Cosy Season: Bookbinding with Viktoria Vanyi – Unfold your story
Cosy Season: Bookbinding with Viktoria Vanyi – Unfold your story
21.10.2025, in collaboration with Ligue Luxembourgeoise d’Hygiène Mentale
14:00 – 17:00
13.11.2025, in collaboration with Singa
14:00 – 17:00
19.11.2025, in collaboration with Hörgeschädigten Beratung SmH
14:30 – 17:30
02.12.2025, in collaboration with Creamisu
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14:00 – 17:00
Framework: Eleanor Antin
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Fee: Free
Booking required:
t +352 453785-531
Join us for a new Cosy Season around bookbinding!
Cosy Season is a collaborative programme that promotes community involvement and cultural exchange. The goal is to offer opportunities for artistic exploration and encounters, while encouraging creativity and personal expression.
This edition offers local associations and the general public a guided tour of Eleanor Antin’s exhibition. This activity will be made in the presence of the artist Viktoria Vanyi, followed by a bookbinding workshop.
Participants will create a leporello; an accordion-fold book made out of paper, textile, polaroid photos and drawings. Everyone can create a personal object that can become a personal archive. Inspired by Eleanor Antin’s exploration of identity through self-transformation and storytelling, everyone can create a personal archive that can grow over time.
Everyone is free to join; we are happy to welcome you at the museum!
Biography
Viktoria Vanyi is an interdisciplinary artist born in Hungary and based in Luxembourg since 2021. She studied industrial design in Brussels and her approach places lived experiences at the core of her work. She explores themes of rootedness, memory and cultural hybridity, focusing on the spaces between belonging and uprooting.
Using analogue techniques such as cyanotype, photography and site-specific installations, she creates tactile narratives that reflect on what it means to feel at home, in a place, a language or a body. Her practice functions as both an archive and a dialogue, revealing subtle layers of identity, heritage, and collective memory, while inviting viewers to reflect on the fluid nature of belonging in today’s world.