Mária FERENČUHOVÁ

 

Mária FERENČUHOVÁ (1975) is a poet, a film historian and theorist, and since 2010 Vice-Dean at the Film and TV Faculty of the Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava. Profoundly marked by the city of Paris, where she studied, she translates extensively from French (Paul Virilio, Philippe Brenot, Philippe Sollers, Amélie Nothomb, Samuel Beckett, etc.).
Several collections of her poetry have appeared: Hidden Subtitles (2003), and The Uncertainty Principle (2008). A third, Endangered Species was published in 2012.
Her poetry appeared in numerous international publications. Her poems were translated into French, English, and Czech.

 

 

 

 

 

  • Orfeu - Livraria Portuguesa
  • Instituto Cervantes Brussels
  • Austrian Cultural Forum
  • Etxepare Euskal Institutua
  • LOFT 58
  • MuntPunt
  • Austrian Presidency of the Council of the European Union
  • Embassy of Ireland
  • Leeuwarden Europan Capital of Culture 2018
  • Istituto Italiano di Cultura
  • Camões Instituto de Cooperação e Língua Portugal
  • Yunus Emre Institute
  • Czech Centre Brussels
  • Permanent Representation of the Republic of Estonia to the European Union
  • Commission européenne
  • Permanent Representation of Lithuania to the EU
  • Romanian Cultural Institute in Brussels
  • Ville de Bruxelles
  • Swedish Institute
  • LUCA School of Arts
  • Vlaams-Nederlands Huis deBuren
  • Embassy of Sweden
  • Network to Promote Linguistic Diversity
  • Greenland Representation to the European Union
  • Mission of the Faroes to the EU
  • Lithuanian Culture Institute
  • Embassy of the Republic of Latvia to the Kingdom of Belgium
  • Ambassade du Luxembourg à Bruxelles
  • Embassy of Andorra
  • Greenlandic Writers Association
  • Spain Arts and Culture - Cultural and Scientific Service of the Embassy of Spain in Belgium
  • Embassy of the Republic of Estonia in Belgium
  • Polish Institute - Cultural Service of the Embassy of the Republic of Poland in Brussels
  • Danish Cultural Institute
  • Permanent Representation of the Republic of Slovenia to the European Union
  • Hungarian Cultural Institute Brussels
  • It Skriuwersboun
  • Scottish Government EU Office