Thie Times, 2021
The exhibition at Kunstverein Barsinghausen deals with questions about appropriation of urban space on the one hand and displacement of youth and sub-culture through local authorities on the other hand. The struggle of the local youth to preserve the “Thie” site in the city center is well documented since two decades. The accompanying self-published zine contextualizes subjective memories through photos and drawings with newspaper-clippings and official correspondence from the archive of the city.
Artists: Christopher Balassa, Robin Höning, Jan-Michel Harmening, Sven-Julien Kanclerski, Jakob Nolte, Jördis Samland
Visual concept, zine 19 × 27 cm, 96 pages, edition: 150, black and red soy ink
Poster 84 × 59,4 cm, Invitation 11 × 24 cm and floor plan 21 × 29,7 cm
photo: Sven-Julien Kanclerski
photo: Sven-Julien Kanclerski
Thie Times, 2021
The exhibition at Kunstverein Barsinghausen deals with questions about appropriation of urban space on the one hand and displacement of youth and sub-culture through local authorities on the other hand. The struggle of the local youth to preserve the “Thie” site in the city center is well documented since two decades. The accompanying self-published zine contextualizes subjective memories through photos and drawings with newspaper-clippings and official correspondence from the archive of the city.
Artists: Christopher Balassa, Robin Höning, Jan-Michel Harmening, Sven-Julien Kanclerski, Jakob Nolte, Jördis Samland
Visual concept, zine 19 × 27 cm, 96 pages, edition: 150, black and red soy ink
Poster 84 × 59,4 cm, Invitation 11 × 24 cm and floor plan 21 × 29,7 cm
photo: Sven-Julien Kanclerski
photo: Sven-Julien Kanclerski