Małgorzata Mirga-Tas's groundbreaking exhibition, Przeczarowując świat (ENG: Re-enchanting the world) is a powerful and inspiring artistic manifesto that challenges stereotypes and broadens the history of art by presenting Roma culture, the largest minority in Europe, through a contemporary lens. Displayed at the Venice Biennale, then in Ferrara, and now in Warsaw, the exhibition is the first time a Roma artist has ever been represented in the more than 120-year history of the event. The installation is an impressive display of twelve large-format fabrics, corresponding to the twelve months of the calendar, that draws inspiration from astrological frescoes found in the Palazzo Schifanoia in Ferrara. The exhibit showcases Małgorzata Mirgi-Tas's re-appropriation of key motifs in European art history by incorporating them into depictions of Polish-Roma culture and reversing the stereotypical narrative. The upper band presents the history of Roma migrations around Europe, challenging anti-Roma stereotypes, while the middle lane is an archive of Roma history built from a female perspective, with symbols borrowed from tarot cards and zodiac signs. Finally, the bottom strip of the composition presents twelve paintings that show contemporary everyday life in the artist's home village, Czarna Góra, and the areas with which she is most associated. The exhibition proposes a new narrative about the constant cultural migration of images and mutual influences between Roma, Polish, and European culture, proposing an enchantment, a non-violent process intended to remove the evil spell from the world and help regain a sense of community and rebuild relationships with others.