Film Poster 16mm film transferred to digital, color/sound, 18 min. 26 sec., Japan, 2015. Shape Shifting was shown at Berlinale Forum Expanded 2015. Granting culture to the nonhuman world, the film “Shape Shifting” outlines a cartography of a particular landscape. A landscape, which can be found in many parts of Asia and in Japan is… Read more »
A Line May Lie / Testing Time
Open Form – Space, Interaction, and the Tradition of Oskar Hansen
Oskar Hansen’s (1922–2005) theoretical concept of “open form” was developed in the context of international debates around late-modern architecture in the 1950s. Open form assumed that no artistic expression is complete until it has been appropriated by its users or beholders. In the following decades, the concept became a key principle of performance and film… Read more »
Vacacíones de sí mísmo
Spanish translation of Ferien vom Ich (2004) by Hinrich Sachs.
Torpor
German translation of Chris Kraus’ novel “Torpor”, originally published by Semiotext(e) in 2006. Translated by Stephanie Wurster Epilogue by Karolin Meunier
Udolpho
Udolpho is a new space dedicated to the exhibition and sale of rare books and manuscripts. The Visual Identity for Udolpho comprises the design of logo, stationery, exhibition posters, hand outs and the website. Exhibition photography by Nick Ash. Website programming by selbstbewusstlos.
The Drumhead
On May 21, 2013, the French right-wing activist and blogger, Dominique Venner, shot himself in the head at the altar of the cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris. His choice to end his life was intended as a demonstration against homosexuality in the public realm. It was also the onset of Gerry Bibby’s investigation into,… Read more »
Telling and Retelling
Poster design for the artist´s permanent commissioning at Zealand Institute of Business and Technology, Campus Roskilde, Denmark in 2014. The complex work “Telling and Retelling” comprises site specific installations such as curtains, vitrine with objects, films and a poster. Photography by Johannes Christoffersen
Hystericizing Germany. Fassbinder, Alexanderplatz
“Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s fourteen-part Berlin Alexanderplatz, broadcast on German television in 1980, is a pivotal work in the artist’s oeuvre. The 1929 novel by Alfred Döblin, a subproletarian apocalypse set in the Weimar Republic, provided Fassbinder with material to historicize the avant-garde of the 1920s and redetermine the relationship between utopianism and popular address. While… Read more »
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