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TOM HOLMES BRINGS COLOR TO EFREMIDIS GALLERY — RAZOR BLADE CANDY

TOM HOLMES BRINGS COLOR TO EFREMIDIS GALLERY — RAZOR BLADE CANDY

In Berlin Halloween should be in February, when you’re so sick of winter that even the first rays of sunshine can’t chase away those ubiquitous mood clouds and their ghosts. Berlin’s architecture hardly helps matters as you climb up the stairs of Ernst-Reuter-Platz underground station – but do so at dusk, and your gaze will immediately fall on the ground floor windows of the former IBM building. There, away from the traffic and behind the glass, you see brushstrokes on canvas. Resolutely and spontaneously, the strokes shine on the faces of passers-by with viscosity and lightness, offering a kind of mystical firmness. Curiosity and amazement stop you in your tracks: you have to go inside the gallery. Opened in 2018 by Stavros Efremidis and Tom Woo, the art space in question – Efremidis – is now a permanent fixture on the Berlin scene. The gallery’s current exhibition by American painter Tom Holmes is called Razor Blade Candy (until 06.04.2023), and it proves how deserved the institution’s rapidly-gained reputation is.

Holmes’s works captivate you with a unique blend of style, motif and craftsmanship. They wander between baroque still life, photorealism and pop, but are always connected by the placement of light. The art is as American and gentle as the painter himself, yet always full of innovation and keen observation. On the walls, screaming children in Halloween costumes look at you. In another room, you stumble over a milk container full of Fruit Loops before your gaze lands on painted textiles, lush folds and uncanny still lifes saturated with sensuality and viscous colors. What better way to scare away the February ghosts….

Text: Hilka Dirks / Photos: Eric Tschernow

Efremidis, Ernst-Reuter-Platz 2, 10587 Berlin–Charlottenburg; map
Tue–Sat 11–18h

Tom Holmes: Razor Blade Candy runs until 06.04.2023 

@mx.dusty.dust
@_efremidis_

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ECLECTIC ENGINEERING — A PODCAST FOR CONVERSATIONS ABOUT PHILOSOPHY, ART AND MORE

ECLECTIC ENGINEERING — A PODCAST FOR CONVERSATIONS ABOUT PHILOSOPHY, ART AND MORE

Two academics begin a collaboration that turns out to be more fruitful and rewarding than almost any other in their field – but it’s a partnership that attracts jealousy. This scenario doesn’t take place in an open-plan office, but among three 20th century philosophers. The story is spotlighted in the latest episode of the Eclectic Engineering podcast. In it, artist and theorist Marie von Heyl examines philosopher Alain Badiou’s relationship with Gilles Deleuze and the jealousy Félix Guattari has towards this undeniably special collaboration. Eclectic Engineering manages to let the themes of philosophy, art, feminism and psychoanalysis come together in an intuitive way. The show is neither an exclusive medium for initiated experts nor a beginners guide. Marie von Heyl places the conversation, and the potential for collaboration, in the foreground. In doing so, she prompts questions that can only arise when the answers are not already predefined.

If you listen carefully, you feel how these themes and questions – which so far have been discussed with more than 20 people – unfold at their own pace, run their course and reunite. If you’re curious about jealousy and lust in philosophy or just want to see where these conversations carry you, give Eclectic Engineering a listen. It’s available wherever you get your podcasts.

Text: Felix Deiters / Photos: Artem Podrez, Cottonbro & MockupMaison

Based in Wedding, visual artist Felix Deiters’ work focuses on trans bodies. His artworks vary from observations drawn on a micro scale through to expansive installations.

Eclectic Engineering is available wherever you get your podcasts.

@flx_dtrs
@marie.von.heyl

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MONTHLY LOVE LETTERS FROM ARTISTS AND WRITERS SENT TO YOUR INBOX — DEPARTMENT OF LOVE

MONTHLY LOVE LETTERS FROM ARTISTS AND WRITERS SENT TO YOUR INBOX — DEPARTMENT OF LOVE

Love letters. There’s the ones exchanged by writer pair Ingeborg Bachmann and Max Frisch that were recently published, and John Cage and Pauline Schindler’s pining correspondence, sent over a single summer. Then there’s Ralph Wiggum, who sent Lisa Simpson one saying “I choo-choo-choose you”. And lastly there’s Paris-born artist Sophie Calle, who, having not received a card, immediately paid to have one professionally written. If you feel like Calle this winter – or just can’t get enough romantic post – the Love Letters series from the “Department of Love” curatorial collective is highly recommended. The project, whose brief is to “explore love as a mode of resistance, a practice of collaboration and a continuous exercise in empathy” began in 2022. It takes the form of a newsletter where subscribers get a love letter sent to their inbox every month. Written by artists and authors exclusively for the project, the formats are as diverse as the participants themselves. You register for free, and then forget about it. Then suddenly, amongst bills, spam and work messages, a different kind of email pops up: “Days have turned foggier since my last letter, it is as if your absence has wrapped itself around the light” (Fette Sans). In a kitschy, melancholic way, you’re reminded how important, big and beautiful these expressions of love can be. 

Text: Hilka Dirks / Photos: Cottonbro & Polina Zimmerman

You can subscribe to the Love Letters newsletter here.

@deptof.love

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FROM HANDEL TO PRINCE — SCHALL&RAUSCH FESTIVAL BRINGS MUSICAL THEATER FROM THE KOMISCHE OPER TO NEUKÖLLN

FROM HANDEL TO PRINCE — SCHALL&RAUSCH FESTIVAL BRINGS MUSICAL THEATER FROM THE KOMISCHE OPER TO NEUKÖLLN

Fearless musical theater, according to Komische Oper founder Hans Gregor, is “art without convention, prejudice or vanity”. Known for punk, pageantry, classics and class, the Mitte opera institution is moving its stage to the former Kindl brewery in Neukölln for the first time this February (17–26.02.2023). Under the artistic direction of Rainer Simon, the first annual Schall&Rausch (“sound and noise”) festival for musical theater will bring bass, beats and stroboscopes that shake up the structures and concepts of the classical form. Across venues including Schwuz, Kindl and Vollgutlager, the diverse and interdisciplinary program encompasses performance, concert, pop, experiment and dance. Amateurs and professionals from all over the world will shape the program, including established institutions such as William Kentridge’s “Centre for the Less Good Idea”, international artists such as Tianzhuo Chen and music ensembles like Baroque Prince, whose chamber concert blends pop and baroque (think Benjamin Britten meets Björk). This first edition of the festival provides a preview of what is to come, both for the musical theater form and the Komische Oper itself. The program marks the start of a series of citywide performances that we can look forward to all year.

Text: Hilka Dirks / Photos: Oumou Aidara, Jaro Suffner & Camile Blake

Schall&Rausch (17–26.02.2023). Find the whole program and tickets here.

@komischeoperberlin

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HANNAH ROSE STEWART AT NUMBER 1 MAIN ROAD — RECOMMENDED BY FETTE SANS

HANNAH ROSE STEWART AT NUMBER 1 MAIN ROAD — RECOMMENDED BY FETTE SANS

Would you describe your Zoom fatigue as a numbness of the eyelids, a way to say I have seen too much? Or does it rather feel like being confined to a room the size of your own self? Perhaps more than a feeling, I think of it as a non-place—like a patch of grass at the end of a parking lot—a vacant, meager yet inauspicious corner lurking. The Conceptual artist and 3D designer Hannah Rose Stewart produces intricate digital and physical environments where familiar ghosts masquerading as morose (unarmed?) first-person shooters seem caught in a perpetual state of lingering. The way our hands have learned to scroll unknown territories with such ease and disregard for the world. Opening tomorrow (03.02.2023) at Number 1 Main Road, the newly founded space run by Tom Esam and Paul Ferens, is a site-specific installation by the artist entitled The Waiting Room. I imagine a palimpsest made of our collective time spent online roaming mundane and hazy spaces and all of the rooms in between we cruise for easter eggs carved with our own initials. From our bedrooms turned offices, aren’t we always simply waiting to be let in by The Host?

Text: Fette Sans / Photos: Hannah Rose Stewart

Fette Sans art meanders between concept and poetry, words and people, body politics and dystopian fantasy, the very digital and the very nostalgic. Her latest book, based on a collaborative performance with Marie von Heyl, is available here

Hannah Rose Stewart — The Waiting Room at Number 1 Main Road, Ossastr.21a, 12045 Berlin–Neukölln; map

Opening Fri 03.02.2023 18h, Sa & Sun 14–18h and by appointment.

@fettesans
@6footstranger
@number1mainroad

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