East Art Map (EAM) is a multimedia, archival, and art historical project by the Slovenian artist group IRWIN in 2001.
7-615: [REDACTED] Look up eam in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. EAM may refer to: East Art Map , an art history project Electric accounting machine Electro-absorption modulator Embedded atom model Emergency Action Message Enterprise architecture management Enterprise asset management European Academy of Microbiology Equine atypical myopathy External Affairs Minister External auditory meatus Henry Eam (died before 1360), Founder Knight of
14-586: A "department"), governing the following: In some countries or subnational jurisdictions (e.g., provinces, regions, Länder), the minister of culture may also be responsible for sport, youth issues, or tourism (e.g., in Turkey ). In a few cases, the minister of culture is also responsible for foreign affairs (e.g., in Scotland ), education (e.g., Hungary , Iceland , Indonesia ), science and technology policy (e.g., Japan ), communications/media ( Singapore , UK ), or
21-412: A common cabinet position in governments . The culture minister is typically responsible for cultural policy , which often includes arts policy (direct and indirect support to artists and arts organizations) and measures to protect the national heritage of a country and cultural expression of a country or subnational region. This responsibility usually manifests in the accompanying ministry (also called
28-468: A singular narrative and invites data, and contributions from the public. The project aims to create a referential history in which artists can be connected by their tactics and qualities. The European Union ’s Culture 2000 programme, the Slovenian Minister of Culture supported the first phase of the project. Minister of Culture A culture minister or a heritage minister is
35-443: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages East Art Map The purpose of East Art Map is to create an art history for Eastern Europe after 1945 by identifying modern artists, works, and projects which had a major impact on visual arts in the region. So far the project's working art critics, historians, curators, and artists have identified over 250 artists to include in
42-816: The Order of the Garter Najran Domestic Airport , in Saudi Arabia National Liberation Front (Greece) , a Greek World War II Resistance movement Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title EAM . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=EAM&oldid=1258470945 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
49-413: The project. Contributors in the artist selection process include representatives from Albania and Kosovo , Bosnia-Herzegovina , Bulgaria , Croatia , Czech Republic , East Germany , Estonia , Hungary , Latvia , Lithuania , Moldova , North Macedonia , Poland , Romania , Russia , Serbia and Montenegro , Slovakia , and Slovenia . The EAM aims to be a democratized model that does not impose
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