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NUMA NOVELA — SMART ACCOMMODATION FOR TODAY’S TRAVEL TRENDS

NUMA NOVELA — SMART ACCOMMODATION FOR TODAY’S TRAVEL TRENDS

Got friends stopping over in Berlin but no guest room to house them? Are your parents not ones to spend the weekend on the sofa bed? Well, we’ve got an alternative, and it’s in Wilmersdorf. Here in the wonderful west, a lot of what makes Berlin great comes together: charming architecture and lots of culture. The streets are lined with magnificent old buildings and art galleries, there’s an abundance of classic restaurants and the Schaubühne is within walking distance. And then there’s good old Ku’damm, which is practically at your feet. This is exactly where numa has opened its latest accommodation, Novela. The company’s concept is individually and distinctively designed hotels sited in exciting districts – letting you experience the city as effortlessly and authentically as possible. Tips for local culture and culinary delights are provided in the form of a blog and a city guide in the room.

With high stuccoed ceilings, the guestrooms are impressive. The interior contrasts with the dignified charm of the architecture, with herringbone parquet flooring and beautiful high windows. No frills, just homely furnishings. Contemporary art, simple open shelves, rounded mirrors and headboards combine to create a clear, fresh look that will recharge your mind and tired tourist limbs alike. Check-in is completely digital, with smartphone-controlled arrivals and departures taking the place of the classic lobby. And if something is missing, there’s a chat (with a real person) letting you request the likes of extra pillows and towels directly to the room. We tested it and it works pretty well. Of course, all this isn’t just for visitors: if you don’t live in Charlottenburg–Wilmersdorf yourself, how about treating yourself to a stylish, digital staycation out west?

Text: Nina Trippel / Photos: Celeste Najt

Novela, Konstanzer Str.1, 10707 Berlin–Wilmersdorf, map

@numastays

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TIPS AND INSPIRATION FROM PRO TRAVELERS — A HALL FULL OF WANDERLUST AT BERLIN TRAVEL FESTIVAL

TIPS AND INSPIRATION FROM PRO TRAVELERS — A HALL FULL OF WANDERLUST AT BERLIN TRAVEL FESTIVAL

Brandenburg or Bulgaria? Hammock or houseboat? Weekend getaway or wellness retreat? If you fancy being somewhere else but aren’t sure where to head, it’s time to visit Messe Berlin for an exotic escape. It’s there that the Berlin Travel Festival is taking place (25–27.11.2022), inviting globetrotting travelers and cultural ambassadors from places ranging from Georgia to Jerusalem. If you want to stay closer, that’s good too: regional districts like Spreewald and Mecklenburg are also represented. Hopping from one stand to the next, you’ll soon discover your new number one travel destination. The fair has it all, from tiny house accommodation to capsule hotels and wonderful Wayks backpacks for adventurous trips. There’s also travel reading material aplenty. Organized by Bernd Neff and his team and returning after a pandemic pause, the festival is very much about the experience. The location has switched from Arena Berlin to the Messe, and while it might be a bit further away, it’s really a stone’s throw given how much there is to discover. Time to cure that wanderlust and temper that travel fever.

Text: Nina Trippel / Photos: Tina Linster

Berlin Travel Festival at Messe Berlin, Messedamm 22, 14055 Berlin–Westend; map
25–27.11.2022 10–18h. You can buy tickets here

@berlintravelfestival

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SOUND YOU CAN FEEL — SPATIAL FESTIVAL BRINGS IMMERSIVE MUSIC TO MONOM’S 4D SOUND SYSTEM

SOUND YOU CAN FEEL — SPATIAL FESTIVAL BRINGS IMMERSIVE MUSIC TO MONOM’S 4D SOUND SYSTEM

An extraordinary program of extraordinary art with extraordinary sound: this weekend (25–27.11.2022) a very special festival is taking place at Monom, the studio and listening space located at the Funkhaus complex. Running for three days, Spatial Festival combines sound, art, music and technology. Alongside live concerts by Berlin-based artists like Tobias Freund, William Russel and Robert Henke, the line-up features sound installations by international artists. Among them is the world premiere of Soundwalk Collective and Patti Smith, who will present their joint album “The Perfect Vision” (released tomorrow, 25.11). But this is by no means the only world-class name: the program also features James Blake, Suzanne Ciani, Willem Dafoe, Alex Ebert, Charlotte Gainsbourg…the list goes on and on. Then there are the surprise acts, such as a sound installation by Paul B. Preciado, who is usually associated with philosophy and queer theory. The performances are reproduced using 4D sound, a spatial sound system consisting of 48 omnidirectional loudspeakers and nine subwoofers. The result is an immersive sound experience that makes you feel, fantasize, interact and maybe even get lost – in a good way, of course…

Text: Hilka Dirks / Photos: Sophie Klock & Becca Crawford

Monom at Funkhaus Berlin, Nalepastr.18, 12459 Berlin–Oberschöneweide; map

Spatial Festival (25–27.11.2022) – you can find the line-up and tickets online.

@monomstudios

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A PASTEL PARADISE IN WINTER — ART FROM MONJA GENTSCHOW AT HVW8 GALLERY

A PASTEL PARADISE IN WINTER — ART FROM MONJA GENTSCHOW AT HVW8 GALLERY

The autumn was warm and golden: a long, sweet aftertaste of all those scorching summer days. And now, all of a sudden, it’s winter – leaving everything gray. If you’re still not ready to accept this, you should take a trip to Kurzurlaub (“Short break”) an exhibition by artist, art director and illustrator Monja Gentschow at HVW8 Berlin in Mitte (until 14.01.2023). The title is apt: entering the gallery space, you’re instantly transported to somewhere between Rimini and Los Angeles (where the gallery’s main branch is located). Solero ice cream-colored parasols, plastic pink chairs, rippling pool waves, curved cigarette butts, cocoon-like croissants and crossed sunglasses temples populate the still lifes of the Die Zeit columnist-turned-artist. Her inspiration comes from the package holidays and travel agency catalogs of her 1990s childhood, crawling out of the in-between: fictionalized autobiography and painted longing.

Outside it may be gray, but inside it’s blue. It’s this hue that dominates the mood of the exhibition and, despite all its coolness, manages to bring back memories of squishy peaches in your beach bag, sand in your jeans, sunscreen on your sticky forehead, and that warm, sweet boredom when the heat makes everything slow and the concrete swelters – just like on holiday.

Text: Hilka Dirks / Photos: Justyna Fedec

HVW8 Berlin, Linienstr.161, 10115 Berlin–Mitte; map

Monja Gentschow – Kurzurlaub (until 14.01.2023) Tue–Sat, 14–19h

@monifaktur
@hvw8gallery

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SCULPTURE IN SOUND: SINGING WITH AYUMI PAUL AT GROPIUS BAU

SCULPTURE IN SOUND: SINGING WITH AYUMI PAUL AT GROPIUS BAU

What does cohesion sound like? What sounds are in the air before a song is created? Ayumi Paul has been seeking answers to these questions as artist in residence at Gropius Bau since August 2021, where she regularly invites visitors to sing together. As a violinist and composer, she played concerts all over the world before turning to art a few years ago. Now, instead of opera houses, she performs in museums and has traded playing in front of an audience for creating collective sound. She views The Singing Project as an aural sculpture that constantly reshapes itself depending on who’s in the room at any given moment. To sing with Paul you don’t need any prior knowledge or training, just your own voice. In the past, this was doneexclusively at workshops, but from now until January, you can join Paul for an ongoing discovery of her growing archive.

In five freely accessible rooms, laid out as a musical score, visitors can discover notes, sound and dream studies, and embroidered scores with which Paul has traced vocal traditions. Also on exhibit for the first time are sound works composed to the rhythm of the seasons during her time at Gropius Bau. Those who want to immerse themselves completely in Paul’s project will have the opportunity to do so today (24.11) at 16h. As part of her Ears Listening to Feet series, Paul will be hosting a conversation with Charlotte Wiedemann, a bereavement counselor and journalist. In addition to discussing death and the rituals around dying, Paul will create larger-than-life soundscapes with the audience.

Text: Laura Storfner / Photos: Debora Mittelstaedt

Gropius Bau, Niederkirchnerstr.7, 10963 Berlin–Kreuzberg; map

The Singing Project runs until 22.01.2023, Mon–Fri 11–19h (except Tue), Sat & Sun 10–19h, free entry

Ears Listening to Feet, Thu 24.11.2022, 16-18h, register by email.

@gropiusbau

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