CO:NNECTING THE DANUBE in Novi Sad

Photo exhibition by Dejan Petrović

FROM

19/08/22

UNTIL

29/08/22

Photo exhibition by Dejan Petrović

The exhibition CO:NNECTING THE DANUBE, supported and exhibited in the window gallery of ERSTE Foundation in April this year will be shown in Novi Sad as part of the Novi Sad 2022, The European Capital of Culture, soon. The exhibition will take place from 19 to 29 August in a newly refurbished Creative District.

Exhibition opening: 19 August at 8 p.m.

The greatest, largest, longest, widest, deepest, bluest, foggiest… Over the millennia, the Danube has always been described in superlatives, never as poor, unexceptional, mediocre… It has been loved, feared, worshipped, cursed, but never underestimated. The Danube, once a long-standing frontier of the Roman, Ottoman, and Austro-Hungarian Empires, has divided enemies, and in good times connected friends. It can be blue, grey, brown, green, following the moods of those closely connected to it. You may see it just once, or it may be the longest relationship you ever had. One thing is certain: it always leaves you in awe.  

The Danube connects and divides; it has brought people together and kept them apart. Like a big vascular system, it absorbs the waste we produce, and it brings life to over 230 million people, with bridges being the essential part of everyday lives for so many. For almost 2,000 years since the Romans built the first bridge at the Iron Gate, bridges have crossed the Danube like a zip, opening and closing the gaps between its shores.

Connecting Exhibition Dejan Petrovic
Most slobode (Liberty Bridge) is a cable-stayed bridge on the Danube river in Novi Sad, Vojvodina

Today the Danube waterway is spanned by more than 300 bridges from its source to its mouth. This exhibition focuses on some of them, those that are crossed by the largest number of people every day. The Danube flows through ten countries, more than any other river in the world, passing through or bordering Germany, Austria, Slovakia, Hungary, Croatia, Serbia, Romania, Bulgaria, Moldova and Ukraine. Yes, Ukraine! This most European of rivers can take you all the way from Vienna to Ukraine, while its drainage basin extends to ten more countries. It gives life to Vienna, Budapest, Belgrade and Bratislava, all of which are the capitals of their respective countries, as well as 95 other cities on its direct route.

Connecting Exhibition Dejan Petrovic
Margit Híd (Margaret Bridge) in Budapest is a three-way bridge linking Margaret Island to the banks.

Dejan Petrović is, among his other callings, a photographer, born in Novi Sad, a city that sits on the Danube. Spanning the period of 50+ years, he has also lived in Belgrade, Vienna, and Bratislava, all of which occupy the Danube’s shores.

Exhibition in Novi Sad is supported by the Austrian Cultural Forum Belgrade and The European Capital of Culture.

Cover picture: The Steinitzsteg, previously Nordsteg, a bridge over the Danube and the New Danube in Vienna. It connects the districts of Brigittenau and Floridsdorf. Photo: Dejan Petrović, 2022

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Florian Bauer

Director Social Finance, Sustainability and Innovation
Since 2023, Florian Bauer has been responsible for social finance, sustainability and social innovation at ERSTE Foundation. Prior to this role, Florian worked in the NGO & Social Entrepreneurship sector for more than 13 years. He led the Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Partnership (REEEP), an international multilateral NGO that works to accelerate market-based deployment of renewable energy and energy efficient systems in developing countries, and was Managing Director & COO of the Impact Hub Vienna. From 2020-2023, Florian established strategic alliances with key partners and helped to create innovative semantic technology solutions at Semantic Web Company (SWC), a leading IT company in semantic AI solutions.