May 11, 2023
Welcome Tomasz Kitlinski as Senior Fellow at TU Dresden!
We are delighted to welcome Tomasz Kitlinski! Dr. Tomasz Kitlinsk is an academic, artivist, and socially engaged art curator. And a non-binary self. From May to October 2023, he is a Senior Fellow at the Art History Departement at TU Dresden.
Short bio
Kitlinski studied Text and Image in Paris with H. Cixous and J. Kristeva, earning her/his Dîplome d’Études Approfondies; s/he also conducted research at the Courtauld Institute of Art. Kitlinski holds her/his Ph.D. and Habilitation from Warsaw's Polish Academy of Sciences. S/he served as a Fulbright scholar, Marie Curie Actions grantee, and Academy in Exile/New University in Exile Consortium fellow. S/he has written in Art in America, The Advocate, taz and was cited in the New York Times and Der Spiegel. Her/his scholarly texts have appeared in volumes, published by Routledge, Palgrave Macmillan, and New York University Press; s/he has also authored 4 English- and Polish-language books, quoted by Zygmunt Bauman.
Artivist and Academic in Exile
After serving 25 years as lecturer and researcher at Lublin’s Curie University, s/he was targeted by the far-right party, currently ruling in Poland, for commissioning and exhibiting Dorota Nieznalska's memorial [commemoration of, memorialization of] to pogroms, perpetrated by Poles on their Jewish neighbors and for exposing in public the anti-Semitism, misogyny, Islamophobia, and LGBTQI+phobia of the Polish government today: https://www.theartnewspaper.com/2019/12/09/lublin-governor-files-defamation-suit-against-art-historian-sparking-free-speech-fears-in-poland
Kitlinski invited to Lublin feminist art historian Griselda Pollock, Holberg Prize winner; feminist visual culture analyst and filmmaker Christina von Braun; ha-Shoah scholar Irena Grudzinska-Gross of Princeton University; and Sarah Wilson of the Courtauld Institute of Art, curator and author of The Visual World of French Theory. At Curie University, s/he spearheaded a successful protest against the planned lay-off of auxiliary personnel: the jobs of all the 400 “cleaning ladies” have remained safe. Angus Reid highlighted her/his struggle for human rights in an exhibition at Edinburgh’s Summerhall.
Kitlinski’s Projects @TUD
At TU Dresden, Tomasz is realizing her/his project A Comparative Study of the Politics of Women's, Queer, and Refugees' Protest Art and Visual Culture in Poland 2015-present in the framework of the methodology of Bildproteste, introduced by Kerstin Schankweiler; her/his curatorial project has a working title: Bildproteste aus Osteuropa.
S/he has lived with her/his husband, art curator and historian Pawel Leszkowicz, for thirty years. Kitlinski: “I am looking forward to collaborating closely with the Students and Staff of the Art History Department.”