Forum NEXT GEN: Rethinking Shared Cultural Futures

Regional platform for culture - Kooperativa - produced the Forum NEXT GEN: Rethinking Shared Cultural Futures (Zagreb, November 2025). 
The duo Foxes Fluff (Anna Belorukova and Ilia Belorukov), nominated by kuda.org (Novi Sad) for participation in the program, was selected.

 

The Forum brought together emerging artists and cultural practitioners from across Southeast
Europe to discuss key themes: mobility, collaboration, borders, self-organization, transformation,
and sustainable models of cultural work in the context of ongoing social and political change.
Artists’ Conversation - In the first part of the program, Foxes Fluff participated in a discussion session devoted to artistic positions and methodologies that emerge in conditions of crisis and constraint. The conversation explored:
- how body and space become a field of power and resistance;
- how forms of cultural mobility in the region are shifting;
- what new models of collective work are taking shape today;
- how artists construct attention, boundaries, and new modes of presence.

Premiere screening of the video installation “Document of the Body” at the Gallery Suputnici, Nova Ves 73a, Zagreb. The second part of the program featured the video installation “Document of the Body”, created by Anna Belorukova (movement) and Ilia Belorukov (sound). Filmed in Novi Sad, the video work examines the relationship between body and space within a climate of heightened social sensitivity. Through quiet gestures, micro-movements, and pre-verbal impulses, the video shows how the body registers environmental pressure, how small deviations from habitual behavioral patterns appear, and how an autonomous trajectory of movement emerges within these shifts.
The thematic focus of the work grows out of the duo’s collaborative practice within kuda.org -
from ongoing dialogues on attention, communication, and the boundaries of presence developed
throughout their cooperation.

https://platforma-kooperativa.org/news/forum-2-0-next-gen-rethinking-shared-cultural-futures