Birds and Buoys

Nadja Abt Barbara Marcel

Grafik: Viktor Schmidt

Exhibition:
9 April – 13 June 2021

Please wear an FFP2-mask while visiting. According to the regulations issued by the Berlin Senate, the exhibition space can host a maximum of 8 visitors at the same time.

No appointment necessary. You can visit the exhibition Tuesday to Sunday between 11am and 7pm.


Further Events:

28.4. – Paz Guevara in conversation with Nadja Abt, Barbara Marcel, Katja Kynast (Online on Zoom)

[postponed] 2.5. – These Birds of Temptation. Book presentation with Barbara Marcel and K. Verlag (Open-Air)

20.5. – “Decolonize Mitte!” Digital city tour with Berlin Postkolonial

27.5. – Wayfaring Strata. As We Move Along. Audio Walk Sonia Fernández Pan in collaboration with Stephen McEvoy & Julia Rodríguez

[postponed] 3.6. – Guided tour through the neighbourhood of the Bärenzwinger with Berlin Postkolonial e.V. / Dekoloniale (German)

13.6. 5 to 7pm – Finissage with Nadja Abt, Barbara Marcel, Andreas Doepke and Tâmera Bak

On 9 April 2021, the double exhibition “Birds and Buoys” opens at Bärenzwinger Berlin with works by Nadja Abt and Barbara Marcel. The double exhibition “Birds and Buoys”, with works by Nadja Abt and Barbara Marcel, brings two complex and long-standing artistic strands of research together and deals with transatlantic labour and the cultural history of shipping and mining from a feminist and queer perspective.

Together, the works reference the architecture and history of the Bärenzwinger as well as its immediate neighbourhood, including the historic harbour, the Marinehaus (former clubhouse of the imperial navy) and the Brazilian embassy.

Based on texts by the writer, philosopher and cultural theorist Édouard Glissant, Nadja Abt presents “Ship of Relation”. With this work she reinterprets the ship, traditionally a male-dominated space, as a place for feminist narratives and a multiplicity of relationships. Following Glissant’s “Our boats are open, and we sail them for everyone”, Abt considers the ship with its female crew as a metaphor for creating connections in postcolonial discourse.

The artist incorporates concrete elements of seafaring, such as ropes, buoys or sails, into her composition and transforms the bear kennel into a ship’s hull. In three fictional narratives, which can be read on boat fenders in the exhibition space, the voices on board report on the intention and background of their journey.



Barbara Marcel’s project “Golden Tone” is derived from her research into the historic and cultural landscape of Harz, the western mountain region of Germany, where many of the mining technologies of mineral soil extraction were first developed and later exported across the world.

The video installation reflects on the intersections of the past, present and future of this anthropogenic landscape through the particular history of the breeding, training and trading of canary birds in the region. In a video assemblage featuring hands and machines, silver and serinettes, contaminated heavy metal hills and falling spruce trees, touristic tours and intimate interviews, the iconic landscape of the German Harz gradually reveals its many hybrid layers. “Golden Tone” is a film about the Harz Roller canary birds, the domestication of mines and the queering of nature.

The exhibition “Birds and Buoys” opens the “Bricolage” programme and with it a series of explorations into the less visible present and history of the Bärenzwinger.

Exhibition concept (EN)
Conceito curatorial (PT)

Curated by Isabel Jäger, Katja Kynast, Malte Pieper, Maja Smoszna

Grafik: Viktor Schmidt



Nadja Abt

Nadja Abt is an artist and writer living between Berlin and Lisbon. Abt studied literature and art history at the Free University of Berlin as well as visual arts at the Berlin University of the Arts and the Universidad Torcuato di Tella in Buenos Aires. In her performances, videos and paintings, she constructs feminist narratives that reference the worlds of literature and film.

She is part of the artist collective Michelle Volta. She has recently shown works and performances at KW-Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, Pivô, São Paulo, Casa Triângulo, São Paulo, among others.

Barbara Marcel

Barbara Marcel is an artist and filmmaker. Marcel studied film studies in Rio de Janeiro, holds an MA from the Institute Art in Context at the Berlin University of the Arts and is currently a PhD student at the Bauhaus University Weimar as a research fellow of the Heinrich Böll Foundation. Her video installations and publications are often collages and essays of found and produced images, based on histories of colonialities. Her works propose experimentation with new ecological relations, processes of thought and practice.

Her work has been shown at ZKM, Karlsruhe; Galeria Metropolitana, Santiago de Chile; Savvy Contemporary Berlin; Broad Art Museum, Michigan; Espacio Pla, Buenos Aires; Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin; CeNak – Zoological Museum Hamburg; V240, Amsterdam; Athens Biennale; Galerie für Zeitgenössische Kunst, Leipzig and Galeria Marta Traba; Fundação Memorial da América Latina, São Paulo, among others.

Finissage

13.6. – 5 to 7pm
 
With Nadja Abt, Barbara Marcel, Andreas Doepke and Tâmera Bak

Exhibition, Audio Walk, Readings, Conversations

We kindly ask for proof of a negative COVID test result not older than 24h. Please wear a FFP2 mask while visiting the exhibition. A maximum of 8 visitors are allowed in the exhibition at the same time.

The artists Nadja Abt and Barbara Marcel and the curatorial team will be present and invite you to visit the exhibition, discover publications by the artists presented on site and wander through our neighbourhood, guided by the audio walk »Wayfaring Strata. As We Move Along« written by Sonia Fernández Pan.

Pick up your copy of Nadja Abts publication »Ship of Relation« and listen to Barbara Marcel and researcher Andreas Doepke reading fragments of their essay on the blue canary – to be published soon in »These Birds of Temptation« – while going for a walk in the neighbourhood of Bärenzwinger.
 
A maximum of ten participants can take part in the walk, which begins at 5pm with a contribution by singer and producer Tâmera Bak. Registration for the walk will take place on site.

The current measures to protect against infection apply. 


 



Audio Walk

27.5. – 13.6.2021

»Wayfaring Strata. As We Move Along.«

Audio Walk choreographed by Sonia Fernández Pan in collaboration with Stephen McEvoy & Julia Rodríguez

Language: English
Start your walk on site at Bärenzwinger.

Starting on May 27, 2021, Bärenzwinger invites you to participate in an audio walk, »Wayfaring Strata. As We Move Along«. The audio walk was developed for the Bärenzwinger by curator and writer Sonia Fernández Pan in collaboration with musician Stephen McEvoy and performer and choreographer Julia Rodriguez.



Visitors are invited to engage in an audiovisual journey and re-discover the neighborhood of the Bärenzwinger in a new way. »Wayfaring Strata« proposes a practice of wandering and attentive listening in motion, that is based on an act of writing that responds to and expands the environment.

The audio walk lasts approx. 45 minutes and will be held in English. It will be accessible to all visitors as an audio file to take away during the gallery’s opening hours (Tue-Sun, 11am-7pm) from 27 May to 13 June. 

Please bring your own smartphone or MP3 player and headphones. Alternatively, a MP3 player will be offered in the exhibition space, which can be borrowed for temporary use on site. The audio file can be picked up without prior registration during opening hours in the entrance area of the Bärenzwingers.

Proof of a negative corona antigen test is not necessary for pick-up. Please wear an FFP2 mask and follow the distance rules.

Artist Talk

28.4.2021, 6.30 – 8pm
Online on Zoom

Paz Guevara in conversation with Nadja Abt, Barbara Marcel, Katja Kynast

Participation is possible online using Zoom, please follow this link: Artist Talk on Zoom  

Dial-in:
Meeting ID: 954 2135 3509, ID code: 183974

On 28 April 2021 from 6.30 to 8 pm, Bärenzwinger invites you to an online artist talk around the current exhibition »Birds and Buoys«. The two participating artists, Nadja Abt and Barbara Marcel, will each explain their individual approach and also present some of the long-standing research that forms the background to their works on display at the Bärenzwinger. Abt and Marcel have independently of each other been working for many years on the transatlantic history of labour and culture in shipping, respectively mining.

Together with curator, researcher and author Paz Guevara and exhibition curator Katja Kynast, they will explore the connections between their artistic works and question the ways in which they relate to the architecture and history of the Bärenzinger and its immediate neighbourhood including the historic harbour, the Marinehaus (former clubhouse of the Imperial Navy) and the Brazilian Embassy.

The conversation will be held in English.

The audience is invited to participate in the discussion and is welcome to ask questions and give feedback. The entire curatorial team will be part of the conversation.

“Decolonize Mitte!”

Digital city tour with Berlin Postkolonial

20 May 2021
18.00
Online on Zoom

Participation is possible online on Zoom, follow this link: https://zoom.us/j/95268226330?pwd=a
3hqZ0F1emF0M2ZuK2JWOVJ
ObFFMQT09


Dial-in:
Meeting ID: 952 6822 6330
ID code: 605373





Why do African visitors in Berlin still ask in vain for an appropriate place of remembrance for the infamous Berlin Conference? What does Berlin’s M-Street have to do with the Sachsenhausen concentration camp? When did activists of African origin first demand a Black representative in the German parliament?

On 20 May 2021, the Bärenzwinger invites you to a virtual city tour through the neighbourhood of the Bärenzwinger online in the evening from 6 to 8 pm.

The tour will be moderated by Christian Kopp and the Berlin Postkolonial association. The virtual city tour with Berlin Postkolonial explores forgotten, repressed, embellished and contested sites of colonial history in the centre of Berlin, touching on pressing questions of the postcolonial present. The tour will take place in English.

Into the drift and sway

Christa Joo Hyun D’Angelo,
Constantin Hartenstein,
Lindsay Lawson,
Lotte Meret,
Lucas Odahara,
Emma Wolf-Haugh

Image: Viktor Schmidt

Exhibition:
02/12/2021–20/02/2022

Opening:
02/12/2021, 5–9 pm

Exhibition and events curated by:
Malte Pieper, Lusin Reinsch

Events co-curated by:
Lara Huesmann, Annika Maus

“Into the drift and sway” is the 4th part of the annual programme “Bricolage”

Events

15/12/2021, 7 pm
Exhibition tour with the curators (in German language)

20/02/2022, 3 pm
Reading with Lucas Odahara and hn. lyonga

Performance postponed due to stormy weather – new date:

24/02/2022, 7 pm

A Side / B Side
Alizée Lenox and Els Vandeweyer play Lindsay Lawson’s Organum


Event details will be published online.

The group show “Into the drift and sway” considers the Bärenzwinger as a place in constant flux. Located at the southern entrance to Köllnischer Park, the Bärenzwinger was built on an area that formerly contained a street-cleaning depot with a public restroom run by Berlin’s city sanitation department from 1901 to 1938. The building of the former depot was converted into a bear pit using the bricks of the pre-existing architecture. What stories from the past reside in its walls, which new qualities appear from its cracks?

The proximity of a park, the nearby banks of the Spree river, a former public bathing house and records of 1920s homosexual venues in the bear pit’s neighbourhood on Wallstraße and Inselstraße suggest the site’s previous use as a cruising area. Public restrooms or urinals, such as those in Köllnischer Park, were already documented in Berlin around 1900 as anonymous meeting places for homosexuals in the book “Berlins Drittes Geschlecht” (Berlin’s Third Sex, published in 1904) by the doctor and sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld.


The possible queer history of the surrounding area has left traces which the exhibition’s site-specific artistic interventions pick up on. From 1920 onwards, the publisher Adolf Brand regularly gathered with the “Gemeinschaft der Eigenen” (Society of the Own-Willed), a homosexual men’s club, in the neighbouring Marinehaus, formerly a home base for the imperial navy. Brand was a difficult man: while advocating for the abolishment of paragraph 175 which deemed homosexual acts between men illegal, he was an anti-Semite, sympathized with the Nazis and was in favor of traditional gender roles, idealizing a virile masculinity. Ludwig Hoffman, architect of the street-cleaning depot and public utility building, also built the infamous Märchenbrunnen in Volkspark Friedrichshain – which later became one of the most popular gay cruising sites in former East Berlin. In GDR times, the Klappe (“cottage”/”tea-room” in German gay slang) at Märkisches Ufer is reported to have been a meeting place for gay men, in close proximity to the bear pit. One of the founding members of the Homosexuelle Interessengemeinschaft Berlin (HIB, a gay rights association in the GDR) worked as a bear keeper at the bear pit in the 1970s.

Drawing from these historical constellations the exhibition traces queer stories, gathering six contemporary artists who address masculinities and questions of cruising and gender, reflecting on and claiming space for desire in the private and public sphere. On display are installation works, drawings, sculptures and textile works that interact with the specific history of the Köllnischer Park and the current architecture of the Bärenzwinger.
The exhibition borrows its title from a short story by gay rights activist and artist David Wojnarowicz, recalling memories of cruising and anonymous intimate encounters in urban landscapes. These recollections are marked by ambivalences. Often a transformation is at play – public spaces, industrial buildings or abandoned locations are turned into spaces of pleasure or violence. Queer spaces are also contested spaces, disappearing due to surveillance measures, policing, gentrification, and changing ways of living a “queer” life.


Christa Joo Hyun D’Angelo

Christa Joo Hyun D’Angelo is an American artist based in Berlin. The core of D’Angelo’s work confronts fear, vulnerability, and what is thus invisible through video, neon, installation, and sculpture. Drawing on narratives that involve the legacies of colonialism, racism in Germany, HIV stigma specific to women of color, transracial adoption, and domestic violence, she navigates precarious conditions and attempts to redefine what is normal while embracing difference as a source of inspiration and empowerment in order to discover new means of acceptance and ultimately, healing..

She has exhibited at The Screen City Biennial, Arsenal Institute for Film and Video Art, Kunstraum Bethanien, Taiwan Digital Arts Center, and The Goethe Institute with upcoming exhibitions at Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg, Villa Merkel and SOMA Artspace. Her work has been reviewed in Artforum, Elephant Magazine, The New York Times, and GalleryTalk and is included in The Federal Collection of Contemporary Art Germany. D’Angelo has designed sets for Fever Ray and King Kong Magazine.

Website

Constantin Hartenstein

Constantin Hartenstein is a German artist based in Berlin. He studied at University of the Arts Berlin and Braunschweig University of Art with Professor Candice Breitz. In 2011, he worked as a film producer for the German Pavilion at the Venice Art Biennale. Since 2019, Hartenstein is an Artistic Associate at the UdK Film Institute Berlin.

He received grants and prizes including Akademie der Künste, Stiftung Kunstfonds, Kunststiftung NRW, VISIO European Program on Artists’ Moving Images, Institut für Auslandsbeziehungen (Künstlerkontakte) and Karl Hofer Gesellschaft grant. Hartenstein participated in several artist in residency programs such as Triangle Arts Association New York, Calle Mayor 54, Grand Central Art Center Santa Ana, Flux Factory New York and Künstlerdorf Schöppingen. His works are included in public and private collections; and have been exhibited and screened at international institutions.

Recent exhibitions include Studio Berlin (Boros Collection/Berghain), Kunstverein Dresden, Staatliche Kunsthalle Baden-Baden, Galerie für Zeitgenössische Kunst Leipzig, Kunstraum Kreuzberg Bethanien Berlin, Galerie im Turm Berlin, Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, WRO Media Art Biennale Wroclaw, Berlinische Galerie, Anthology Film Archives New York, Goethe Institute Beijing, Spring/Break Art Fair New York, Museum of the Moving Image New York (USA), Times Museum Guangzhou (CN), Kunstmuseum Bonn, Bundeskunsthalle Bonn, German Consulate New York, Goethe Institute New York and transmediale Berlin.



Website

Lindsay Lawson

Born in the United States and living in Berlin, Germany, Lindsay Lawson received her BFA in Sculpture from Virginia Commonwealth University, her MFA in New Genres from UCLA, and attended the Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main in the class of Judith Hopf. While working with a wide range of sculptural media including ceramics, fountains, lamps, and 3D printing, Lawson’s practice also encompasses film, video, and digital renders. Her practice often deals with the presence and agency of objecthood in virtual and physical spaces. Numerous bodies of work investigate states of infatuation with virtual personas and both virtual and physical objects.

Her work has been exhibited internationally at venues such as Efremidis Gallery, Berlin; Herald St., London; LAXART, Los Angeles; Yossi Milo Gallery, New York; Centre Pompidou, Paris; the 9thBerlin Biennale; Frutta Gallery, Rome; Kunstverein Leipzig; Piktogram, Warsaw; Trafo Contemporary Art Center, Budapest; and TEA Museum, Tenerife. Lawson will present a solo exhibition at Efremidis Gallery, Berlin in January 2022 including a new series of paintings as well as sculptures and a fountain installation.



Website

Lotte Meret

Lotte Meret (*1985, Berlin / Germany) analyzes the effects of digital media on our identity. In her practice she articulates the influence of technologies and digital media on body experiences and body knowledge. In this context between physical experience, political agency and digital worlds – Lotte Meret creates new narrative formats and develops hybrid sculptures and installations. She was an artist-in-residence at the Van Eyck Academy in Maastricht and was included in the Emerging Artists Program from the German Short Film Association.

Her work has been presented at OCT_LOFT, Shenzhen; EIGEN+ART Gallery, Leipzig, NRW Forum, Düsseldorf; Goethe-Institut, Beijing; Kunsthal Rotterdam; Kunstverein Leipzig; Nottingham Contemporary; Kunstmuseum Bonn; Kunsthalle Basel; ZKM, Karlsruhe; Kunsthalle Baden-Baden. In collective structures she has published the publication ‘Body of Work’ and the record ‘Don’t DJ – Authentic Exoticism’. With the interdisciplinary label SEXES she is involved in installations and music events for clubs and festivals. Her works are included in international collections as the Lafayette Anticipation, Fonds de dotation Famille Moulin in Paris and Kunstkredit, Kanton Basel-Stadt.



Website

Lucas Odahara

Lucas Odahara, born in São Paulo, lives and works in Berlin. Probing the complex relationships between body, space and memory, Odahara works in diverse media to create often architectural-scale installations in which personal and external visual and textual materials are invoked to recompose diverse scenes. Odahara reimagines the materials he encounters as open negotiations in a present that is never complete. In doing so, he often returns to the format of painted ceramic tiles. Employing a technique that has historically served in the depiction of colonial narratives, in his work, he welcomes the format’s modularity as a tool for re-imagination.

He holds a bachelor’s in product design from the São Paulo State University and a master’s in arts from the University of the Arts of Bremen. His work has been presented in numerous exhibitions in Europe as well as in South Africa and Pakistan. He is currently a recipient of the Kunstfonds Bonn work grant.



Website

Emma Wolf-Haugh

Emma Wolf-Haugh is a visual artist, educator and writer based in Dublin and Berlin and working internationally. Emma’s work is shaped by economic necessity, engaging forms of recycling, thrift and ephemera that result in soft modularity, wild archiving, and performative intervention, posing questions about value, accumulation, and authorship. They sees a cultural centring of thrift as part of a tradition of queer-working class vernacular and ethics, promiscuous and adept at working within limitations. Their pedagogical and publishing work posits the imagination as a political tool with radical potential that can exist and erupt anywhere and at anytime. Their work is often collaborative generating forms of temporary collectivity, intent on the erotic and energetic capacity of brief encounter. Emma’s work occupies many different sites, spaces and relations including exhibition, performance, filmmaking, publishing, writing, disruptive pedagogy, friendship and solidarity, elements that often get messy together in long term projects.

Emma has developed a trilogy of works since 2014 dealing with sexuality and space. The Re-appropriation of Sensuality, Sex in Public, and Domestic Optimism have been exhibited through various iterations at: The Project Arts Centre Dublin, The Grazer Kunstverein Graz, NCAD Gallery Dublin, Dundee Contemporary Arts Dundee, District Berlin, Den Frie Center Of Contemporary Art Copenhagen, The Galway Arts Centre, nGbK Berlin, Scriptings Berlin, Archive Kabinet Berlin, Survival Kit Festival Riga among other places. Emma is co-founder of The Many Headed-Hydra (TMHH), aqueous-decolonising collective since 2015 working on long term critical and poly-vocal projects across the seas that connect Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Iceland, Germany, Ireland, Lithuania and beyond.

Website

Rundgang

15/12/2021, 7 pm

Exhibition tour with the curators Malte Pieper and Lusin Reinsch

Language: German

On the evening of December 15, the curators of “Into the drift and sway” invite you to join a guided tour (in German language) of the exhibition and visit the show and research that it is based on together.

The 2G regulation is valid for the visit in the Bärenzwinger. Please bring the proof of vaccination or recovery with you.

We additionally ask you to please wear a mask while visiting the exhibition.

Reading

20/02/2022, 3 pm

Reading with Lucas Odahara and hn. lyonga

Click here to sign up

Event in English language. The texts will be available as print-outs as well.

2G+ regulation is valid for the visit in the Bärenzwinger. Please bring the proof of vaccination or recovery with you and a negative Antigen-test result (no older than 24 hrs), or a proof of third (“booster”) vaccination.

We kindly ask you to wear a mask while visiting the exhibition.

As part of Lucas Odahara’s Sleep and Death (Rasse & Schönheit), commissioned by Bärenzwinger Berlin for the exhibition „Into the drift and sway“, the artist prepared a collaborative exchange with writer hn. lyonga
set to take place on Sunday, February 20th at 15h.

In the past year, Odahara and lyonga have actively engaged in each other’s practices and personal lives. As queer people of color living in Germany for over a decade, their work often engages with questions of race and gender within European spaces and histories. 
 
For the upcoming event, they are stepping aside – but not away from the convoluted history surrounding Adolf Brand, the founder of Germany’s first published gay magazine. Odahara’s installation places a fragment of this history in the water basins of the Bärenzwinger. 

What are the water’s wills, motives, and modes of remembering? How can memories of the global south exist next to the monolithic power of western histories? Is it possible to look at water as a space of memory, in transition – one in which personal and historical memories can coexist? These questions are the bedrock upon which Odahara and lyonga’s collaboration rests. Their new texts ‘Twin Constellations’ and ’The river flows fastest towards the end’ will be read in public at the event. 
 
Following the reading, a visit to the café of nearby Marinehaus is proposed.

a side / b Side

Postponed due to stormy weather – new date:

24/02/2022, 7 pm

A Side / B Side

Alizée Lenox and Els Vandeweyer play Lindsay Lawson’s Organum

A short concert in two acts divided by a pause for drinks and chatter

Musicians: Alizée Lenox and Els Vandeweyer

Lindsay Lawson’s Organum is a sculptural, architectural, and sound installation of over 200 wind chimes hanging from the security spikes on the perimeter moat encircling the Bärenzwinger. Divided in two halves, just like the grounds themselves, each side of Organum is tuned to eight octaves of a musical scale. Artist and musician Alizée Lenox will perform electric guitar while surrounded by and responding to the Organum.

Experimental vibraphonist Els Vandeweyer will apply an unconventional percussive technique to this watery and unwieldy instrument.

2G+ regulation is valid for the visit in the Bärenzwinger. Please bring the proof of vaccination or recovery with you and a negative Antigen-test result (no older than 24 hrs), or a proof of third (“booster”) vaccination.
 
We kindly ask you to wear a mask while visiting the exhibition.

Cat’s Cradle

Nándor AngstenbergerSalon Oblique

Image: Viktor Schmidt

Opening
24. Juni 2021,

11:00–19:00 Uhr

Exhibition
25. Juni – 29. August 2021

Augmented Reality: Ross Alexander Payne und Lupus Siegert

Digital sculptures: MSHR, Asdrúbal Gómez, Aujik und Lupus Siegert


What if the Bärenzwinger was left still and empty for 100 years? Drawing from this thought, the exhibition “Cat’s Cradle” deals not only with what was, but with what is or could be. The different times of the site are visualised in the form of fine cobwebs spun between metal, thick dust wool on concrete and brown streaks drawn through the mortar.

Nándor Angstenberger allows the Bärenzwinger’s architecture and its surrounding nature in the outdoor enclosures to intertwine. A new organism comes into being that inserts itself into its environment and becomes a part of it. The white-yarn installation is reminiscent of the numerous spider webs that were already present at the site. At the same time, this organism blocks the way and new paths must be sought attentively.

Something else is nestled here, something that, at first glance, is not visible. Among the stones and under the branches of the elder tree, there are virtual sculptures.

These are on loan from the artists MSHR, Asdrúbal Gómez, Aujik and Lupus Siegert, and are part of an augmented reality composition that the collective Salon Oblique developed for the Bärenzwinger. Via a tablet, the virtual sculptures become visible in the outdoor area of the Bärenzwinger. This work also encourages unknown directions to be taken and a renewed exploration of the site. It is about strengthening and connecting the existing and the new. Just because something is not immediately visible, does not mean that it is not there.

With the imagined vacancy of the former bear pit, there is a growing understanding and feeling for the existing space and the responsibility we all share for it. The works enter into a dialogue with one another and with the natural environment of the site. Through their networking and interlinking, they together embody the intention to promote a common becoming-with.

The exhibition “Cat’s Cradle” is the second in the Bärenzwinger’s annual programme Bricolage, a series researching the less visible present and history of Bärenzwinger.



Nándor Angstenberger

Nándor Angstenberger studied fine arts at the Hamburg University of Fine Arts. His focus is on organically growing sculptures and expansive installations. He describes himself as a world builder and archivist. His artistic approach involves simple methods of exploring materials that he folds, tears, cuts or places. It’s a process of searching, usually finding something, and breaking the material down into tiny pieces which he then reconnects.

His works have been shown at among others the Museum Marta Herford, Kunsthalle Krems, Kunstmuseum Ahrenshoop, Kunsthalle Emden and Stadtgalerie Kiel, Kunstmuseum Kloster Unser lieben Frauen Magdeburg, Landesmuseum Stuttgart, Kunstverein Freiburg, Kunstverein Bellevue-Saal Wiesbaden and Zeppelin Museum Friedrichshafen. He has also developed stage design installations for New Music at the Paris Philharmonie and for OperaLab at Ackerstadtpalast, Berlin.

Salon Oblique

Since 2018, Salon Oblique has been committed to enabling conceptual creative production and has since adapted to many forms. The collective specialises in experimental conceptual realisation. The core principles of the Salon Oblique project are a diversity of practice and the creation of a radically inclusive, open platform for experimentation within music and art of all kinds.

Salon Oblique aims to be inventive, collaborative and sustainable, using available technological means to build a network and support the production and communication of music and art, without losing sight of the interconnectedness with the natural world of which we are a part.

»Decolonize Mitte!«

Guided tour with Berlin Postkolonial

22 July 2021
Start: 6:30 pm

We’re meeting in front of Bärenzwinger. The tour will take place in German.

Participation in the tour is possible after proof of a current negative corona antigen test, complete immunisation or vaccination. Please keep a minimum distance of 1.5m from other participants and wear a medical mask. We will gather contact details on site for attendance documentation.

Why do African visitors in Berlin still ask in vain for an appropriate place of remembrance for the infamous Berlin Conference? What does Berlin’s M-Street have to do with the Sachsenhausen concentration camp? When did activists of African origin first demand a Black representative in the German parliament?

On 22 July 2021, the Bärenzwinger invites you to a walking city tour through the neighbourhood of the Bärenzwinger, starting at 6.30pm and continuing until 8.30pm.

The tour will be moderated by Christian Kopp and Mnyaka Sururu Mboro from the Berlin Postkolonial association. The city tour with Berlin Postkolonial explores forgotten, repressed, embellished and contested sites of colonial history in the centre of Berlin, touching on pressing questions of the postcolonial present.

»the planet is round«

Performance with Michelle Moura and Maikon K,
Sound: Kaj Duncan David

July 30, 2021
Start: 7:00 pm
Open air event.

Participation is possible upon proof of a current negative corona antigen test, complete immunization or vaccination.

Please keep a minimum distance of 1.5m to other participants and wear a medical mask. We will collect contact information on site for attendance documentation.

The artistic work responds to the movement of the so-called Flat-Earthers, who believe that the Earth is a flat, immovable disc. Along with other conspiracy narratives, this polarizing belief is currently being propagated by supporters of the extreme right.

The performance attempts to prove the opposite. It seeks to show “the world rotates, that the moon moves the tides, that volcanoes are the earth’s anus’, that sound does not propagate in a vacuum.” (Michelle Moura)

In this performance-concert produced especially for the Bärenzwinger, Kaj Duncan David performs pieces from his electronic music album “All Culture is Dissolving” (2021).

Michelle Moura is a Brazilian choreographer and dancer living in Berlin since 2017. Overtongue (2021/2020), BLINK mini unison intense lament (2015) and FOLE (2013) are her most important pieces focusing on the physical, affective and neurological properties of the body. Her work has been presented at international dance and performance festivals, including Impulstanz (AU), Festival Panorama (BR), and La Biennale di Venezia (IT).

Maikon K is a performance artist from Brazil. In his work he explores the creation of extended dramaturgies, generation of intensities and hybrid languages. He has been living in Berlin since 2021 with the support of the Martin Roth Initiative and as an associated artist at HZT – Hochschulübergreifendes Zentrum Tanz Berlin.

Kaj Duncan David is a Berlin-based experimental music composer. Many of his pieces are audiovisual and explore creative relationships between sound and light in concert situations. In addition to concert pieces, he has also developed hybrid theater/music/opera/installation/dance projects. In the 2019/2020 season he was a fellow of the JUNGE AKADEMIE at the Akademie der Künste, Berlin.

»unheimlich unheimlich« #6

Concert with Tomomi Adachi, Ignaz Schick, Fabíola and Margaret Unknown.

August 6, 2021
Start: 19:30 & 20:30

Due to the current hygiene measures, there will be 2 time slots (start: 19:30 and 20:30). The number of participants is limited to 30 persons.

Please register here.

To attend the event, you are required to show proof of a negative corona test – no more than 24 hours old – or proof of vaccination or recovery, and to wear a medical mask.

On August 6, between 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. Bärenzwinger invites you to the first of two performances of the concert series »Unheimlich Unheimlich«. Curated by Max Bogner/Margaret Unknown, »Unheimlich Unheimlich« was initiated in the fall of 2020 in Berlin bars and part of the Berlin underground music scene.

For the concert series at Bärenzwinger, a quartet of Berlin-based musicians will be invited to collaborate for the first time and develop joint sound improvisations.

Tomomi Adachi (vocals, electronics) is a Japanese performer, composer, sound poet, instrument maker and visual artist. He has presented his vocal and electronic music pieces, sound poetry, improvised and contemporary music all over the world, including Tate Modern, Maerzmusik, Hamburger Bahnhof, Centre Pompidou.

Ignaz Schick (turntables, electronics) is a Berlin-based sound artist, composer as well as conceptual artist. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich. Schlick has toured worldwide solo or with various ensembles and has collaborated with more than a hundred international sound artists.

Fabíola (vocals, electronics) is a Portuguese-born interdisciplinary artist who fuses sculpture and movement in her artistic practice.

Max Bogner/Margaret Unknown (vocals, lapsteel guitar) is an Austrian musician and concert organizer. As an improviser, Bogner is active both solo and in often transnational and intergenerational ensembles, and has played with Eric Arn, Linda Sharrock, Sabu Toyozumi, and Kazuhisa Uchihashi, among others. As a concert organizer, he is jointly responsible for the Viennese underground hub mo.ë.

»unheimlich unheimlich« #7

THE ULTIMATE BRUITAL ORCHESTRA

Concert with Tomomi Adachi, Ignaz Schick, Fabíola and Margaret Unknown.

August 28, 2021
Start: 19:30
Doors: 19:00

Due to the current hygiene measures, the number of participants is limited to 20 persons.

To attend the event, you are required to show proof of a negative corona test – no more than 24 hours old – or proof of vaccination or recovery, and to wear a medical mask.

On August 28, 2021, from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Bärenzwinger invites you to a second performance of the concert series “Unheimlich Unheimlich”. Focusing on improvised music and performance art the series has featured a broad variety of artists from the Berlin scene as well as international guests. Curated by Max Bogner/Margaret Unknown, “Unheimlich Unheimlich” was initiated in the fall of 2020 in Berlin bars and part of the Berlin underground music scene.

For the 7th edition we are presenting THE ULTIMATE BRUITAL ORCHESTRA, a group of nine internationally working artists, curated by Max Bogner/Margaret Unknown.

THE ULTIMATE BRUITAL ORCHESTRA is an international shape changing improvisation orchestra which doesn’t rehearse – every „piece“ is different than the one before and will never be repeated. So if you want you can also call it an „Echtzeit Orchestra“. Every player has her/his own musical background and is active in many different projects.

Marta Masternak (drums) studied Painting, Sculpture and Multimedia at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna and Fine Art at Gerrit Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam. She is also a member of the experimental/ noise music projects: permanenterror and CATARAT.

Antti Virtaranta (double bass) forms his musical language while using his influences from jazz and rock music and contemporary techniques.

Adam Goodwin (double bass) He received degrees in classical and contemporary double bass performance from the University of North Texas (BM, 2009) and University of California San Diego (MM, 2012), as well as studying composition at both universities.

Guido Kohn (cello) is an improviser/ cellist/ noise musician.

Markus Krispel (sax) works in diverse constellations as an improvising musician, as well as playing solo concerts with a high interest in the sonic exploration of the saxophone, related to the acoustics of the certain space, its resonance and social context.

Davide Piersanti (trombone) is an Italian trombonist, electric bass player, improviser, composer, multi-instrumentalist and performer from Rome living in Berlin. He currently plays mainly in several collaborations as a part of the varied electro-acoustic avant-garde “Echtzeitmusik”-scene in Berlin.

Marie Takahashi (viola) is a modern and baroque violist, improviser, chamber musician from Sapporo, Japan.

Samin Son (throat singing) appreciates playing with gongs, voice, guitar, keys, drums or computers, depending on the availability of arrangements, instruments, situations.

Dr. Nexus (voice), as a Berlin based artist, coming from the fine arts (painting, sculpture, [sound-]installations, performance), started about 25 years ago to explore the field of sound art, experimental, noise & industrial music.


deep states

BBB_(Alla Popp & Alex Traka)
Korhan Erel
Gosia Lehmann
Lukas Liese
Kristina Paustian
ZUGANG Kollektiv (Bruno Siegrist, Ada Kopaz, Can Kurucu, Tama Ruß)

Image: Viktor Schmidt

Opening
09/09/2021, 4–9 pm

Exhibition
09/09/ – 21/11/2021

Exhibition Curation
Maja Smoszna

Events Curation
Lara Huesmann, Annika Maus and Lusin Reinsch

 

The term ‘deep state’ in its original meaning refers to a belief in a conspiracy, a secret shadow cabinet that secretly rules the world. Meanwhile, the term ‘deep states’ holds a second meaning, referring to certain moods or emotional states. In the exhibited works, the invited artists explore critical and dystopian scenarios, as well as feelings of powerlessness, mistrust or “fear of the other” – feelings which have become increasingly apparent during the current pandemic.  Can these emotional states and stances be understood as variants of a ‘hermeneutics of suspicion’? This philosophical concept, which can be traced back to Paul Ricœur, can be used to describe a particular attitude that many have adopted during the pandemic, in which the available information is permanently met with scepticism. 


Suspicion is a high-arousal emotion that can certainly cause particular content to go viral. Just like the story of the supposedly high-ranking military officer, who allegedly since 2017 has made it his mission to spread the QAnon conspiracy theory on the internet. Conspiracy theories tend to surface and proliferate in times of crisis. In the case of a catastrophe, a tragedy or a pandemic, certain groups or individuals are blamed on an emotional basis for incomprehensible events – even though the origin of many crises lies beyond what can be logically explained. Cultural theorist Lauren Berlant points to the AIDS epidemic which occurred not so long ago. The spread of the HIV virus is still accompanied by conspiracy narratives and attempts at explanations that lead nowhere. Berlant notes that the term ‘epidemic’ is never “a neutral description” and that thinking about a widespread infectious disease in one or more communities always raises questions of classification, causality, responsibility and decay.

The exhibition explores the emotive backgrounds of conspiracy narratives in a place – the Köllnischer Park – that itself was once (in 1825) administered by the Masonic lodge called “Zu den drei Weltkugeln” (“To the three globes”). By designing the park to include an orangery, a temple, a pyramid and a labyrinth, the lodge members created a mysterious atmosphere that can still be felt at Bärenzwinger today. In the context of the exhibition, the unusual interior of the former bear pit has been transformed into a multi-layered labyrinth in which critical approaches towards knowledge are interwoven with affective images. The labyrinth stands metaphorically for unmanageable circumstances that are difficult to categorise, as well as for the search for solutions and answers to questions about its beginning and end, and in extension our unknown and unconscious future.

BBB_

BBB_ (Alla Popp & Alex Traka) is a digitally advanced music and performance artist duo that confronts audiences with utopian and dystopian worlds where the boundaries between the human and the digital seem to merge.

Instagram @allapopp @alextraka

Korhan Erel

Korhan Erel creates electronic music and sound art. Erel treats the computer and electronics as instruments that coexist with conventional instruments in free improvisation and other musical genres. Erel often uses field recordings, found sounds or synthesised sounds in instrument designs and sound art projects. 

Erel’s music shifts between free improvisation, conceptual sound performances and also structured and composed pieces. Erel presents sound art projects in group and solo exhibitions and also collaborates with visual artists in performances.


Website

Gosia Lehmann

Gosia Lehmann studied at Central Saint Martin’s College in London and at the Berlin University of the Arts. Her works move between video, scenography and sound. She often works with performative and participatory formats. In 2019, she co-founded the art collective Lagoon Parliament, a platform and network established for the independent scene in Berlin. 

Her work has been presented at the following Berlin venues, among others: Kunsthaus KuLe, at 2 OG in the Alte Münze, the Museum für Naturkunde and the Akademie der Künste.

Website

Lukas Liese

Lukas Liese studied free art/sculpture at the Weißensee Kunsthochschule Berlin and at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, USA. In his sculptural work, Liese mainly uses stone. Over the years, he has created a wide variety of works that have this material in common. Through the presence of stone in space, its geological properties and its significance in art and cultural history, Liese builds up an interaction between the content of his works and the material.

In 2018, Liese was awarded the Mart Stam Prize for his graduation work at the Weißensee Kunsthochschule Berlin. In 2020, Liese received the Elsa Neumann Scholarship from the State of Berlin.

Website

Kristina Paustian

Kristina Paustian explores cultural anthropological and socio-political themes in her work. She is a co-founder of the Medienkunstverein (mkv), which works towards the promotion of contemporary art with new media, dedicated to the development of experimental narrative- and exhibition formats.

Paustian’s work has been shown at Les Rencontres Internationales Festival, Arsenal Berlin, Visions du Réel International Film Festival, Torino International Film Festival, Odessa Biennale, Athens Biennale, Tashkent Biennale and the Russian Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia.

Website

ZUGANG Kollektiv

ZUGANG collective members – Bruno Siegrist, Ada Kopaz, Can Kurucu and Tama Ruß – studied fine arts at the Berlin University of the Arts, among others, and work across the fields of film, photography, performance and sculpture. They are interested in the city, its inhabitants and relationships. 

The central theme of their artistic practice is their research into the political dimension of images and the power of relations in public space..


Websites:
Bruno Siegrist
Can Kurucu
Edekawo

»The double«

Holly Childs & Gediminas Žygus (Hydrangea)

10.–12.09.2021 Bärenzwinger, everyday at 19 Uhr & 20 Uhr

Within the frame of the festival Easterndaze x Berlin 2021

»The Double« will be experienced as a walk-through listening session at the Bärenzwinger on 10, 11 and 12 September 2021. Admission is free.

Between 10 and 12 September, the Bärenzwinger invites you to the concert performance “The Double” at 7 and 8 pm. »The Double« is an immersive music installation by the artist duo Holly Childs & Gediminas Žygus (Hydrangea), taking place as part of the Easterndaze x Berlin festival. Easterndaze is a platform that connects community-oriented radio projects from Central and Eastern Europe and organises annual digital and on-site events to connect local music scenes internationally.

The artist duo Holly Childs & Gediminas Žygus explores the history of European colonial gardens in their work. Visitors will be guided through the evening by two performers. In the performance»The Double«, botanical gardens are critically reflected upon by questioning them as places of hidden violence, appropriation and destruction.

The work is presented on the outside terraces of the building and deals with the history of Köllnischer Park, which was privately administered as a garden and park in the 19th century by a Masonic lodge, among others, and was transformed into an aesthetic landscape according to their designs. The artistic intervention»The Double«is now transforming once again, through music and installative elements, the place that until 2015 served as an enclosure for the Berlin city bears.

»Songs of Cyborgeoisie«

BBB_
Concert performance
01/10/2021

Admission 7 pm
Concert 7.30 pm

The concert will take place on an outdoor terrace of the Bärenzwinger. Admission is free.

Access according to the 3G regulation for those tested – negative antigen test not older than 24h, vaccinated or recovered.

The music and performance artist duo BBB_ (Alla Popp & Alex Traka) confronts the audience with utopian and dystopian worlds in which the boundaries between the human and the digital seem to merge. The performance extends the computer game designed by BBB_ “Songs of Cyborgeoisie. The Game”, which is part of the current exhibition “deep states” at Bärenzwinger.

The project explores how technological dystopian fears influence the imagination about the future. The audience can expect a one-hour interactive performance with narrative electronic live music that invites them to take an audio-visual journey through immersive science fiction worlds. Visitors are immersed in the perspectives of various technological, organic or fantastic beings. The performance questions the technological status quo in order to create new future scenarios.

With live vocals and spoken word by Alla Popp and live guitar by Alex Traka.

Game visuals by BBB_ in collaboration with Simon Kein and Lixing Yang, with costume design by Sarah Ama Duah and hybrid choreographic concept by Katja Cheranaeva.


Note: Strobe lights and fog may be used during the event.  

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»The fat dreams of an Eastern bear«

Viviana Druga
Performance
15/10/2021

Admission 6 pm

The performance will take place on an outdoor terrace of the Bärenzwinger. Admission is free.

Access according to the 3G regulation for those tested – negative antigen test not older than 24h, vaccinated or recovered.

In her performance “The fat dreams of an Eastern bear“ Viviana Druga takes visitors on a journey to channel the energy of the Ukranian bear, a distant cousin of the Berlin bear. Fat as a materialized power source is a medicine used in archaic cultures centering bears throughout Eastern Europe.

By using “bear fat vapors”, the ritualista offers healing to the participants, while enabling them to connect with nature.

What is the significance of rituals in contemporary life? How can spiritual practices help to connect with nature and with oneself – and how can we reflect on them?

“Art for me is a magical activity, a ritual that could help subjects (people) discover new dimensions of themselves.” Viviana Druga

In her work Romanian artist Viviana Druga explores the relationship of nature and humans, using ritual practices touching upon issues like healing, rebirth and feminine aesthetics.

With this performance, Viviana Druga invites visitors to discuss contemporary healing practices and their relation to ritual, tradition and heritage.


»Portal to the Other Realms«

Gosia Lehmann
Performance

Gosia Lehmann
Performance
19/11/2021

6-8 pm

There will be 3 time slots for 8 persons each. 

Access according to the 2G regulation for vaccinated or recovered persons.

Starting point: Wall Street (Wallstraße 57 in front of Brazilian Embassy)

Please be on time!

In her experimental lecture-performance “Portal to the Other Realms” Gosia Lehmann invites the audience into the Blue Chamber: an extra-dimensional space inhabited by ’Angels-of-sweet-deals’, who will be your guides through the evening. The audience will get to make decisions about the narratives of the performance. But be aware: a choice can’t be undone and a story can never be told twice.

“Portal to the Other Realms” is part of Gosia Lehmann’s “Divine Interventions <–> Force Majeure” – an ongoing series of works exploring the idea of economic shamanism and how the business of future forecasting evolved from esoteric and ritualistic believes into a corporate industry.

The performance will take place in English. Admission is free. Registration is required and the number of participants is limited. 

Credits

Concept: Gosia Lehmann
Performers: Rosanna Graf & Maryna Makarenko
Production assistance: Valerian Blos
Sound: Gabriel Kleber
3D renders: Hsiangfu Chen

Finissage with Zugang Kollektiv

Zugang Kollektiv
Finissage & Community
20/11/2021

6-8 pm

Access according to the 2G regulation for vaccinated or recovered persons.

The Zugang Kollektiv (Bruno Siegrist, Ada Kopaz, Can Kurucu and Tama Ruß) invites to the “Performative Encounter with Soup and Fire Substitute” on the second to last evening of the exhibition.

Over soup, fire substitute and music, the Zugang Kollektiv will engage with the audience of the Bärenzwinger.

In the course of the evening, the gathering will be framed by gestures and performative interludes. In this way, possible proposals about the course of the evening will emerge.

Surprise guests have also already announced themselves, among others:

“The Radically Other”
Lecture Performance
Anonymised Telegramchat Querdenker

With Paja Burgess, Rydiger Benterbusch, Ken-und-Barbie-Hollihore, Antonia Benterbusch, Lara Kitzig.

It will be possible to (partly) experience the exhibition at the same time. Please register in advance and bring your warmest overalls.

The performative gathering will take place in German and English.

Admission is free.