Vladimírovo knihkupectví Serius and the PLAC association, with financial support from the Czech Architecture Foundation, warmly invite you to the 52nd lecture from the series Printed Architecture: What was the role of women in modernity and the Bauhaus? Their successes, illustrated through examples from the Czech Republic, Germany, Poland, Hungary, and Estonia, will be presented by Helena Huber-Doudová. The current book „Modern Woman – Architect / Projections and Reality since 1900“ is a collective monograph striving not only to reveal lesser-known protagonists of architecture and their buildings but also to pose questions about the creation of a feminist canon. It delves into the significance of contributions from media, gender, and visual studies. Graphics by Petr Babák, Martin Ponec (Laboratory), publication photo by Eda Babák. Helena Huber-Doudová is the curator of the Architecture Collection at the National Gallery in Prague. She completed her doctoral studies in art history at the University of Zurich. She is active in the fields of architecture and media and women in architecture. She is the principal investigator of the research project "Women in Architecture" (GAČR, 2021–2023). She has received international scholarships, such as DAAD, Aktion Österreich, and the International Museum Fellowship from the Federal Cultural Foundation. From 2011 to 2012, she was involved in the Robert Bosch Stiftung foundation program at the Museum of Architecture of the Technical University in Munich, Pinakothek der Moderne. She was the curator of exhibitions including Don't Demolish! Forms of Brutalism in Prague (2020), Image Factories. Infographics 1920–1945 (Leipzig 2017–2018).
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