{"id":128,"date":"2006-06-13T14:33:57","date_gmt":"2006-06-13T12:33:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/?p=128"},"modified":"2007-06-01T20:57:31","modified_gmt":"2007-06-01T18:57:31","slug":"von-musen-und-menschen","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/?p=128","title":{"rendered":"Von M&auml;usen und Menschen"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img id=\"image95\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/RobertoCuoghi.jpg\" alt=\"RobertoCuoghi.jpg\" \/><br \/>\nRoberto Cuoghi, Untitled 2004<\/p>\n<p>Last monday the 4. Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art under the title: &#8220;Von M&auml;usen und Menschen&#8221; (<a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Of_Mice_and_Men\">Of Mice and Men<\/a>) closed its doors. The biennale is one of Berlins important regular modern art events.<\/p>\n<p>From the<a href=\"http:\/\/www.berlinbiennale.de\/eng\/pdf\/bb4%20Press%20Kit%20engl%20230306.pdf\"> press kit for the exhibition<\/a>:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>&#8220;Of Mice and Men&#8221; looks at life as a series of traumas and at art as an enigma that capture moments of disorientation and states of uncertainty and fragility. Anxiety and paranoia, a<br \/>\nimpenetrable obscurity and a looming sense of suspension are some of the recurring atmospheres in the show. <\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p>This is a rather long post.  I originally intended to break up in pieces and to blog it over time, but after writing it I decided to keep it as it is.<\/p>\n<p>The biennale was located  along Berlins Auguststrasse &#8211; a street which is located in the former jewish central quarter &#8220;Scheunenviertel&#8221;, which is in the center of Berlin. The street is next to the old <a href=\"http:\/\/mysql.snafu.de\/cjudaicum\/index.html\">New Synagogue<\/a> and the <a href=\"http:\/\/super.tacheles.de\/cms\/\">Tacheles<\/a>. Main buildings of the Biennale were the  &#8220;Kunstwerke&#8221; (building below with flags) and the former jewish girls school just opposite of the Kunstwerke.<\/p>\n<p><img id=\"image79\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/strassenarbeiter.jpg\" alt=\"strassenarbeiter.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>However the curators of the biennale <a href=\"http:\/\/www.berlinbiennale.de\/eng\/pdf\/bb4_web_curatorsteam_cv_120705_english.pdf\">Maurizio Cattelan, Massimiliano Gioni and Ali Subotnick<\/a> (who are an artist, a curator and an editor\/writer\/curator) included the whole street with private appartments, a dance hall etc. into their Biennale location.  Alltogether there were 12 exhibition venues along Auguststrasse.<br \/>\nFrom the press kit:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>These venues were not selected in order to comment on gentrification or socio-economic changes in the area; they are sites that everyone can connect with, almost on a visceral level, and the entire street can be seen as a microcosm of an entire society, or a fictional setting for a novel. &#8220;Of Mice and Men&#8221; then can be read as a journey across time and space, in which viewers are invited to experience art and the contexts in which works are presented, as if opening a series of time capsules. A serious effort has been made to preserve the spaces exactly as they were found.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>As I said, the &#8220;Scheunenviertel&#8221; is located in the very center of Berlin in a district called &#8220;Mitte&#8221; (means: center).  The gentrification of &#8220;Mitte&#8221; currently manifests itself in a  mixture of on the one hand expensive housing, shops and galleries and on the other hand old ruins,  still some more experimental shops and galleries, former GDR Plattenbau (buildings made with precast concrete slabs), traditional Berlin pubs etc.  The Auguststrasse is meanwhile quite packed with galleries and starts to adress rather rich clients.  Likewise the entrance fee of the biennale of 12 Euros was rather pricey &#8211; in a city with an <a href=\"http:\/\/www.bbr.bund.de\/infosite\/kinfo\/baam_bbr.pdf\">unemployment rate<\/a> of 21,7 %.<\/p>\n<p>By the way the above street workers,  who worked there all day, left a work which made me think for quite a while:<br \/>\n<img id=\"image80\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/bauarbeitermuster.jpg\" alt=\"bauarbeitermuster.jpg\" \/>.<br \/>\nAt the end of my tour the tar-pattern  was destroyed:<br \/>\n<img id=image81\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/Bauarbeitermusterkaputt.jpg\" alt=\"Bauarbeitermusterkaputt.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n&#8230;and I am still not sure, why they generated this tar-pattern at all.<br \/>\n<br \/>\nHowever despite all ritzy establishment &#8211; Berlins street art is still prevalent at this place:<br \/>\n<img id=\"image82\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/brandwandfaeustehochkant.jpg\" alt=\"brandwandfaeustehochkant.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image83\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/schlangeundgesicht.jpg\" alt=\"schlangeundgesicht.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image84\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/spillerigeswandbildrot.jpg\" alt=\"spillerigeswandbildrot.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image89\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/mampe.jpg\" alt=\"mampe.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image90\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/mickeymode.jpg\" alt=\"mickeymode.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image86\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/vivelabourgoisiecontainer.jpg\" alt=\"vivelabourgoisiecontainer.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image85\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/pfeilmann.jpg\" alt=\"pfeilmann.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image87\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/parkscheinloesen.jpg\" alt=\"parkscheinloesen.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n(I am not going to translate the (modified) sign on the parking ticket vending machine!)<br \/>\n<br \/>\nThe aesthetics of the outside (and partially of the former &#8220;inside&#8221;) were partially included in the &#8220;inside of the Biennale&#8221;. Inside and outside, observed, observer, object and environment were  evidently entangled.<br \/>\n <img id=\"image91\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/wagenradbalkon.jpg\" alt=\"wagenradbalkon.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image92\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/michaelSchmidt.jpg\" alt=\"michaelSchmidt.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image93\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/schmidtundbetrachterin.jpg\" alt=\"schmidtundbetrachterin.jpg\" \/><br \/>\nThe above fotographs called &#8220;Einheit&#8221; (unity) (1991-1994) are by Michael Schmidt. They were aligned along the big central hall of the Kunstwerke. In the middle of this hall there were Thomas Sch&uuml;ttes &#8220;Capacity men&#8221; (2005) &#8211; three crow-like giant sculptures looking at Schmidts images.<br \/>\n<img id=\"image94\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/schuetteschmidt.jpg\" alt=\"schuetteschmidt.jpg\" \/> Creatures, life and death were important themes in the Biennale. Besides the<br \/>\nMice-men (top most image) by Roberto Cuoghi (2004) there were e.g. Bruce Nauman&#8217;s video sculpture &#8220;Of rats and bats&#8221; (Learned Helplessness in Rats II)(1988) &#8211; a yellow-green maze-shaped plastic container and a video, showing the artist whacking on a sack with a baseball bat next to  the yellow-green plastic container (just &#8211; in the video the yellow-green plastic container contained real living rats and I asked myself wether there were originally real rats also inside the exhibition yellow-green plastic container):<br \/>\n<img id=\"image96\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/ratsandbats.jpg\" alt=\"ratsandbats.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<br \/>\nReal creatures were also shown in this video &#8220;Deeparture&#8221; (2005) by Mircea Cantor displaying a wolf and a deer trapped together in a white cube and humans in a white cube watching the video:<br \/>\n<img id=\"image97\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/reh.jpg\" alt=\"reh.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>In a series of cold-coloured fotographs  Corey McCorkle documented the birth of his son. The fotographs are called  &#8220;Spiritual midwifery&#8221; (2005).  Why he did chose this title?<br \/>\n<img id=\"image98\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/spiritualMidwifery.jpg\" alt=\"spiritualMidwifery.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<br \/> <a href=\"www.berlinbiennale.de\/pdf\/Reynolds%20&#038;%20Jolley.pdf \">Reynold Reynolds &#8220;burn&#8221; (with Patrick Jolley) <\/a> was a bit more poetic. It is a  35 mm film recast on DVD.  The film displays people living in fire and snow. The people are acting as if the fire wouldn&#8217;t hurt them.<br \/>\nAlso if the play with fire, snow and rotten houses was consciously exagerated &#8211; the film still reminded me of <a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Nostalghia\">Tarkovsky&#8217;s Nostalghia<\/a>.<br \/>\n<img id=\"image100\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/burn1.jpg\" alt=\"burn1.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>In contrast to these rather heavy loaded themes was the lively video &#8220;paralyzed&#8221; of<a href=\"www.berlinbiennale.de\/pdf\/Klrara%20Liden.pdf\"> Klara Liden<\/a> (2003) . It made me think a bit of <a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Parcour\">&#8220;parkour&#8221;.<\/a><br \/>\n<img id=\"image101\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/ClaraSiden1.jpg\" alt=\"ClaraSiden1.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>Another piece of reinterpreted architectural use was &#8220;Sondermodelle&#8221; of <a href=\"www.berlinbiennale.de\/pdf\/Croy%20&#038;%20Elser.pdf\">Oliver Croy with Oliver Elser&#8217;s<\/a> display of the 387 houses which were built by austrian insurance clerk Peter Fritz:<br \/>\n<img id=\"image102\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/SondermodelleLangerTisch.jpg\" alt=\"SondermodelleLangerTisch.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image103\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/Kirchturm.jpg\" alt=\"Kirchturm.jpg\" \/><br \/>\nThe entanglement of inside and ouside in this room not only given by the above juxtaposition, but also by thoughtful fotographs from <a href=\"www.berlinbiennale.de\/pdf\/Shirana%20Shabazi.pdf\">Shirana Shahbazi <\/a> which were hanging next to the Sondermodelle and which were displaying again scenes of Berlin-Mitte:<br \/>\n<img id=\"image104\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/ShiranaShabaziMitte.jpg\" alt=\"ShiranaShabaziMitte.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<br \/>\nA traumatic experience was adressed in  <a href=\"www.berlinbiennale.de\/pdf\/Jan%20Mancuska.pdf\">J\u00e1n Man\u010du\u0161ka<\/a>&#8216;s 20 min after (2006) a conceptional 3D installation about a story from his mother. In this story she describes how she heard that her father has suffered  a stroke and is dying.  I would have never expected such a story behind a decorative, graphically elaborate set-up like this one. The letters were about 6cm big in shiny silver and hung on a steel cable in a height of about 2m30.<br \/>\n<img id=\"image106\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/JanMancuskaBuchstaben.jpg\" alt=\"JanMancuskaBuchstaben.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p> Next to it was an installation of   <a href=\"www.berlinbiennale.de\/pdf\/Cathy%20Wilkes.pdf\">Cathy Wilkes.<\/a> The installation didn&#8217;t speak to me, but may be I was too occupied with observing the two fotographers trying to capture her artwork:<br \/>\n<img id=\"image107\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/CathyWilkes.jpg\" alt=\"CathyWilkes.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image108\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/CathyWilkes2.jpg\" alt=\"CathyWilkes2.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>The last work I documented in the Kunstwerke was <a href=\"www.berlinbiennale.de\/pdf\/Gillian%20Wearing.pdf\">Gillian Wearing<\/a>s &#8220;drunk&#8221; (1999) &#8211; a video portrait of drunks that live rough around her studios in East London which she implemented into a laboratory-like setting:<br \/>\n<img id=\"image109\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/penner.jpg\" alt=\"penner.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>There was more artwork in the Kunstwerke, however I turn now to the<br \/>\nnext venues.<br \/>\n<img id=\"image119\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/KWeinfahrt.jpg\" alt=\"KWeinfahrt.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image110\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/StrassenschildFrauKind.jpg\" alt=\"StrassenschildFrauKind.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>There was a container on Auguststrasse containing a little cinema, which showed a 17 min. video of a bike trip of Erik van Lieshout from Amsterdam to Berlin. Erik van Lieshout was carefully observing. The video displayed the german landscape unerringly in a bitter sarcastic and true manner. <\/p>\n<p><img id=\"image117\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/LieshoutContainer.jpg\" alt=\"LieshoutContainer.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image118\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/LieshoutInterkontinental.jpg\" alt=\"LieshoutInterkontinental.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<br \/>\nIn  Ballhaus Mitte (dance hall Mitte) there was a work of Tino Sehgal in which two actors were permanently kissing each other in the old beautiful (but ruinous) Spiegelsaal (mirror hall). It was forbidden to take <a href=\"http:\/\/kunst-blog.com\/2006\/04\/ang_sookoon_eli.php\">fotographs<\/a> there. Two other venues  were private appartments. The first appartment was Auguststrasse 23. This appartment had no bedroom, as I was told the owner uses it only for gatherings.  Among the precious furniture of the owner  the appartment displayed the work &#8220;Reticencia al trabajo&#8221; (2006) by Dami\u00e1n Ortega  which consisted of motorized furniture, which moves if one comes to close. However unfortuantely it didnt work when I was there. The appartment contained also a foto album of Aneta Grzeszykowska (&#8220;Album&#8221; 2005), where she cut herself out of her own family pictures:<br \/>\n<img id=\"image120\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/edlerTisch.jpg\" alt=\"edlerTisch.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>In between venues there was Auguststrasse again:<br \/>\n<img id=\"image121\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/geschlosseneFenster.jpg\" alt=\"geschlosseneFenster.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p><img id=\"image115\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/zwerg1.jpg\" alt=\"zwerg1.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<img id=\"image116\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/beckrufmichan.jpg\" alt=\"beckrufmichan.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>\nThe other appartment was the appartment of artist Norbert Schwontkowski, apparently a rising star on the Berlin art heaven. However his appartment emanated an air of meekness, which was indeed bracing.<br \/>\n<img id=\"image111\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/schwontkowski1.jpg\" alt=\"schwontkowski1.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<br \/>\n<img id=\"image112\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/schwontkowski4.jpg\" alt=\"schwontkowski4.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<\/br><br \/>\n<img id=\"image113\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/schwontkowski5.jpg\" alt=\"schwontkowski5.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n<br \/>\nMy next and last venue was the former jewish girl school. The girls school was closed in 1942 by the Nazi&#8217;s and reopened after the war again as a school. It was abandonned in the nineties and empty since then. There were still the old school paperwall and some announcements from 10 years ago on the walls. There was a security check at the entrance and it was forbidden to take pictures of the building itself and of some of the artwork. The unchanged condition of the house and the history of that house were haunting. It was hard to focus on the artworks. <\/p>\n<p><img id=\"image122\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/Maedchenschule.jpg\" alt=\"Maedchenschule.jpg\" \/><br \/>\n(Sebastian Hammw\u00f6hner \/ Dani Jakob \/ Gabriel Vormstein &#8220;cannot forward or rewind, this state of being, this aged resign &#8211; let the wind catch a rainbow on fire&#8230;,&#8221; (2004\/2006))<\/p>\n<p>\nThere was old wall paper even behind Paloma Varga Weisz&#8217;s sculpture:<br \/>\n<img id=\"image123\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/PalomaWeisz.jpg\" alt=\"PalomaWeisz.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>I was happy to find the video works of Thomas Bayrle but even these couldn&#8217;t be watched without a haunted feeling- i think:<br \/>\n<img id=\"image126\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/ThomasBayerle2.jpg\" alt=\"ThomasBayerle2.jpg\" \/> His video work &#8220;(b)alt&#8221; can be watched <a href=\"http:\/\/www.medienkunstnetz.de\/werke\/(b)alt\/\">here<\/a> at medienkunstnetz.<\/p>\n<p>\nIn Viktor Alimpiev 2.5 minutes Film &#8220;Zarnitzyi&#8221; (&#8220;summer lightnings&#8221; 2004) school girls  are hammering with their fingers on their class desks in a school room which looked very much like the room where the video was shown. The hammering sounded a bit like a loud crackle. They all suddenly stopped and put their hands across their mouth as if it was forbidden to make  these sounds. Then they started again and stopped again:<br \/>\n <img id=\"image127\" src=\"http:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/wp-content\/2006\/06\/zarnitzyi.jpg\" alt=\"zarnitzyi.jpg\" \/><br \/>\nSeeing these girls in this house was too much for me. I went home.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Roberto Cuoghi, Untitled 2004 Last monday the 4. Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art under the title: &#8220;Von M&auml;usen und Menschen&#8221; (Of Mice and Men) closed its doors. The biennale is one of Berlins important regular modern art events. From the press kit for the exhibition: &#8220;Of Mice and Men&#8221; looks at life as a series [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[4,13,8],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/128"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=128"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/128\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=128"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=128"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.randform.org\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=128"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}