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Zsuzsanna Ardó is Hungarian by birth, English
by existence, human by inclination, humorous by nature—and a writer
and photographer by profession. Her books and articles have been published in
various languages, in the UK, US, Hungary, Germany, Russia and
Singapore. She has worked as an academic, journalist, editor, and
broadcaster; she has translated and edited over 100 feature films,
from James Bond to Shakespeare. Her broadcasting experience includes
European-wide satellite television series on intercultural
communication and management.
Her play, The Hat: Arendt Meets Heidegger premiered at Harvard and she wrote and directed a short film Allegro Barbaro, a triple-flashback visual poem to music. Culture Shock! Hungary, her social anthropology-cum-travel book, is in its fourth edition worldwide. How to be a European: Go Hungarian, and Love Blues: Hungarian Rhapsodies are cultural satires on Hungarians, published as English and Hungarian parallel texts.
As Artist in Residence at the Digital Art Centre in Spain, she collaborated on digital art, and also on a multimedia interactive feature with soundscape, based on her short story and photographs, published by Arts and Cultures in openDemocracy. Her photograph, “Shifting Sand of History on the Wall” was featured in their Photo of the Week series. In 2005 and 2006 she was invited to be the Photographer in Residence in the André Kertész Museum. Her “André Kertész in My Window” is in the collection of the National Photography Museum in Hungary.
She is a member of the BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television Arts), the British Association of Journalists, the founding Chairman of the Hampstead Authors' Society, and the Editor of HASNotes. She has had solo photo exhibitions in Hungary, the UK and the US, and most recently in Delhi at the India International Centre, the Hungarian Cultural Centre Delhi, and the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts.
Zsuzsanna can be reached by email.
