July 26, 2018
Here we present a video featuring scenes from the exhibition “Welt ohne Außen. Immersive Spaces since the 1960s” and interviews with curator Thomas Oberender, workshop co-curater Isabel Lewis and artist…[read on]
July 17, 2018
Through his kinetic sculptures, artist Gil Delindro employs natural materials to make silent occurrences audible. For example, his piece ‘Manta Morta’ (2016) posed the question: What does decay sound like?…[read on]
Openings & Events at Spike Berlin, Decad, Contemporary Fine Arts, Klemms, Hamburger Banhof, Galerie im Turm, Galerie Judin, Universität der Künste, Haus am Lützowplatz, Liszt, Tropez, Kunstsaele Berlin, Galerie Martin Mertens,…[read on]
Article by Sofia Bergmann // July 11, 2018
The female body conforming to its surroundings and the conflicts of modern societal and technological evolution are themes explored through the exhibition of Valie Export’s archival collection at the Neuer Berliner…[read on]
July 6, 2018
Lcc Program is a bi-annual award, supporting contemporary African photography through giving an emerging artist their first solo exhibition and a cash prize of 2000 USD. Established by Fondation Alliances…[read on]
Article by Julianne Cordray // June 28, 2018
In Xiyadie’s paper-cuts, currently on view at NOME in Berlin, plant and animal life are entangled with human figures and architectural structures in scenes of queer eroticism…[read on]
Article by Emily McDermott // June 25, 2018
Spread across eight venues, the first edition of the Riga International Biennial of Contemporary Art, curated by Katerina Gregos, mixes the political with the natural…[read on]
Article by Dagmara Genda // June 22, 2018
Jeremy Shaw’s show at the Kunstverein in Hamburg premieres his ‘Quantification Trilogy’ (2014–18), a triad of videos that speculate about a controlled trajectory of evolution and documents…[read on]
Article by Ilyn Wong // June 20, 2018
In their exhibition ‘Mighty Good Men,’ the artists Andrew J Burford and Constantin Hartenstein critique masculinity as fractured and troublesome, yet always inescapably hegemonic…[read on]
Article by William Kherbek // June 14, 2018
The phrase “the personal is political” is familiar, even cliché, and it is clear enough that in an age in which personal civil liberties are being eroded by repressive governments, where historically oppressed groups…[read on]
Video by BAL Productions // June 11, 2018
Philippe Parreno is perhaps best known for his evolving artworks. No exhibition ends the way it began, and his current show at Gropius Bau in Berlin is no different. Part of the Berliner Festspiele’s Immersion program,…[read on]
Article by Lucile Bouvard // June 09, 2018
A large-scale helium balloon in the shape of a stylized rock floats over Oranienplatz in Berlin. On its top stands a small inflatable building. Below it, on the sidewalk, a group of performers…[read on]