Sunday, 20 May 2012
Brighton Palermo Remix
Tuesday, 3 April 2012
Hamburger Bahnhof
Hamburger Bahnhof is a rail station, converted into "Museum für Gegenwart" (Museum for Contemporary Art).

Architektonika displays sculptural and photographic works, films and paintings that illustrate different approaches to the relationship between art and
architecture since the 1960s. It emphasises the
sculptural and visual qualities of architectural structures. Because of the way it deals with how architecture defines urban space, the way we
live and the relationship between architecture and social issues, this exhibition was the most valuable experience in Berlin.
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Andrea Pichi- Doublebind, 2011 |
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Isa Genzken- New building for Berlin, 2001 |
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Isa Genzken- Brunnen, 1989 |
Sunday, 1 April 2012
Perceiving Berlin
THIS COULD BE HOME

THE BAUHAUS ARCHIVE

KUNSTHAUS TACHELES

THE HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL

Sunday, 25 March 2012
Controlled chaos

www.jeffdepner.com
Sunday, 11 March 2012
The Art of Tidying Up
Swiss artist and comedian Ursus Wehrli exposes our obsession with order by positioning objects in neat rows according to colour, size, shape and category. This may seem like a rare type of OCD; nonetheless, The Art of Tidying Up shows what happens when ordinary scenes and objects are given an extreme reorganization in fascinating series of photographs. Wehrli previously applied his comical editing skills to the messy world of art, tidying up Vincent Van Gogh's bedroom and bringing order to Pieter Bruegel's chaotic village scene in his books Tidying Up Art (2005) and More Tidying Up Art (2007).
Saturday, 11 February 2012
Alice’s crit: “The door”

However, the fact that we can see all the elements of the installation (including the empty pseudo door frame with the curtain, the amp and projectors..) suggests, that this piece does not want to create an illusion of something, it does not want to confuse, it is clear that it is a very intense report of some sort. The scale of the hand banging on the door, the ambiguity of the projected image of the door in combination with the strident sound, all of this on a loop, speak of an exaggerated moment in time, a very strong experience and terror.
Tuesday, 24 January 2012
Home sweet home
The theme of nationality and the homeland is a reappearing one in Slovak art. The urge to embrace the surroundings and identities is somewhat coded in Slovak art and literature. However, Lucia Tallova (born 1985), Slovak painter of the young generation (she graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts and Design in Bratislava in 2011) approaches this ‘Slovak myth’ differently. Following the tradition of Slovak Modernism pioneers, there are no heroic romanticised Slovaks at work, no enthusiastic folk landscapes, only sober love-hate relationship with the city, the country, with home.
http://www.luciatallova.com/
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