectives for significant achievements, and exceptional works" deemed to "contribute to the overall improvement and development of the city of Sarajevo."[8]

gollark: What? Why?
gollark: Even PotatOS's *drivers* are free and open source!
gollark: PotatOS is FOSS, you know, so you should use that.
gollark: .......
gollark: So Debian is nonfree because it says you can add a repository for nonfree stuff?

References

  1. "FAMA Collection". www.famacollection.org. Retrieved 2018-07-01.
  2. "p3 art and environment". www.p3.org (in Japanese). Retrieved 2018-05-13.
  3. Harper's (November 1993). ""Sarajevo on $0 a Day"". Harper's Magazine: 19–21.
  4. "p3 art and environment". www.p3.org (in Japanese). Retrieved 2018-05-13.
  5. "Sarajevo Survival Map 1992-93-94-95". www.gordoncooper.com. Retrieved 2018-05-13.
  6. "Municipality Center to build the Museum of the Siege of Sarajevo? - Sarajevo Times". Sarajevo Times. 2015-10-22. Retrieved 2018-05-13.
  7. "The Sixth of April Award 2017 [videos]". [videos]. Retrieved 2018-05-13.
  8. "The Sixth of April Awards of the City of Sarajevo presented at the Official Ceremony - Sarajevo Times". Sarajevo Times. 2017-04-07. Retrieved 2018-05-13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.