The show, called Budapest-Tallinn-Budapest 1900-2000, features about twenty displays that outline the cooperation from the opening of the Finnish pavilion at the 1900 Paris World Expo, through the period between the wars, when the Hungarian Géza Jakó established the ceramics department at the Tallinn Academy of Fine Art, through the communist era, when artistic ties were fostered under ?proletarian internationalism?, to the present.
The exhibition shows the work of the Estonian artists Katrin Amos, Selrgei Isupov, Kadri Pärnamets, Anu Raud and Mait Summatavet.
The show runs until September 15.
Photo: Hungarian Institute Tallinn