
untitled (weather#4), 2009, digitally altered photograph, archival inkjet print on canvas, 70 x 100 cm

riga/melissa, 2007, digitally altered photograph, archival inkjet print on canvas, 80 x 90 cm
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Exhibition
The exhibition tries to expose different views on the topic expressed by the artists Ayelet Albenda, Ana Bilankov, Heike Barndt, Tim Deussen, Dotan & Perry, Anna Faroqhi, Lasse Lau, Dana Levy, Chris de Lutz, Guy Raz, Ilana Salama Ortar, Michael H. Shamberg, Simcha Shirman, Felice Naomi Wonnenberg, Paola Yacoub and Maya Zack. The artists adopt the local or project the foreign view on the cities’ life. This exchange of views and opinions among the international participants of our project is just another aspect of the lively Trialogue between the three busy harbours on this imagined seafaring route.
The project will be opened on the 2nd of July 2009 at 7pm in Artneuland.
Schumannstraße 18, 10117 Berlin. It will remain open until the 8th of August 2009.Christian De Lutz presents written evidence and accounts of people who have been
The first series of prints are facsimiles of CIA documents obtained through the Freedom of
from the exhibition text
more details at http://cdelutz.net/html/thumbnail%20pages/installation.htm
space untitled
Drontheimerstraße 3
13359 Berlin
Atelier Sambo-Richter
Koloniestr. 131
13359 Berlin
Several digital prints provide a contrasting static component. The print petroleum lines is made up of satellite images of the Persian Gulf, Wolfsburg, Germany, Flint, Michigan and Toyota, Japan. It represents static records of moments and locations, stolen from their original purpose location, remade into a new visual system. Additionally the area(s) of the installation are covered with detritus, broken wood, wiring, building material – and also text: fragments of algorithms for calculating demographics, migration and population movement.
The Evasion Machine not only implies migrants evasion of central regulation and authority, but also points to the flourishing of cultural hybrids in exactly those regions which (for a while) provide haven for the wanderer. Yuri Lotman, while developing his system of linguistic environments (or semiospheres), divided them into centre and periphery. The centre (metalanguage) controls the environment, but is sterile, bereft of innovation. It is the periphery, ripe with multiple, outside influences, where creativity bears most fruit.
-Christian de Lutz