KARMAWERK

KARMAWERK

Exhibition: 11– 23 September 2015
Opening: 11 September 2015, 6 – 10pm
Performance 8:30pm: The Fall by Karma, Vera Schrankl (vc), Yatziv Caspi (tbl) and Max Pela (dr)
Address: WHITECONCEPTS | Auguststrasse 35 | 10119 Berlin | www.whiteconcepts.de
Opening hours: Mon – Sun 13 – 20 h

“I have not only always felt myself to be a ‘stranger in a strange land’ *, but in actuality an alien on a strange planet. I am somehow OTHER. I have always existed in the in-between, never really joining, but open to all and to every influence.” Karma

WHITECONCEPTS gallery is pleased to present the first Berlin solo mixed-media exhibition of Canadian/Trinidadian artist KARMA. The show will feature new paintings/sculpture, digital art/video that explore the universal themes of life/death, disintegration/ re-incarnation, the mundane/ the transcendent in the artist’s highly expressive, personal, idiosyncratic way.
The exhibition title, KARMAWERK is a ’made up’ (compound) German word, composed of the concept of Karma + work. Though the notion of Karma is often defined in Western popular culture as fate/destiny or action/reaction, work is also another of its multitudinous definitions. Philosophically, work functions as a key socio-cultural political and religious component in German culture. More playfully, the made-up word, KARMAWERK refers to of one on the artist’s favorite German innovators of electronic music, KRAFTWERK. Metaphorically and esoterically, work can also refer to a mystical, alchemical ‘work’ that ultimately mirrors the simplest definition of art – a manipulation of materials to produce a transformation.
KARMA’s art, is not only informed by her attempts to understand the meaning of her culturally and spiritually complex name, but also by the need to investigate the enigmatic questions that result from doing so. The artist’s personal obsessions combined with this quest create her own personal mythos. These varied preoccupations range from such dichotomies, as high vs. subculture, identity/culture, east/west, spirituality/mysticism, mythology/reality, alchemy/science, philosophy/ psychology, nature/space, to the past/future.
Inherently, the exhibition KARMAWERK explores the idea of the Gesamtkunstwerk. Each artwork acts as part of the whole. Aesthetically the ‘WERK’ pays homage to various art historical movements ranging from Modernism, Surrealism, German Expressionism, Abstract Expressionism, Minimalism, Conceptualism, to Video Art and Performance. Ultimately, by utilizing seemingly conflicting colours, materials, styles, and techniques, the artist seeks to create work that she thinks of as ‘hybrid.’ These are works that suggest the interstices and junctions that occur when opposites collide.

Born in Trinidad and Tobago, (of mixed East Indian, Scottish, and North African heritage) to a father who was a poet and part of the black power movement, and Brahmin student of linguistics, KARMA left a southern colony to move to a northern one, Canada. True to her chameleon nature and practice, the artist trained at a young age formally at a performing and visual arts middle- high school as a ballet and modern dancer, and in music, and drama, before making the decision in her last year of her studies to become a Visual Arts major. She received the Visual Art graduation prize. Upon returning to Toronto, the artist co-founded her own artists collective, SYNDICATE.
Later, at Concordia University in Montreal, she studied with the titans of Canadian Abstract Expressionism, and Minimalism. During her studies she won the Ruth Louise Scholarship for Excellence in Visual Art, and graduated with distinction winning the Graduating Prize for Painting and Drawing. Since then, KARMA has shown her work internationally at museums, galleries, and screenings in Canada, USA, India, Brazil, South Africa, the Caribbean, UK, France, the Netherlands, Austria, and Germany, including shows at art institutions like the Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, the Museum for Contemporary Art /TO, The Art Gallery of Ontario, CANADA Gallery and D.U.M.B.O./NYC, Roberts and Tilton/LA, TAO Gallery/Mumbai, as well as the ARTFORUM Berlin. KARMA has been featured in numerous art magazines and catalogues as well as newspapers. Her work has been collected by universities, curators, and internationally respected designers.
True to her nomadic blood she has lived in Jamaica, Saskatchewan, Toronto, and Montreal. KARMA has also been active as an art curator, organizer, and educator. She writes poems, songs and short stories. KARMA now lives and works in Berlin and at the Baltic Coast.

* Stranger in a Strange Land is a 1961 science fiction novel by American author Robert A. Heinlein.

Requiem for a dying planet

Requiem for a Dying Planet

Ritual performance by Christoph Both-Asmus

26 June 2015, 22h30 – 23h30, Gallery WHITECONCEPTS
as part of his solo show ‘Rivers and Trees

Slash and burn. The death knell of the rainforest  is sounded in the roar of the thousands of industrial chain saws. Teeming with hugely diverse life forms, the rainforests have been destroyed at such a speed over the last few decades, that the last remaining areas of primary rainforest are about to be lost forever, according to the famous botanist Francis Hallé. Artist Christoph Both-Asmus, who has been working closely with Francis Hallé on the project THE TREE WALKER, was so moved on hearing this that he was inspired to create his own poignant reponse with ‘Requiem for a Dying Planet.’

In ‘Requiem for a Dying Planet’ beautiful cut flowers are placed in a container of water which is then dug into the ground. Charcoal pieces are set alight and then placed on the ground around the base of the flowers. One by one the flowers succumb to the smouldering heat of the charcoal, wilt and collapse. For the performance of this ritual inside Whiteconcepts Both-Asmus will be using a special kind of vase and new arrangement of flowers. It can be viewed from outside the building, through the windows and door.

In contrast to the the high-speed and loud noise of the rainforest destruction, ‘Requiem for a Dying Planet’ is quiet and very slow, taking around 45 minutes for all of the flowers to collapse. This slowness creates what Both-Asmus calls ’empty moments’. Such ’empty moments’ allow the viewer to take time to experience and reflect and become more aware of what often gets missed in every day life: leaves rustling in the wind, a light breeze. When we directly experience the dying, burning flowers in front of us we can relate on a more emotional level with the otherwise unimaginable immensity of the far off burning and clearing of the rainforests.

Text by Kathrin Shephard
June 15, 2015

Christoph Both-Asmus – Rivers and Trees

Christoph Both-Asmus – Rivers and Trees

June 1 – July 3, 2015
Artist Talk between Christoph Both-Asmus and David Medalla (artist and director and founder of the London Biennale): 09 June, 6 pm
Ritual performance “Requiem for a dying planet” by the artist: 26 June, 22:30 – 23:30h

Donate your blood to art. This is what Christoph Both-Asmus has done for his installation ‘Tale of River’ showing at WHITECONCEPTS Gallery until June 26.

Both-Asmus’ blood will be flowing freely over a landscape made of Japanese papier mache and soil, creating its own rivulets and tributaries and leaving an ever darker and bloodier stain. After this, the blood-river landscape will be displayed as a finished piece of art work.

Can you feel your blood pulsing through your body? When was the last time you saw your own blood, or the blood of someone else? For Both-Asmus it was essential to use his own blood rather than that of a cow or pig to demonstrate his allegiance to living creatures, human and otherwise, whose blood has been spilt unnecessarily. Blood flowing outside of the body is associated with violence, death and killing, as in the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, where the rivers ran red. Flowing water leaves its mark on the landscape, flowing blood its mark on our soul and psyche.

In parallel to this work the gallery will be used as a workspace for the team of THE TREE WALKER project, initiated by Christoph Both-Asmus. Based on a daydream (2009) Christoph saw himself walking over the thinnest branches of the rainforest. Since then he was convinced that he wanted to realize the poetic image „balancing between earth and sky“, going over the edge, almost flying. During the development process he has been successfully experimenting different ways of tree climbing to reach the tree tops. As the artist’s interest for the biodiversity in the canopy has grown, THE TREE WALKER has taken another dimension with the collaboration of world widely known French scientists and botanists (p.e. Operation Canopy – botanist Francis Halley und pilot Dany Clayet-Marrel and ANPN, Gabon/Africa). On the occasion of the exhibition the project team is once a week showcasing different ideas of the project and giving insight into his large-scale installations and performances portraying the sublime of nature and the uniqueness of our existence.

Christoph Both-Asmus (b. 1984, Germany) is currently living and working in Berlin. In 2010 he completed his MFA at the Sandberg Institute for Fine Arts in Amsterdam (NL). In 2011 and 2012 he got funded by the Mondriaan Fund Amsterdam. His interdisciplinary work mainly focuses on performance, video, mixed media installation and site-specific sculpture, often created with natural artifacts or even living organisms. He exhibited amongst the greatest art shows around Europe, including Art Pie Amsterdam, Istanbul Art Fair and Re:Rotterdam. In recent years the artist exhibited together with fellow documenta artist and director of the London Biennale David Medalla and Venice Biennale artist Pedro Calapez. 

Information about the artist and available works
www.christophbothasmus.de

PSJM – Spanische Malerei

PSJM – SPANISCHE MALEREI

01 April 2015 – 30 April 2015

Opening in presence of the artists: 2 April, 2015, 7 PM

PSJM is an artistic team made up in 2003 by Pablo San José (Mieres, 1969) and Cynthia Viera (Las Palmas, 1973), based in Berlin. They act as a cutting-edge art brand, raising questions about the art market, social communication and artistic quality. Making use of the communicative strategies of spectacular capitalism they demonstrate the relevance of the paradoxes being produced by its schemed, but chaotic development. 

Spanische Malerei [Spanish Painting] is a painterly portrait of Spain’s reality rendered geometrically. In this new series, PSJM develops a line of “social geometry” using statistics to determine a variety of geometric compositions. PSJM creates these pieces by strictly adhering to painting materials. In a more or less explicit manner, a reflection on painting has permeated the team’s trajectory.

Spanische Malerei is their creative output from 2013, a year immersed in the most severe financial crisis people have been forced to experience. Demands for austerity somehow make themselves felt in the production process, now removed from resplendent industrial surfaces. Thus, the hard times faced by the cultural sector are seen in a direct and honest way. Just like the political, financial and social reality which shall be brought to the fore in these mathematical reflections rendered in acrylic on canvas. Notwithstanding the handcrafted nature of these paintings, the precision and neatness of their finish reminds us of the implacable hand of the machine. The industrial primary colors are drastically applied following radical compositions that take the figure of the accurate triangle as a prevailing motif. Removed from any decorative pretence, these “paintings which can be read” suggest a harsh reality that has been objectified through the flow of impersonal information; data and colors that conceal personal dramas, hegemonic ideological trends and social unrest.

PSJM has often been invited and extensively exhibited throughout Europe and America.
On the occasion of the 56th La Biennale di Venezia PSJM is participating in the collateral event “Beyond the tropics”, a group show curated by Imma Prieto. 
The work of PSJM is included in many publications p.e. “Younger than Jesus. Artist Directory. The essential handbook to the future of art” of the New Museum of New York, published by Phaidon; and “among the 100 most representative artists of international political art” in the book “Art & Agenda: Political Activism and Art,” published by Gestalten.

Artist information and available works
www.psjm.es

Battlefield Love Memorials

Battlefield Love Memorials

A global art project initiated by Nikolaus Eberstaller

Battlefield Love Memorial is a large-scale international art project in public space, which the Austrian artist Nikolaus Eberstaller has been planning since 2011.

His huge installation will occupy an area of 3,500 sqm consisting of 232 life-sized figures of soldiers and 36 armored vehicles, all made of lightweight concrete. The two armies are facing each other on a pink battlefield in a special formation: tanks and soldiers, also covered in pink, have become arranged in the form of the letters “L”, “O”, “V” and “E” and go literally to an “attack”.

In one way, the art project is winking at us, but at the same time very serious statements about the current social-political discourses of our society are being taken and its reflecting themes such as “love”, “war” and the social responsibility for one another.

This work is not an untouchable museum piece, but wants to be realized, stimulated and edited by the audience: one can and should live, eat and play in it. So claimed, soldiers and tanks pass away until they can be environmental friendly disposed of or reused. The ruinous battlefield will after being exhibited for a while disappear and leaves LOVE back.

Beforehead the project starts with two performances in Berlin. The rigid, concrete battlefield installation is preceded by the living sculpture interpreting the fluid transformation from escalation to deescalation through citizen power. It shows a symbolic transformation of dramatic past into life-affirming, solution-oriented perspectives, the combination of commemoration and new positive orientation on Berlin’s historic ground.

The  participant-strong peace performance was held on 8 May 2015 on the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II in Berlin with hundreds of youths on Askanischer Platz. It is organized in cooperation with WHITECONCEPTS, Youth-LeadeR (UNESCO project), Berlin schools and ambitious partners. The project is created for sending a positive signal to mankind – highlighting the real treasures, true values of our society: peace, human love, and understanding among nations. Both events include a focus on youth powers to transform the world – creative optimism, free spirit, fearlessness, and their inspiring influence on the adult world.

Grounded in history, the installation takes a positive look at creating a peaceful, sustainable present and future through the inspirational examples of teenage hero/ines leading wildly successful social and environmental initiatives around the globe. Schools worldwide are invited to interact with them, contribute to their causes and join a global community through our educational partner Youth-LeadeR.

The project BATTLEFIELD LOVE MEMORIALS collaborates with outstanding young artists. 11 WIE DU (Germany´s leading “positive change” youth band and UNICEF Junior Ambassadors) and FEDOR (Hip Hop) bring the musical spirit of the Change Generation on stage.

The project is being developed in cooperation with WHITECONCEPTS, Youth LeadeR and the Cultural Foundation Forum Castle Kraskow. We are grateful for the support of the Cultural Secretary Tim Renner, Kulturprojekte Berlin, the city of Breslau, Technical University Berlin, betonwerkstatt, LASERLINE, GRACE, contemas websolutions, Scan3D, aalborgportland, Gardemann, Barufke Handelsservice, Jugend Theater Werkstatt Spandau, Marc Bogaerts, Mathilde Lossin, 11WieDu, Filming for Change, Verein der Visionäre, Friedensfestival, and many other dedicated partners and participating schools in Berlin.

The Berlin performance was part of the program Mai 45 – Spring in Berlin, orga­ni­zed by Kulturpro­jekte Berlin: www.berlin.de/mai45/

 

www.battlefield-love-memorial.berlin 

Special Art Editions

artist information and available works

more projects by Nikolaus Eberstaller

www.eberstaller.at

 

Pietro Celesia – The J Line

Pietro Celesia – The j line

“J Line Music”, live jazz/electronica performance by Florian Menzel & jUzzy Gentle: February 12, 2015, 7 PM

February 2 – 15, 2015

We are pleased to present the first solo exhibition in Berlin of Italian artist Pietro Celesia. The exhibition, consisting of photography, video and sound installation by live musicians, represents a selection of Celesia’s artistic spectrum.

Based on an inspirational subway tour from legendary New York’s John F. Kennedy Airport to Wall Street, Pietro Celesia began exploring the different suburbs. The result of capturing the city on infrared film shows the city as in a dreamlike reality – a strong imagery rotating between spaces, energies and rhythms. While Miles Davis´ jazz was always accompanying his moves along the J line, he felt as he was being on a journey through time as well as stucked in a vibrant present of a melting pot; its streets and tunes linked the present and the past with the architecture and visions of the American dream, immortalized by photographers and avant-garde filmmakers a long time ago.

For the show at WHITECONCEPTS gallery Pietro’s photographs are additioned by a special soundtrack. Created by the young German jazz musicians Florian Menzel and Igor Spallati The J Line music reflects on mirrors and echoes, the daydream-feeling of the pictures. Usually in the band The Major Minors – which won the German Film Prize (Deutscher Filmpreis) for the soundtrack of German blockbuster “Oh Boy” in 2013 – both will be performing The J Line live at the opening night.

Understanding architecture as a narration of society The J line reflects on a city of immediacy, and of downright business, as well as on a space of urban intimacy, where one can feel at ease, free of fear or tensions.
Within the different media shown in this exhibition The J Line manifests ideas of inter-connections, coexistence and interdependence or as Pietro describes his project:”The whole, however, can only exist because of all the parts.”

Interview with the artist

Review by Nicoletta Fazio
www.pietrocelesia.com

Raha Rastifard – If it’s not too dark

RAHA RASTIFARD – IF IT’S NOT TOO DARK

Opening in presence of the artist: 18 February, 2015, 7 PM

February 16 – 28, 2015

In a very subtle, remarkable way Raha Rastifard’s works deal with traditional and contemporary issues of Iran as well as with the cultural background of the artist.

WHITECONCEPTS gallery is delighted to present two new series relating to well-known Persian poet and mystic Hafez. His poems inspired the artist’s approach while reflecting on his philosophical thoughts and ideas about the meaning of life.

The mixed-media series, titled „Book of Longing”, are a visual interpretation of Hafez’ poetry. They create a poetic dimension that mirrors the artist‘s emotions and her understanding of the ancient lines. Already Goethe had become acquainted with Hafez’ works and described it as: “the celestial perfume of the East and invigorating breeze of eternity that was being blown from the plains and the wastelands of Persia, and I came to know an extraordinary man whose personality completely fascinated me.” Goethe’s great masterpiece “West-Östlicher Diwan” left a lasting impression everywhere in Europe. When Goethe founded his great “social philosophy”, he considered the time as ripe to think of a humanistic world philosophy, irrespective of nationality and creed. He believed that the East and the West were not really separate from each other and should approach each other. In furthering this philosophy he also envisaged a world literature, and proposed that the greatest poets of the East i.e. Sa’adi and Hafez should become members of it, which Raha defines and states now within her exhibition.

The photographic series, “If it is not too dark”, are dealing with faith in equity and the trust in a world without violence, with deep understanding of inter-culture and inter-media. Using her body as a symbol against violence the photographs function as a constant reminder of the cause and effects of violence. Raha utilized a beautiful Ghazal (lyric) from Hafez to title her work, because his poetry is full of messages against violence and full of peace and love. By the help of meditation, he and other Sufis found the source of knowledge in their own hearts: Poetry full of light and shade, line and color, poetry full of feelings. The whole contemporary trend of the poetry of Hafiz is to awaken that appreciation and love of beauty, the only means by which to experience that bliss which is the purpose of our life.

The Iranian artist Raha Rastifard is based in Stockholm/Sweden. She studied Bachelor of Fine Arts at the National Art University of Tehran, Iran and at the Free University Berlin, Germany, and holds a master degree in European Art History and in Iranian Culture and Literature. In 2009 she was awarded as finalist for “Freedom to Create” Prize, organised by the Victoria & Albert Museum London, UK. Until today Rastifard’s works were part of solo and group shows in Germany, Sweden, USA, Japan, Iran, China, and India and have been shown at various art fairs. 

The show is kindly supported by Gigant Print Works, Berlin.

Information about Raha Rastifard
www.raharastifard.com

Radom Cumulus, 2014

RADOM CUMULUS, 2014

A new outdoor sculpture by Thorsten Gold­berg for the Mazo­vian Centre of Contem­porary Art – Elek­trownia in Radom/Poland

Radom Cumulus is a three-dimensional light object made of layers of curved neon contours, stacked hori­zon­tally on top of each other. The contours form a stylized cumulus cloud that rests on the very edge of the roof above the entrance of the new built museum. The 300 x 210 x 160 cm big light object was realized in November 2014.

The hori­zontal neon contours are direct sculp­tural repre­sen­ta­tions of drawn hatchings, as seen in drawings of clouds on medieval maps: Drawing, object and light instal­lation are combined, so that the trans­formed drawing of a cloud, here as a real and illu­mi­nated object, accen­tuates the urban space. Clouds are used as metaphors for the afterlife, for wanderlust, infinity and freedom of thought— for longings in general.

Review by Dora Rosłońska, Journalist of Goethe-Institut Poland, December 2014
More information about the artistMore projects by Thorsten Goldberg
www.goldberg-berlin.de

Katrin Korfmann – Ensembles assembled

KATRIN KORFMANN  – ENSEMBLES ASSEMBLED 

1 October 2014 – 30 October 2014

The focus of Katrin Korfmann’s new work group is on collective rituals that blur individual identity and connect people to their community. The ‘magical moment’ invoked here reveals the presence of a ritual in which people form a larger organism through common activities. These works, rich in detail, are composed from an archive of digital images that serve as a social-realist documentation of an euphoric utopianism.

The artist travelled all around Europe to take these pictures: to the Castells (human towers) in Catalonia, the Cascamorra festival, in which black paint applied to the body plays a key role, and the Els Enfarinats festival in Ibi, which entails the use of flour and eggs. The visual record consists of monochromatic and patterned masses of people whereby each individual protagonist is equal. The coloration, corporeality, and clothing frame references to art history while reflecting the present time.

The exhibition is accompanied by a catalog: Ensembles assembled, 2014, with texts by Gregory Volk and Freek Lomme, edited by Onomatopee Eindhoven, 116 pages, english.

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Information about Katrin Korfmann
www.katrinkorfmann.com