Chen Xiaoyun, Andreas Koch, Heidi Specker

In distinctive black and white tones, Heidi Specker, Andreas Koch und Chen Xiaoyun present their works in early summer at BüroFriedrich-berlin. A preoccupation with the embodiment of the complex correlation between nature and its effect on human perception and behavior accumulate in a central subject for the works of the three artists from Berlin and Hangzhou. One analyzes the beauty of shadows in nature through the examination of traditional Japanese aesthetics, another attempts to expose the human figure and its effect on nature. The third displays the human being in its modification through the progress of industrialization and urbanization.

Chen Xiaoyun (*1971 in Hubei, CN, lives and works in Hangzhou) shows with the two videos DRAG, 2006 and LASH, 2005 the preoccupation of the human individual with its environment, which – as merely a cog in the machinery of increasing industrialization – is dominated by physical exertion. As an expression of the pointlessness of redundant work, DRAG shows a man, who pulls with all his might a rope, whose end is fixed to a wall. ‘You have no reason to know nothing, about all darkness.’ (Chen Xiaoyun) And the darkness appears in the shadow world behind the wall.
LASH displays the image of black night. Hints of the plot are only visible through short flashes of light, whose recurring quick bursts are accompanied by the crack of a whip; highlighting scenes of a man and a horse, who both work until burnt-out. ‘A flash is a crack of the whip, and time is an individual religion.’ (Chen Xiaoyun) From a new Asian perspective, this work asks new questions of the phenomenon of work in our times.

Andreas Koch (*1970 in Stuttgart, GER, Lives and works in Berlin) transforms the entrance of BF-b with a romantic, monumental reproduction of a seascape. With a black and white wallpaper installed across a corner, the landscape surrounds the viewer like a diorama from the 19th century. Single details and small scenes, hung in hyper-resolution colour quality on top of the wallpaper, imply a narrative element and refer to little anecdotes of daily life.
Andreas Koch’s second work contradicts the romantic traits of the first. Visually reminiscent of a minimal artwork, a glass tunnel, installed with an opening to the Spree River, in which a lightbox has been enclosed, attracts the large population of mosquitos and spiders inhabiting the river. will be enticed into the sculpture during the night and slowly transform it.

Heidi Specker (*1962 in Damme, GER, lives and works in Berlin) presents her new series Day for Night, the result of her trip to Japan in March 2006. The intense examination of the effect of light and shadow mark the three dark exposures of the Imperial Villa and gardens of Shugakuin as well as the two bright architectural photographs of the terrace of her hotel in Tokyo.
As an origin of Heidi Speckers studies, In Praise of Shadows written in 1933 by the Japanese author Junichiro Tanizaki provides a basis. In his reflections on the origin of Japanese aesthetics, Tanizaki contrasts the Japanese beau ideal of muted colors and surfaces with the bright illumination of the Western World. By contrasting the whitewashed walls of her Tokyo hotel with the intensely darkened exposure from the Japanese garden – analog to the Day-for-Night method known from film – , Heidi Specker pays homage to this sensuous essay about the beauty of shadows.

Seelandschaft by Andreas Koch
Seelandschaft by Andreas Koch
Seelandschaft by Andreas Koch
Seelandschaft by Andreas Koch
Kleine Fliegenfalle by Andreas Koch Detail
Kleine Fliegenfalle by Andreas Koch Detail
Kleine Fliegenfalle by Andreas Koch Detail
Kleine Fliegenfalle by Andreas Koch
Kleine Fliegenfalle by Andreas Koch
Kleine Fliegenfalle by Andreas Koch
Day for Night #3 by Heidi Specker
Day for Night #3 by Heidi Specker
Day for Night #2 by Heidi Specker
Day for Night #2 by Heidi Specker
Day for Night #1 by Heidi Specker
Day for Night #1 by Heidi Specker

Funky Lessons

14 September – 13 November 2004

John Baldessari, Monica Bonvicini, Andrea Fraser, Martin Gostner, Eva Grubinger, Erik van Lieshout, Marko Lulic, Aleksandra Mir, Adrian Piper, Tino Sehgal, Annika Ström, Barbara Visser, Franz West.

Curated by Jörg Heiser.

The exhibition is funded by the Berlin Capital Culture Fund, the Mondriaan Foundation, and the art section of Austria’s Bundeskanzleramt.

A common resentment against conceptual art is that it was too didactic. The exhibition brings together work by artists that tackle the problem head-on: they undermine the authority of educational forms yet do not simply renounce knowledge and critique. Humour and role play are the disarming weapons used in performance, video, installation, painting and sculpture. New ways open up beyond the cul-de-sac of a false choice between harmless hermeticism and patronizing gestures.

The title of the exhibition is inspired by Adrian Piper’s pivotal piece “Funk Lessons” (1982-1984), a video based on a performance by the artist teaching – a mostly white – audience of students basic and advanced dance routines of funk and soul music. Another classic example is John Baldessari’s “Baldessari Sings LeWitt” of 1972: the artist sings, like a lay preacher, the famous, stern Sentences on Conceptual Art by Sol LeWitt, to the melody of famous songs, among them the US anthem. Or Franz West’s cross between a pedestal and a lectern “Laocoon’s sprimgy head (Lessingmstudy)” of 2002, with a paperback copy of Lessing’s ‘Laokoon, or on the divisions between painting and poetry’ casually placed inside of it. In the book, Lessing plays off sculpture, which according to him was static, against poetry, which was in motion. West counters the assumption with an amorphous, reddish lump mounted with a rusty steel spring onto the top of the lectern.

Works by 13 artists from 6 countries will be on display throughout the whole space of BüroFriedrich from September through November 2004. BüroFriedrich is a non-profit international venue for contemporary art that has already put on several exhibitions dealing with the history and present of conceptualism. Complementing a group of classical pieces (Piper, Baldessari), there are some recent works (Fraser, Grubinger, van Lieshout, West) and some commissioned exclusively for the exhibition (Bonvicini, Gostner, Lulic, Mir, Sehgal, Ström, Visser).

A series of lectures at Münzclub (Münzstr. 23, Berlin Mitte), taking place on Mondays from 13 September, will address the question of didactics in direct exchange with the audience: some of them will take the form of ‘interview’ (Adrian Piper on 8 November, Aleksandra Mir on 13 September), while others will cross over into performance (Barbara Visser, on the opening night, 11 September). A catalogue which will encompass some of the material from these lectures will be published after the exhibition.

Funky Lessons at Münzsalon
Münzstraße 23, 10178 Berlin
admission €4, Members free

Every Monday 8p.m. Jörg Heiser talks to:

13 September Aleksandra Mir (English)
20 September Martin Gostner and Marko Lulic (German)
27 September Kerstin Grether and Klaus Walter “The Funky Lessons of Pop Music” (German)
04 October Thomas Bayrle “The Funky Lessons of Teaching” (German)
11 October Tino Sehgal (German)
18 October ‘No Talk’ – Funky Lessons Surprise Film
25 October Monica Bonvicini (German)
01 November Eva Grubinger and Annika Ström (English)
08 November Adrian Piper (English)

Higher Truth 2

18 November 2003 – 10 Januari 2004

The project ‘Higher Truth’ dealt with fashion and the void that shopping can occur in the soul of consumers: the allure of fashion was thus shown in its purest form. Not one article of clothing was indeed displayed in the exhibition space. The latter was organized into an imaginary shop, in which factitious salesmen and –women courteously offered an absurd sense of shopping to the visitors. The goal of Higher Truth was to reveal fashion’s gift for creating a compelling atmosphere that cannot be rationally defined or explained: fashion as an experience, as seduction, as a high. An exhibition like the ultimate shop, creating its own reality without using any actual products: the highest attainable form of spiritual materialism.

Concept by Dutch designers Guus Beumer and Rutger Wolfson in collaboration with Herman Verkerk, Rianne Makkink, Alexander van Slobbe, Project_Jordan and Jop van Bennekom.

Higher Truth
Higher Truth

Lebendige Archive

6 december 2002 – 15 februari 2003

What is, actually, a living archive? If one understands archive in the classic sense as something static and bound to a place, does ‘living’ archive imply a potential expansion in terms of space and content?

For Katrin von Maltzahn and Heidi Specker, the project initiators, ‘archive’ does not represent just an accumulation of documents or a digital database. Rather, the exhibition carried the title Archive, as the acts of collecting and sorting are common to both artists in their artistic methods. They regard their systems of order as ‘living’, because connections exist between the different aspects of their respective work, and also to the works of other artists, in this case Guillaume Paris and Michael Schmidt, and writers Elke Naters and Sven Lager. Accompanying the exhibition was an evening of discussion with Elke Naters and Sven Lager who presented their literature project “ampool.de”, and a film program in co-operation with the Freunde der Deutschen Kinemathek in Cinema Arsenal.

Collective work with the participating artists: Katrin von Maltzahn, Guillaume Paris, Michael Schmidt and Heidi Specker.

Here and Now

18 May – 20 Jun 2002

Dave Allen (Glasgow), Michelle Alperin (Los Angeles), Nairy Baghramian (Isfahan), Basserode (Nice), Dominic Eichler (Ballarat) und Ninon Liotet (Chaumont), Omer Fast (Jerusalem), Sofia Hultén (Stockholm), Alisa Anh Kottmair (Baltimore), Joep van Liefland (Utrecht), Liu Anping (Sanyan), Yvette Mattern (San Juan), Hester Oerlemans (Schijndel), Ines Pais (Lissabon), Christine Rebet (Lyon), Anselm Reyle, Egill Sæbjörnsson (Reykjavik), Özcan Sen (Berlin), Chiharu Shiota (Osaka), Kei Takemura (Tokyo), Alexandra Trencséni (Würzburg), Geerten Verheus (Amsterdam), Yin Xiuzhen (Peking), Rommelo Yu (Caloocan City), Dolores Zinny & Juan Maidagan (Rosario)

Here and Now invites artists who live now here in Berlin. As a snapshot of the locality „Berlin”, it asks the question how the city is capable of absorbing and producing difference. The necessity to react to the new situation dominates the works of the artists, that settle down in Berlin for a while. It is not the cultural idiosyncracies that are an issue here, but the demanding processes of location and re-location. The newcomers enact consciously, what the old-establishment has always unconsciously performed – blending in and displacement are universal subjects. The national parameters are dropped without dictating an international style. So the increasing mobility doesn’t necessarily have to lead to the homogenization of culture. For Appadurai, one of the central figures in the debate about cultural difference, the diasporic cultural sphere (in his book „Modernity at Large”) is the motor of present and future culture production. Cultural identity is not thought of as substance, but is being produced with the help of „imagination” in the search for membership, in the formation of group identity. Cultural identity „happens” as a process, most apparent in the moment of orientation in a new environment. A city can work then, when the intellectual and institutional infrastructure is supportive in this search; the task of a metropolis like Berlin could be, to support this without homogenizing. Are the networks – the official and inofficial – open enough to allow diversity and enable the „translation of cultures”?

Here and Now is a snapshot – an encounter of young artists, who practice this translation in different media. The formal preconditions and the structural consequences of these translations are thereby central to their work; so they deal with dramatization, with the „logics of starting-point”, with mobile networks, with the language of opposition, the staging of non-places, with wanting to disappear and the desire to be on the road and part of the „travel culture”.

With Here and Now BüroFriedrich opens its new space. Together with the gallerists of the Jannowitzbrücke there will be an opening with an open end with drinks, food and music. Sponsored by the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science.

4 free

Stadt unter dem Himmel / City under the Sky, Part 3

6 October 2001 – 23 December 2001

The notion of freedom used to be an emotive concept for the Sixties’ generation; today, it seems almost like an anachronism, inextricably connected with successful marketing strategies rather than the rallying cry of any subculture.

The title 4FREE relates to the ambivalence that has been heaved onto the most prominent of human rights: It alludes to both the free marketing sample as well as to notions of „umsonst“, i.e. ‘free of charge’. The actions of the American president after the terror attacks on New York and Washington added another twist to the perpetual re-invention of the word, adding such terms as „Operation Enduring Freedom“, legitimated by the „War on Terror“.

4FREE sought to inquire whether or not the concept of freedom is valid within contemporary art practice and encountered diverse aesthetic „survival strategies“; anti-aesthetic, non-ideological solutions that seek to create new spaces within and through art.

Aesthetic survival strategies:


The artists contributing to 4FREE choose to combine their artistic and personal lives. The art object – to be contemplated from an aesthetic distance – disappears in favour of concrete strategies of the survival of the every-day. These works are not intended as one-off titillations of the exhibition-goer, but much more as proposals that acknowledge the disillusionment bred by the struggles for alternative life styles and the absorption of the subculture movements of the Seventies – proposals with a distinct lack of ideologies.
In what way are yesteryear’s alternatives relevant today? Aren’t they just nostalgic aberrations, escape vehicles from a hyper-aestheticized reality that constantly threatens to drown in its own flood of imagery? A hypocrisy, staged by today’s artist cum entrepreneur?
These „survival strategies“ shown at 4FREE convince by virtue of their idiosyncratic nature, their efficiency and autonomy – and by their renunciation of the ideological crutch.
Each work accentuates an involvement with social and institutional interactions, resulting in an intricate mesh of both acts of adjustment and defiance. The artists seek to challenge the system by way of mimesis, however within the realm the contemporary art.

An enormous crossed-out Superman logo, sprayed on the walls of the railway arches: With No Heroes, artist Johan Grimonprez elects to put away with the concept of the superhero in favour of self-interested solutions for every-day problems.
The exhibition presents several prototypes of such socio-political, yet anti-utopian approaches.

Esther Epstein first realized her Caravan Message Salon project in Zurich in 1996, where Esther and her artist friends experimented with ways of presenting art. Inside the caravan, an audio-visual archive was installed for use by visitors, documenting all the events of the Massage Salon.

Atelier van Lieshout builds equipment and objects for daily use, from sanitary facilities to kitchens, from complete living units to their very own “nation state“ of AVL-Ville. Van Lieshout’s objects promote second thoughts about habitual patterns and the revision of daily rituals, exposing the social structures that inform them. Capsule forms part of a project centred on the notion of group sex.

Rirkrit Tiravanija’s proposal office for the land. Chiang Mai is somewhat akin to an agency promoting an artists-in-residence program in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

Are You Meaning Company’s laconic observations of two people who share a flat illustrate the intricacies and difficulties of social interaction.

Nils Norman’s Geocruiser is an „info vehicle dedicated to eco-political projects“ – a decommissioned bus, equipped with a library as well as its own bio-energy waste and renewal system. This is its first tour on the continent.

L.A. Raeven’s performance pieces mesh art and life. Here, the survival strategy is conveyed as an – affected – commitment to certain images and identities. In White Love, they confront the spectator with an excessive, hyperbolical invocation of the aesthetic principles of the fashion world, reminding us of the story of the twin sisters June and Jennifer Gibbons, who wanted to escape from their self-inflicted image-prison with self-chosen isolation.

Fiering & Luem show a staged wrestling-match between groups of teenagers in a Californian back yard. Terrifying and disturbing, this re-enactment of TV wrestling footage turns into a cruel game.

For Eugenio Dittborn, who lives in Santiago de Chile, the email is a means of – artistic – survival. His work Santiago/Berlin reconsiders previous mail-art projects. Printouts of messages unite current affairs bulletins with his personal associations to Germany.

Das atoll examines interactions of restriction, seclusion and connection.

With reinraus:prototype, realities:united have produced a chair that allows its owner to hang it out of the living room window, leaving the inside of the apartment behind while providing a new perspective on one’s own way of living.

In addition to aesthetic survival strategies, City under the Sky sought to contextualize politics and science. The invited artists commented on art’s connection with politics and media representation.

At Fabrice Gygi’s Polling Station, a barrier stops the visitor from entering the voting cabin, commenting on the right to vote, a highly symbolic part of Western democracy, as being a sham, evoking hidden power structures.

Tal Adler swaps photographs from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with comments from the exhibition’s visitors. Manipulation through images and the consumption patterns are subject of his work.

Jonathan Horowitz reflects on the personalization of politics by focusing on the persona George W. Bush jr. – his vices and virtues as well as his powerful supporters.

Thomas Demand’s work stapel/piles 1-5 also focuses on the recent presidential election. Demand re-builds the polling stations that were used during the recounting process of the Florida ballot-papers. An infinite number of piles – empty ballots, with nothing written on them – document the absence of meaning, the travesty of the operation, which nevertheless demonstrates in a unique way the obscure and incomprehensible interplay of power.

Dierk Schmidt reflects on politics and the media. His work Berliner Kapitel reveals applied culture-politics, exemplified by Berlin: Opinion formers and cultural entrepreneurs, the podia and the audience.

Mieke Gerritzen/NL design re-act with their ‘democratic design’ – billboards to the realities of the commercial world. Beautiful World represents the world of the brand, seemingly the only reliable factor in a world dominated by the post-industrial propensity to project desires into the world of the commodities.

For 4FREE, BüroFriedrich invited artists who seek a scientific or pseudo-scientific approach to their objects. Science and technology thereby serve as a means of communication with their object – nature that, through this sort of mediation, remains distant and enigmatic.

Håkannson records the sounds of crickets, indigenous to the Mediterranean that now practice their survival strategies in a Berlin park. Håkannson’s complex array of technology becomes an almost melancholic commentary on the futility of attempting to understand nature.

On their journeys through Berlin – their hometown of several years – Maria Thereza Alves and Jimmie Durham are fascinated by the presence of nature within the city’s limits. Alves searches for plant seeds on Berlin construction sites that may have been in the ground for centuries, having been carried there with the wind, or accompanying travellers that visited the city. The seeds were classified and subsequently cultivated; a history of the place where they were found was (re)constructed by way of determining their geographic origin. With Nature Diary,Jimmie Durham chronicles encounters with nature in the city.

Mvrdv estimates the size of agricultural space – based on sustainable farming methods – needed to accommodate current meat consumption patterns in the future. The result is called Pig City, a satellite town for pig farming. From her won office at the Institute of Genetics at Humboldt University, Yvonne Trapp examines the medical use of genetic material. Her Y-Verführmaschine transforms a large basin, originally used for the classification of DNA, into a swimming pool, alluding to the body of Darwinist theories that have nowadays being turned into worldviews.

At present, politics have become inseparable from its reflection in the media. In the light of the advance of new models of distribution, Danish artist collective Superflex installed the web project SUPERCHANNEL/SUPERFRIEDRICH, seeking to offer a platform for alternative communications.


Liam Gillick unites all of these different positions in his terror-design for the upcoming exhibition catalogue.


At the opening of 4FREE, Rirkrit Tiravanija – in continuation of the M(odel)4∞ project – opened the Brychcy Bar in railway arch #54.

4Free exhibition
Tal Adler (Israel)    1 to 1000    Conflict Israel/Palestine, 2001    Collectors' items#56
Tal Adler (Israel) 1 to 1000 Conflict Israel/Palestine, 2001 Collectors’ items#56 Color prints; Xerox Copies
 Maria Thereza Alves & Jimmie Durham (MEX/D)    A Nature Diary,2001
Maria Thereza Alves & Jimmie Durham (MEX/D) A Nature Diary,2001 Crow Skull, Mirror, Metal, Text
Joep van Lieshout    Capsule, 2001
Atelier van Lieshout (NL) Joep van Lieshout Capsule, 2001 Polyester, wood, mixed material
    Esther Eppstein (CH) Message Salon Wohnwagen, 1998-2000 CH
Esther Eppstein (CH) Message Salon Wohnwagen, 1998-2000 CH Leihgabe der Sammlung des Migros Museums für Gegenwartskunst, Zürich CH
Unholy Solution,Event#2, 2001
Fiering&Luem(USA) Matthew Luem, Greg Fiering Unholy Solution,Event#2, 2001 Projection
Mieke Gerritzen (NL)    Beautiful World,2001
Mieke Gerritzen (NL) Beautiful World,2001 Billboards
Johan Grimonprez (B)    No-Supermann,2001
Johan Grimonprez (B) No-Supermann,2001 walldrawing
  Ayumi Minemura        two getting along project 2001
are you meaning company Ayumi Minemura two getting along project 2001 computer-prints, video
 Nils Norman (UK) Geocruiser, 2001
Nils Norman (UK) Geocruiser, 2001 Mobile library/greenhouse powered py diesel and vegetable oil. With solar powered onboard xerox machine and laptop. In collaboration with www.instituteofvisualculture.org and The Arts Council of England
Liesbeth Raeven, Angelique Raeven    White Love,2001
L.A.Raeven (NL) Liesbeth Raeven, Angelique Raeven White Love,2001 Video Installation
 Superflex (DK)    Bjornstjerne Reuter Christiansen, Jakob Fenger, Rasmus Nielsen SUPERCHANNEL/SUPERFRIEDRICH;2001
Superflex (DK) Bjornstjerne Reuter Christiansen, Jakob Fenger, Rasmus Nielsen SUPERCHANNEL/SUPERFRIEDRICH;2001 Internet TV Station
Yvonne Trapp (D) Waste,2001 Thanks to Institut für Genetik, Humboldt-Universität, Berlin

Standort Berlin, Places to Stay #4 P(rinted) M(atter)

5 September through 27 September: Liam Gillick (GB), Eva Grubinger (D) Yvonne Trapp (D), Marijn Bolink (NL), Mat Collishaw (GB), Liza May Post (NL).

(continuing: Standort Berlin – Places to Stay # 4 A(udio) & V(ideo) – Journeys from Berlin).

Traffic Jam, part 5 (through 18 September): Jun Jieh Wang and part 6 (through 29 September): David d’Heilly (USA) & Kayoko Ota (Japan).

In a presentational model seeking to discover more about relations between different formats of artistic production, printed products were presented alongside recent works of the artists. These works functioned as counter parts of the book presentation.
Mat Collishaw, Merijn O. Bolink and Liza May Post presented their publications, published by Artimo, a private art supporting foundation in Holland.
The fragmentary novel based on locations and surfaces, ‘Big Conference Center’, produced in collaboration of Kunstverein Ludwigsburg and Orchard Gallery, London, by Liam Gillick, was shown together with his ‘The What If? Scenario Dining Table,’ a blue table tennis table sprinkled with silver glitter from 1996. Yvonne Trapp showed a fragment of her documentation on the subject of the ‘male muse’ collected in ‘Das Museum des Verschwindens/The Museum of Disappearance/Le Musée de la Disparition’. A videotape and poster showed her attempt to make this collection disappear. With the book project ‘group.sex’ Eva Grubinger took on the role of the editor, carefully assembling essays on group dynamics from the late nineteenth century to the Nineties. Her initial interactive work for the book, ‘Sacher Torture’, complemented the presentation.

11 September
discussion: ‘group.sex.’ Discussed were the liberal sexual practices and utopias of the sixties and seventies with e.g. Matthias Frings (TV-producer of ‘Liebe Sünde’) and Kathrin Rohnstock (gender studies, book editor).

Standort Berlin, Places to Stay #4 A(udio) & V(ideo) – Journeys from Berlin

5 August through 27 September: Audio and video works from the collections of ‘Gelbe Musik’ and Mike Steiner.

In collaboration with Ursula Block and Mike Steiner, an archive of VHS and audio material was installed, tracing a selective history of Berlin in the Seventies and Eighties. Focusing on artists who took up residence in Berlin during these years, the archive displayed early experiments in video, sound and performance. Reassessing the notion of crossover in a historical and local perspective, ‘Journeys from Berlin’ was one step in an ongoing path of research.

Works by: Glenn Branca, Joseph Beuys, Luciano Castelli/Kiddy Citny, Colette, Philip Corner, Die Tödliche Doris, Brian Eno, Valie Export/Monsti Wiener, Robert Fillou, Terry Fox, Geile Tiere, Gilbert & George, Al Hansen, Nan Hoover, Dorothy Iannone, Sven Åke Johannson, Frieder Butzmann/ Thomas Kapielski, Martin Kippenberger, Arthur Köpcke, Takehisa Kosugi, Joan La Barbara, Györgi Ligeti, Charlotte Moormann, Virginia Quesada, Nam June Paik, Charlemagne Palestine, Yvonne Rainer, ‘Rosenfest’, Walter Ruttmann, Carolee Schneemann, David Tudor, Ben Vautier, Ingrid Wiener, Emmett Williams and Krysztof Wodicko.

Standort Berlin, Places to Stay #3 f(ashion)

16 May through 30 July: Viktor & Rolf (NL), Purple Institute – (Olivier Zahm and Katja Rahlwes (F)).

‘Standort Berlin – Places to stay # 3f’ formed a new episode of the exhibition project at BüroFriedrich. Already present in earlier episodes, the focus of this part was fully concentrated on f = ‘Fashion’ – new links between art and fashion.

The artists/designers Viktor & Rolf from Amsterdam, performing as stage designers, used BüroFriedrich as the location for a sinister and, at the same time, hilarious play on labels and fashion. Transformed into a promotional boutique, their logo dominated the (showcase) windows and hundreds of black balloons in the exhibition. A video projection of their latest fashion show underlaid with a soundtrack of a hysterically cheering crowd was combined with a billboard displaying a self-portrait of Viktor & Rolf presenting their own latest creation in the vicinity of Friedrichstraße. The billboard made for this presentation showed the artists wearing their proposal for a cross-gender haute couture.

This presentation merged with a choice of 17 videotapes viewed simultaneously, curated by

Olivier Zahm, founder of the Purple Institute and editor of the Paris-based artists’ magazine,

‘Purple,’ together with Katja Rahlwes. As a kind of video magazine, the tapes focussed on the

overlapping aspects between art and fashion. In the form of a catwalk, the videos were

presented on monitors in a strict line-up, allowing the visitors to perform a passage between

the different statements. Performance videos were presented as well as artists’ documentations

of fashion ‘defiles’: Hussein Chalayan, Comme des Garçons, Martin Margiela, Kostas

Murkudis were shown with their recent collections. ‘Dynastie’ by Antek Walczak,

performance work by Sarah Schwarz and Giasco Bertoli and a video statement by Tomato

installed next to each other in a non-hierarchical set-up proposed a shared laboratory of

working and thinking on contemporary lifestyle.

Traffic Jam, billboard project

January 1998 through October 1999: Zhou Tiehai (VR China), Xu Tan (VR China), Liew Kung Yu (Malaysia), Lee Bull (Korea), Jun Jieh Wang (Taiwan), David d’Heilly (USA) & Kayoko Ota (Japan).

Extending BüroFriedrich’s activities into the city, ‘Traffic Jam’ was an intervention outside the exhibition space. Guest curated by Hou Hanru and conceived in collaboration with ‘Cities on the Move’ (curators Hou Hanru/Hans-Ulrich Obrist) six artists from different metropoles in Asia were invited to create billboard works. The artists’ contributions to the project concentrated on the experience of rapidly shifting urban environments, modernization as a global phenomenon bringing about specific moments of parallel development in a shift towards a new urban reality. For almost a year the project ran parallel to the continuing exhibition ‘Standort Berlin – Places to Stay,’ establishing links of varying intensity from a parallel presentation to an actual intervention with the exhibition (Standort Berlin – Places to Stay #2 +X (Strange Fruits)). The posters were shown in front of BüroFriedrich and in different places in the city of Berlin. Succesivelly they were part of traveling exhibition ‘Cities on the Move’ and presented in Museum CAPC Bordeaux, PS1 New York, Museum of Modern Art, Louisiana (DK).

Discussion

19 April – Grüne Salon, Berlin. The project ‘Traffic Jam’ was discussed with the

curator Hou Hanru together with Christian Rattemeyer and Mark Glöde. Moderation: Waling Boers.