Until the space was acquired, Kosovo StoryLab had operated in various locations, such as the Center for Narrative Practice (CNP), which, until early 2024, served as a cultural and work space, and Foundation 17, a non-governmental organization in Prishtina that combines cultural activism, education, and art while also offering work spaces for artists and researchers. This year, Artrit considered it necessary for Kosovo StoryLab to have a home.
“It’s all do-it-yourself,” Artrit said of the space. “We cleaned it, we had people come round and in April we launched the space. We just said, ‘Let’s open it, then we’ll see what happens.’”
Everything is kept alive by Artrit’s personal savings. “From the investment to the monthly expenses — electricity, water — I pay for them out of my own pocket,” he said. However, although this financial model is unsustainable, it is part of the lab’s philosophy: to create without depending on grants or bureaucracies.
Kosovo StoryLab, in addition to its projects, will now also offer space for community use. “This is being done because there is an urgent need for public spaces everywhere,” said Artrit.
He also confirms what other artists have said: “There is a certain gentrification here; there is no escape from it,” referring to the increase in rent for the neighborhood. Such a trend is a typical example of the social and economic process known as gentrification — when a neglected urban area is renovated and begins to attract a new demographic, who are often wealthier and more privileged, which leads to rising house prices and the gradual displacement of lower-income residents or tenants. He hopes that the neighborhood will escape this process and overload.
For Artrit, the aesthetic of Artists’ Neighborhood makes it a kind of mini-Brooklyn or little Berlin, where cafés, galleries and cultural initiatives create a rare ecosystem that exudes community vitality. “Sometimes I hear someone say, ‘This road has the potential to become like kafet e rakisë’… I’m like, I hope not,” he said, referring to the cafés lining 2 Korriku Street in downtown Prishtina, where dozens of bars have opened, and which is known as one of the city’s most frequented alleys.
Near Musa Kalaveshi and Zog Limani’s studio, a new space called Kometa has been added to the street — a social enterprise and feminist bar that opened in August of this year. Kometa is an alternative social space, conceived by the Center for Criticism, Information and Action (QIKA). The goal of Kometa, according to Leonida Molliqaj, editor-in-chief at QIKA, is for the space to serve as a connecting point for communication between students, artists and activists.