Two Artpool projects, the World Art Post (1982), and Hungary Can Be Yours (1984) are featured in the exhibition Transperyphery Movement, which is part of the third edition of Off Bienniale Budapest.
Artists: Clemente Padín, György Galántai, Katrin Winkler, Manthia Diawara, Mónica de Miranda, Naeem Mohaiemen, Judit Flóra Schuller
Curators: Eszter Szakács, Zoltán Ginelli
Researchers: Zoltán Ginelli, Zsuzsa László, Bartosz Nowicki, Tereza Stejskalová, Eszter Szakács, Bálint Tolmár

The exhibition combines archival materials and personal memories with historical and contemporary art, including newly commissioned artworks. It addresses the critical question of how, from the perspective of the global peripheries, to de-center history dominated by the global center and re-center peripheral positions.
The Transperiphery Movement seeks to counter the center-dominated, hierarchical view of history by re-telling the histories of resistance strategies and emancipative possibilities of interperipherality.
Accompanying conversations:
- Transperiphery Conversations – (Post)Colonial Eastern Europe, with the participation of James Mark, Bartosz Nowicki, Ovidiu Țichindeleanu and Judit Flóra Schuller
- Transperiphery Conversations – Global History, Global Networks, with the participation of Zsuzsa László, Doreen Mende – Lea Marie Nienhoff, Myriam Mouflih and Katrin Winkler
- East Europe Biennial Alliance: East to East, with the participation of Tereza Stejskalová (Biennale Matter of Art Prague), Bartosz Frąckowiak (Biennale Warszawa), Vasyl Cherepanyn, Serhiy Klymko (Kyiv Biennial), and Inga Lāce (Survival Kit Festival Riga)