Karol Radziszewski, Installation view of Karol Radziszewski, "Theses on Hope #10: One Day These Kids...", Between Bridges, Berlin, 2023. Photo: Courtesy of Between Bridges. © Karol Radziszewski 2025
Karol Radziszewski
The Classroom
31.1 – 12.4 2026
Stockholm
Opens in 55 days
Karol Radziszewski’s practice begins with the archive. Through his publication DIK Fagazine and the Queer Archives Institute, he has spent the past two decades gathering stories, materials, and oral histories that have been systematically excluded from mainstream historical narratives in Central and Eastern Europe, and therefore from the classroom itself.
The archive in Radziszewski’s work does not only preserve; it activates. In “The Classroom”, these materials reappear as tools for learning and exchange, transforming a site of instruction into one of imagination and collective study.
Lectures, talks & workshops
The exhibition ”Karol Radziszewski — The Classroom” is accompanied by a series of public events. The performance “Fag Fighters” takes place on the opening evening, preceded by a conversation between the artist and curator Hendrik Folkerts. Throughout the exhibition, the classroom will be activated through lectures, talks, and workshops by invited guests.
On the closing weekend, a film programme will present Radziszewski’s moving-image works, tracing his sustained dialogue between queer archives, pedagogy, and artistic practice.
Expanded at Moderna Museet
In 2024, “The Classroom” entered Moderna Museet’s collection. First presented at Between Bridges in Berlin in 2023, the exhibition at Moderna Museet marks the work’s Scandinavian debut, now expanded with new elements:
A new mural by Karol Radziszewski evokes the daydreams of “fag fighter heroes”, figures imagined while gazing out of the classroom windows. A new edition of DIK Fagazine is published on the occasion of the exhibition, along with a soundscape composed from recordings of earlier programmes in Berlin.
About the artist
Karol Radziszewski (born 1980, Białystok; lives and works in Warsaw) works in film, painting, installation, and publishing. His practice examines queer histories in Central and Eastern Europe and how they can be made visible through artistic and editorial means. He is the founder of the Queer Archives Institute and the editor of DIK Fagazine, both of which function as platforms for research, exhibition, and exchange. Through these interconnected projects, Radziszewski develops a visual and discursive framework that links art-making with archiving, education, and activism.
Curated by Hendrik Folkerts, Curator of International Contemporary Art and Head of Exhibitions.
Supported by Adam Mickiewicz Institute, and the Polish Institute in Sweden.

