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CSR.Gallery Weekend Berlin
With the exhibition “ZEITENWENDE – Art and Society”, DEEDS LAB gUG presents relevant contemporary art at special, temporary exhibition venues in Berlin.


The exhibition ZEITENWENDE is intended as an annual periodical and presents in its pilot works of art of all genres by international artists, regardless of origin, age or gender, on social, cultural and artistic turns of the new millennium. The approved genres are Painting, Drawing, Sculpture, Collage, Photography, Urban Contemporary, Film + Video, Performance, Object, Installation, Digital Art, Mixed Media, Glass, Light, Sound, Kinetics, Textile in the styles Abstract, Figurative, Realistic, Constructivist, Hyperrealistic, Calligraphic, Pointilistic, Landscape, Surrealistic and Gestural.

Participating Artists:
Albrecht/Wilke, Khaled Barakeh, Bas2, Katerina Belkina, Anne Bengard, Laurenz Bostedt, Benedikt Braun, Michael Busse, Kerstin Dzewior, Margret Eicher, FABIFA, Jeanne Fredac 1970, Torben Giehler, Julija Goyd, Lennart Grau, Jiny Lan, Joax, Olena Klochko, Gita Kurdpoor, Miriam Lenk, Jonathan Meese, Tom Meier, Stephan Meissner, Anna Mirkin, Jan Muche, Nafir, Parisurteil, Jörn Reiners, Kimo von Rekowski, Victoria Rosenman, Römer + Römer, Manuela Sambo, Daniel Sambo-Richter, Olaf Schirm, Snyder, Luisa Stroh, Daniel Maria Thurau, Tobo, Saverio Tonoli Adamo, Kata Unger, Maria Volokhova, Wiebke Maria Wachmann, Stella Winter, Thomas Wommelsdorf, Anne Wölk, Xianwei Zhu, Sahar Zukerman
27.04.2023 – 18 Uhr
Friedrichstraße 69 – 10117 Berlin – Quartier 205 more info on: https://www.deeds.news#artatberlin#artshow


#opening#artfromberlin#galleryweekendberlin#csrgallery#annewoelk#annewölk#contemporaryart#artinvest#artcollectors#universe#thegreatsilence#shining#stars#landscapepainting#starscape#wohinamwochenende#berlinartgallery#artinvest#artoftheday#malereiberlin#deepspace#vernissage
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Collective Memory
link: https://www.artspring.berlin
12.12. -29.12.2022Opening: 12.12.2022, 3 pm
Opening Hours: Monday-Saturday, 3 – 6 pm
PopUp Store Schönhauser Allee Arcaden
Artspring Festival Ausstellungsraum
3rd floor, Schönhauser Allee 80, 10439 Berlin
Installation view, “Collective Memory”, 2022, PopUp Store of Artspring Berlin Let us look at art in the present. It seems effortlessly possible to understand contemporary works of art beyond the moment in a sizeable causal context. That is caused by art history, which is constantly trying to interpret and assign art to epoch styles and movements.
Nevertheless, the memory of art is limitless. Artists animate the contemporary art world with quotes from the past. The context in which artists produce their art on a daily basis forms their spiritual home. Thus, the spiritual home of a generation is permeated with memories and shared knowledge. The resulting aesthetic dominates the artists’ cultural memory and includes the audience’s expectations.
What strategies do artists use to do this, and what distinguishes an individual from the collective memory? How is shared remembrance expressed in works of art, and how important is it for artists to belong to a group of others?
The exhibition ‘Collective Memory’ refers to the memory of art and is the last presentation in the annual 2022 program in the PopUp Store of the Artspring Festival. The artists in the exhibition examine the interactions between artistic positions in various ways. The exhibited images and objects represent contemporary art’s unique interplay of painterly, photographic, and sculptural issues. At first glance, the participating artists’ birth countries appear to be far away from one another, as they are spread over several continents. However, it is precisely through international scholarship and training programs that a familiar aesthetic becomes visible as it is developed through decades of global exchange.
The respective artists’ positions refer to earlier generations and aim to inspire thought about the past in the present. The citation process is an essential component, here, and is characterized by the continuation and supplementation of existing ideas. In this sense, all exhibitors work on the future ‘collective memory’ of a generation. The exhibition offers a wide range of international positions and exciting discoveries. In the spirit of collective memory, the project space is transformed into a culmination point for encounters between extraordinary art objects and a place for participation and exchange.
Works by the following artists can be seen in the Collective Memory exhibition:
Katja Eminusk, Carla Faché, Rachael Jablo, Joanna Mortreux, Kirstin Rabe, Henrieke Ribbe, Carita Schmidt, Maria Volokhova, Anne Wölk
Anne Wölk curated the exhibition.

Installation view, “Collective Memory”, 2022, PopUp Store of Artspring Berlin ___________________________

About the artists:The objects by Joanna Mortreux and Maria Volokhova deal with sculptural questions. The artists quote from the formal language of the past and deal with ceramic arts and crafts tradition. Mortreux and Volokhova share a love of clay, which people have used for thousands of years. That may be why one finds diverse references to artifacts from antique collections by both artists. Maria Volokhova found her way to porcelain through her work with ceramics. Porcelain allows her to explore the contradiction between aesthetic attraction and repulsion. She contrasts the surface’s unique shine with the material’s fragility. In the work series of both artists, there are references to sculptures of classical modernism, such as Peter Agostoni’s elegant white sculpture Summer Clouds (1963) or the totem-like figure The Pink Child Birth (1964) by Niki de Saint-Phalle.
The seemingly archaic forms of Niki de Saint-Phalle also echo in the work of Joanna Mortreux, who has lived and worked in the capital since taking part in the Berlin artist-in-residence program, Takt, in 2013. The Australian artist has received various awards, including the Dr. Wendy Gers Ceramics Coach Grant. Mortreux studied Fine Art at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in Australia until 2008 and has participated in international exhibitions.
Maria Volokhova, on the other hand, came to Germany from Ukraine as a teenager and studied painting at Burg Giebichenstein Halle. She deepened her studies in Bologna, Italy, and Athens, Ohio, USA. She also studied for two years in the ceramics department at the Tokyo Art University Japan and was awarded a scholarship from the renowned Monbukagakusho Scholarship program. Maria Volokhova received the NASPA Prize for Ceramics in 2016 and has exhibited her works at the James Simon Gallery on Museum Island in Berlin Mitte. Her works are represented in various public collections, for example, in the Kunstgewerbemuseum and the Stadtmuseum Berlin collections.

Installation view, “Collective Memory”, 2022, PopUp Store of Artspring Berlin The principles of collage and quotation are also in the foreground for Rachael Jablo. Her works show the influence of artists such as Judy Chicago, whose ‘Birth Project’ documents birth experiences and accounts and uses them as a basis for drawings and tapestries.
In the ‘Collective Memory’ exhibition, Rachael Jablo shows part of her ‘Hysteria’ series of works, which the artist conceived as a storytelling collage project. The artworks address intimate medical diagnoses, such as experiences with pelvic dysfunction. Jablo’s portraits of pelvic organs fit firmly into social practice. For her collages, the artist uses the technique of cameraless photography and mounts the results on cut-out sheet metal backgrounds. These are presented in gilded, laser-cut Plexiglass frames.
Jablo’s work has recently been shown at the Kaos Collage Festival and the Museum of Photography in Braunschweig. Jablo’s work has been recognized with articles in newspapers such as Ever-Emerging Magazine, Lensculture, WNYC’s The Takeaway, and Migraine Magazine. Her book ‘My days of losing words’ was published by Kehrer Verlag in 2013, and her current series of works, ‘The Hysteria Project,’ was awarded a new start culture grant for innovative art in 2021.
The idea of the object-like is also of interest to the artist Kirstin Rabe, who since 2012 has mainly focused on the production of three-dimensional paper images. Rabe regards paper as a fragile material by which to sense its particular materiality. The artist finds the prerequisites for developing her formal language in the feel of the material and in the meditative process of paper production itself. Her works of art are created in different work phases by forming layered and laced reliefs. In this regard, Rabe strives to visualize elementary phenomena, such as light, colour, and texture. She was lastingly inspired by the work of Yves Klein, which focuses on the visual power of monochrome in the sense of monochrome painting.

Installation view, “Collective Memory”, 2022, PopUp Store of Artspring Berlin Kirstin Rabe was born in Hamburg in 1971 and initially studied surveying at the University of Applied Sciences in Hamburg. After spending several years in South Korea, this graduate engineer turned to art in 2007 and completed an academic art degree in Berlin. She is a member of BBK Brandenburg, VBK Berlin, and IAPMA (International Association of Hand Papermakers and Paper Artists). As such, Rabe’s work is represented in public and private collections worldwide.
Paper, light, and colour are also the main research areas of Katja Eminusk. Eminusk studied physics and works in the field of colour field painting. She uses grids in the form of circles, triangles, rectangles, and stripes in her artwork. In the grid, colour succeeds in developing maximum energy and liveliness because a vibrant colour presence permeates the grid.
Katja Eminusk received a grant from the Deutscher Künstlerbund in 2022. Furthermore, she was funded by the Hessian Cultural Foundation in 2020. Her works are in the collection of the Oberhessischen Museum in Giessen.
The Chilean-born painter Carla Faché and the Finnish-German artist Carita Schmidt examine the sensuality and luminosity of colour in abstract paintings. Both artists deal with the juxtaposition of sensor technology and layering and psychologically stage their works in the exhibition space.

Installation view, “Collective Memory”, 2022, PopUp Store of Artspring Berlin In art history, Carita Schmidt finds inspiration in the work of Vincent Van Gogh and, at the same time, in the performances of contemporary artist, Marina Abramović.
Schmidt’s approach is like a walk through different worlds, with the echo of movements becoming visible as contoured areas of colour. The artist plays with the principles of perceptual psychology and combines visual and aural perception. She tries to merge drawing and painting, which allows her to create multidimensional pictorial worlds. Her preferred materials are pen, ink, acrylic, and oil on paper and canvas.
Carita Schmidt studied with Björn Lövin and received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Swedish Institute of Dramatic Art in Stockholm, Sweden. She has participated in more than 80 solo and group exhibitions worldwide and has been an artist in residence at the Vermont Studio Center. In addition, she received the Silver Award for contemporary painting in the Artfolio competition in 2021. Her paintings are represented in collections such as Graphotek Berlin, Pinakothek Nico Lazaridi, Ptolemaida Art Museum, and the Vafopoulio Cultural Center of Thessaloniki.
Carla Faché was born in Chile in 1977 and has lived and worked in the Miami art scene in the USA for many years. Her current exhibitions include group presentations at the Fondazione Giorgio Cini di Venezia, the Florida Museum for Women Artists, and the art association Locus Projects Miami. The artists also exhibited their large-scale abstract paintings at the Invisible Dog Art Center, New York; at the Armory Art Center, Palm Beach; at the Cambridge Art Association, Boston; and at the All-Media Juried Biennial at the Hollywood Center for the Arts and Culture.
Faché’s work has been featured in many publications, including Studio Visit Magazine. Her work is included in important private and corporate collections, and since 2011, she has worked in the Fountainhead Residency Studio Program in Florida.
Anne Wölk and Henrieke Ribbe are also painters but work in the tradition of representational painting. In the ‘Collective Memory’ exhibition, Ribbe shows portraits of female scientists who have received the Nobel Prize. Like Alice Neel, whom she admires, the portrait painter prefers to paint in oil on canvas to show respect for her subjects. Her small-format paintings thrive on quick brushstrokes and are reminiscent of Elizabeth Peyton’s portraits in their precision and spontaneity. Henrieke Ribbe studied at the HFBK Hamburg with Werner Büttner and at the Spatens Art Academy in Oslo. Since 2004, she has been part of the ‘3 Hamburger Frauen artist collective’. She was a scholarship holder of the artists’ project Goldrausch and an artist in residence at the artists’ houses in Worpswede. In 2005, her work was awarded the Karl-Heinz-Dietze prize for painting. Her works are exhibited and collected internationally.
In contrast to Henrieke Ribbe, Anne Wölk worked for many months on her astronomical star landscapes. With her pictures, the Berlin artist abducts us into the vastness of space and takes us on a journey that points far beyond the planets, moons, and asteroids of our solar system. Wölk’s works fascinate with their romantic interpretation of a bizarre strangeness and the painterly interpretation of the deep light of our vast universe. Her interstellar landscapes of nebulae and galaxy clusters are in the tradition of the American painter Vija Celmins. In contemporary art, her works also tie in with the three-dimensional drawings of Russel Crotty.
Anne Wölk studied at the Kunsthochschule Berlin-Weissensee with Katharina Grosse and Antje Majewski and at the Chelsea College of Art and Design in London. The artist was a scholarship holder of the Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes, the Stiftung Kunstfonds Bonn. In 2013, she received the Category Award in the competition ‘Art Takes Paris’, initiated by See.me New York. Wölk’s works have been exhibited worldwide and are represented in collections such as the Proje 4L Elgiz Museum Contemporary of Art, the Czong Institute for Contemporary Art (CICA), and the Tirana Art Gallery Museum Albania.
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Text in German:
„Collective Memory“12.12. -29.12.2022
PopUp Store Schönhauser Allee Arcaden
Artspring Festival Ausstellungsraum
3. Etage, Schönhauser Allee 80, 10439 BerlinBlicken wir auf die Kunst im Jetzt, so scheint es mühelos möglich, zeitgenössische Kunstwerke über den Augenblick hinaus, in einem großen kausalen Zusammenhang zu verstehen. Denn, die Kunsthistorie versucht sich unentwegt an einer Deutung und Zuordnung von Kunstwerken zu Epochenstilen und Kunstrichtungen.
Das Gedächtnis der Kunst ist uferlos. Kunstschaffende halten die Kunstwelt der Gegenwart mit Zitaten aus der Vergangenheit in Atem. Der Kontext, in dem KünstlerInnen täglich arbeiten und Ihre Kunstwerke schaffen, bildet Ihr geistiges Zuhause. Somit ist das geistige Zuhause einer Generation durchdrungen von Erinnerungen und geteiltem Wissen. Die sich daraus bildende Ästhetik dominiert das kulturelle Gedächtnis der Kunstschaffenden, umfasst aber auch die Erwartungen Ihres Publikums.
Mit welchen Strategien gehen KünstlerInnen dabei vor und was unterscheidet das individuelle vom kollektiven Gedächtnis? Wie drückt sich das gemeinsame Erinnern in den Kunstwerken aus und wie wichtig ist es für KünstlerInnen zu einer Gruppe von anderen dazuzugehören?
Die Ausstellung „Collective Memory“ bezieht sich auf das Gedächtnis der Kunst und ist die letzte Präsentation im Rahmen des Jahresprogramms 2022, im PopUp Store des Artspring Festivals. Die KünstlerInnen der Ausstellung untersuchen auf unterschiedlichste Weise die Wechselwirkungen zwischen Künstlerpositionen. Die ausgestellten Bilder und Objekte repräsentieren das einzigartige Zusammenspiel von malerischen, fotografischen und bildhauerischen Fragestellungen in der zeitgenössischen Kunst. Die Geburtsländer der beteiligten KünstlerInnen scheinen auf den ersten Blick weit von einer entfernt zu sein, denn sie verteilen sich auf mehrere Kontinente. Doch gerade durch internationale Stipendien-und Ausbildungsprogramme wird eine gemeinsame Ästhetik sichtbar, die sich durch Jahrzehnte des globalen Austauschs entwickelt hat. Die jeweiligen Künstlerpositionen beziehen sich auf frühere Generationen und versuchen die Vergangenheit in der Gegenwart mitzudenken. Dabei ist der Prozess des Zitierens ein wesentlicher Bestandteil und wird durch das Fortführen und Ergänzen von bereits bestehenden Ideen charakterisiert. In diesem Sinne arbeiten alle Ausstellenden mit und am zukünftigen „kollektiven Gedächtnis“ einer Generation. Die Ausstellung bietet ein breites Angebot an internationalen Positionen und spannenden Entdeckungen. Im Sinne des Kollektiven Gedächtnisses verwandelt sich der Projektraum zu einem Kulminationspunkt für Begegnungen zwischen außergewöhnliche Kunstobjekten und zu einem Ort für Teilhabe und Austausch.
Arbeiten von folgenden KünstlerInnen sind in der Ausstellung „Collective Memory“ zu sehen:
Katja Eminusk, Carla Faché, Rachael Jablo, Joanna Mortreux, Kirstin Rabe, Henrieke Ribbe, Carita Schmidt, Maria Volokhova, Anne Wölk
Die Ausstellung wurde von Anne Wölk kuratiert.
Zu den KünstlerInnen:
Die Objekte von Joanna Mortreux und Maria Volokhova haben Bildhauerische Fragen zum Inhalt. Die KünstlerInnen zitieren aus der Formensprache der Vergangenheit und setzen sich mit der Tradition des Keramik-Kunsthandwerks auseinander. Mortreux und Volokhova verbindet die Liebe zu Tonerde, welche seit Jahrtausenden von Menschen verwendet wird. Vielleicht findet man deshalb vielfältige Referenzen zu Artefakten aus Antiken Sammlungen bei beiden KünstlerInnen. Maria Volokhova hat über die Beschäftigung mit Keramik zum Werkstoff Porzellan gefunden. Porzellan bietet Ihr die Möglichkeit, den Widerspruch zwischen ästhetischer Anziehung und Abstoßung zu erforschen. Den besonderen Glanz der Oberfläche setzt sie in Kontrast zur Zerbrechlichkeit des Materials. In Ihren Werkgruppen finden sich Bezüge zu Skulpturen der klassischen Moderne, wie zum Beispiel Peter Agostonis eleganter weißer Plastik „Sommerwolken“ (1963) oder die totemhafte Figur „die rosa Kindergeburt“ (1964) von Niki de Saint-Phalle. Die scheinbar archaischen Formen von Niki de Saint-Phalle hallen auch im Werk von Joanna Mortreux wieder, die seit Ihrer Teilnahme am Berliner Artist in Residence Programm „Takt“ im Jahr 2013 in der Hauptstadt lebt und arbeitet. Die australische Künstlerin erhielt verschiedene Auszeichnungen, unter anderem das „Dr. Wendy Gers Ceramics Coach Stipendium“. Mortreux hat bis zum Jahr 2008 Freie Kunst am Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in Australien studiert und nimmt seither an internationalen Ausstellungen teil.
Maria Volokhova kam hingegen bereits als Teenager aus der Ukraine nach Deutschland und studierte Malerei and der Burg Giebichenstein Halle. Ihre Studien vertiefte sie in Bologna, Italien und Athens, Ohio, USA. Sie studierte zusätzlich zwei Jahre im Fachbereich Keramik an der Tokio Art University Japan und wurde Stipendiatin des renommierten Monbukagakusho Scholarship Programms. Maria Volokhova erhielt 2016 den NASPA Preis für Keramik und stellte Ihre Werke unter anderem in der James Simon Galerie auf der Museumsinsel in Berlin Mitte aus. Ihre Arbeiten sind in verschiedenenen öffentlichen Sammlungen vertreten, zum Beispiel im Kunstgewerbemuseum Berlin und in der Sammlung des Stadtmuseums Berlin.
Das Prinzip der Collage und des Zitats stehen auch für Rachael Jablo im Vordergrund. Ihre Werke zeigen Einflüsse von KünstlerInnen, wie zum Beispiel Judy Chicago, deren „Birth Project“ zu Geburtserfahrungen, Erlebnisberichte dokumentiert und diese als Grundlage für Zeichnungen und Wandteppiche weiter verwendet.
In der Ausstellung „Collective Memory“ zeigt Rachael Jablo einen Teil ihrer „Hysterie“ Werkserie, welche die Künstlerin als Storytelling-Collage-Projekt konzipiert hat. Die Kunstwerke thematisieren intime medizinische Diagnosen, zum Beispiel Erfahrungen mit Beckenfunktionsstörungen. Jablos Porträts von Beckenorganen fügt sich fest in den Bereich der sozialen Praxis ein. Für ihre Collagen verwendet die Künstlerin die Technik einer kameralosen Fotografie und montiert die Ergebnisse auf ausgeschnittene Metallblatthintergründe. Diese werden in vergoldeten, lasergeschnittenen Plexiglasrahmen präsentiert.
Rachael Jablos Arbeiten wurden kürzlich auf dem Kaos Collage Festival und im Museum für Fotographie in Braunschweig gezeigt. Jablos Werk wurde mit Artikeln in Zeitungen, wie dem Ever-Emerging Magazine, dem Lensculture, dem WNYC’s The Takeaway und im Migraine Magazine gewürdigt. Ihr Buch „My days of lossing words“ erschien 2013 im Kehrer Verlag und ihre aktuelle Werkserie „The Hysteria Project“ wurde 2021 mit einem Neustart Kultur Stipendium für Innovative Kunst ausgezeichnet.
Die Idee des Objekthaften interessiert auch die Künstlerin Kirstin Rabe, die sich seit 2012 überwiegend mit der Herstellung von dreidimensionalen Papierbildern beschäftigt. Rabe betrachtet Papier als fragilen Werkstoff, mit der Intention, dessen besondere Materialität zu erspüren. Die Voraussetzungen für die Entwicklung Ihrer Formensprache findet die Künstlerin in der Haptik des Materials und im meditativen Prozess der Papierherstellung selbst. In unterschiedlichen Arbeitsphasen entstehen Ihre Kunstwerke, die sich zu geschichteten und geschnürten Reliefs formen. In dieser Hinsicht strebt Rabe an, elementare Phänomene wie Licht, Farbe und Textur zu visualisieren. Nachhaltig hat sie das Werk von Yves Klein inspiriert, welches sich auf die visuelle Kraft von Einfarbigkeit, im Sinne von monochromer Malerei, fokussiert.
Die Künstlerin wurde 1971 in Hamburg geboren und studierte zunächst Vermessungswesen an der Fachhochschule in Hamburg. Nach einem mehrjährigen Aufenthalt in Südkorea, ging die diplomierte Ingenieurin 2007 den Weg zur Kunst und absolvierte ein akademisches Kunststudium in Berlin. Kirstin Rabe ist Mitglied im BBK Brandenburg, im VBK Berlin und bei IAPMA (International Assoziation of Hand Papermakers and Paper Artists). Ihre Arbeiten sind in öffentlichen und privaten Sammlungen weltweit vertreten.
Papier, Licht und Farbe sind auch die Forschungsschwerpunkte von Katja Eminusk. Sie ist studierte Physikerin und arbeitet im Bereich der Farbfeldmalerei. In Ihren Kunstwerken nutzt sie Raster in Form von Kreisen, Dreiecken, Rechtecken und Streifen. Im Raster gelingt es Farbe eine maximale Energie und Lebendigkeit zu entfalten, denn das Gitter wird als Ganzes von einer vibrierenden Farbpräsenz durchdrungen.
Katja Eminusk erhielt 2022 ein Stipendium des Deutscher Künstlerbundes. und wurde 2020 durch die Hessische Kulturstiftung gefördert. Ihre Werke sind in der Sammlung des
Oberhessischen Museums in Gießen vertreten.
Die in Chile geborene Malerin Carla Faché und die finnisch-deutsche Künstlerin Carita Schmidt untersuchen in der abstrakten Malerei die Sinnlichkeit und Leuchtkraft von Farbe. Beide Künstlerinnen beschäftigen sich mit der Gegenüberstellung von Sensorik und Schichtung und inszenieren Ihre Werke auf psychologische Weise im Ausstellungsraum.
In der Kunstgeschichte findet Carita Schmidt Inspiration im Werk von Vincent Van Gogh und gleichzeitig in den Performances der zeitgenössischen Künstlerin Marina Abramović.
Schmidts Herangehensweise gleicht einem Spaziergang durch unterschiedliche Welten, wobei das Echo von Bewegungen, als konturierte Farbflächen sichtbar werden. Die Künstlerin spielt mit Prinzipien der Wahrnehmungspsychologie und verbindet den Hörsinns mit visuellen Wahrnehmungen. Sie versucht Zeichnung und Malerei miteinander zu verschmelzen, wodurch ihr multidimensionale Bildwelten gelingen. Ihre bevorzugten Materialien sind Fineliner, Tusche, Acryl und Öl auf Papier und Leinwand.
Carita Schmidt studierte bei Björn Lövin und erhielt einen Bachelor of Fine Arts vom Swedish Institute of Dramatic Arts in Stockholm in Schweden. Sie nahm an mehr als 80 Einzel-und Gruppenausstellungen weltweit teil und war „Artist in Residence“ im Vermont Studio Center. Zusätzlich erhielt sie den Silver Award für zeitgenössische Malerei des Artfolio Wettbewerbs 2021. Ihre Bilder sind in Sammlungen, wie der Graphotek Berlin, der Pinakothek Nico Lazaridi, dem Kunstmuseum Ptolemaida und dem Vafopoulio Art-Center Thessaloniki vertreten.
Carla Faché wurde 1977 in Chile geboren und lebt und arbeitet seit vielen Jahren in der Kunstszene von Miami in den USA. Zu ihren aktuellen Ausstellungen gehören Gruppenpräsentationen in der Fondazione Giorgio Cini di Venezia im Florida Museum for Women Artists und im Kunstverein Locus Projects Miami. Außerdem hat die Künstlerinnen ihre großformatige abstrakte Malerei im Invisible Dog Art Center, New York; im Armory Art Center, Palm Beach; in der Cambridge Art Association, Boston und in der All-Media Juried Biennale im Kunst- und Kulturzentrum von Hollywood gezeigt.
Fachés Arbeiten wurden in vielen Publikationen besprochen, unter anderem im Studio Visit Magazine. Ihre Werke sind in wichtigen Privat- und Unternehmenssammlungen enthalten und seit 2011 arbeitet sie im Fountainhead Residency Studio Program in Florida.
Anne Wölk und Henrieke Ribbe sind ebenfalls MalerInnen, arbeiten aber in der Tradition der gegenständlichen Malerei. Ribbe zeigt in der Ausstellung „Collective Memory“ Porträts von Wissenschaftlerinnen, die den Nobelpreis erhalten haben. Die Porträtmalerin bevorzugt es, wie die von ihr verehrte Alice Neel, in Öl auf Leinwand zu malen, um ihren Sujets den nötigen Respekt zu erweisen. Ihre kleinformatigen Malereien leben vom flüchtigen Pinselstrich und erinnern in Ihrer Präzision und Spontanität auch an die Porträts von Elizabeth Peyton. Henrieke Ribbe hat an der HFBK Hamburg bei Werner Büttner und an der Spatens Kunstakademie Oslo studiert. Seit 2004 ist sie Teil des Künstlerkollektivs „3 Hamburger Frauen“. Sie war Stipendiatin des Künstlerinnenprojekts Goldrausch und Artist in Residence in den Künstlerhäusern Worpswede. 2005 wurde ihr Werk mit dem Karl-Heinz-Dietze Preis für Malerei ausgezeichnet. Ihre Werke werden International ausgestellt und gesammelt.
Anne Wölk arbeitet, im Gegensatz zu Henrieke Ribbe, viele Monate an ihren astronomischen Sternlandschaften. Mit ihren Bildern entführt uns die Berliner Künstlerin in die Weiten des Weltraums und nimmt uns mit auf eine Reise, die weit über die Planeten, Monde und Asteroiden unseres Sonnensystems hinausweist. Eingehüllt in das Tiefenlicht unseres riesigen Universums, faszinieren Wölk’s Werke durch Ihre romantische Interpretation einer bizarren Fremdartigkeit. Ihre interstellaren Landschaften von Nebeln und Galaxienhaufen stehen in der Tradition der amerikanischen Malerin Vija Celmins . In der Gegenwartskunst knüpfen Ihre Werke ebenfalls an die dreidimensionalen Zeichnungen von Russel Crotty an.
Anne Wölk hat an der Kunsthochschule Berlin-Weissensee bei Katharina Grosse und Antje Majewski und am Chelsea College of Art and Design in London studiert. Die Künstlerin war Stipendiatin der Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes, der Stiftung Kunstfonds Bonn und erhielt 2013 den Category Award im Wettbewerb ‘Art Takes Paris’, initiiert von see.me New York. Wölk´s Werke wurden weltweit ausgestellt und sind in Sammlungen, wie dem Proje 4L Elgiz Museum Contemporary of Art, dem Czong Institute for Contemporary Art (CICA) und dem Tirana Art Gallery Museum Albanien vertreten.
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XMAS KunstKlatsch
Christmas market at Studio Henrike Ribbe
Nibbling on cookies, sippin’ hot beverages, smell of orange and pine needles in the air, makes us forget the cold and dark days.
Find cute presents for everyone in the family: 15 artists have been knitting, sewing, painting, drawing for this advent event, there is going to be jewelry, toys, art, and other sustainable products made with love.
Can’t wait to see you there!

Saturday + Sunday, Dec 3/4, 2-6 pm in the studio of Henrike Ribbe,
Address: Prenzlauer Allee 10, 10405 Berlin
artist list: Gabi Blum, Ergül Cengiz, Anda Corrie, Katharina Forster, Bettina Garner, Andrea Golla, Monika Jarecka, Katia Keli, Rani Le Prince, Mimi McGarry, Alice Münch, Henrike Ribbe, Doris Sprengel, Kathrin Wolf, Anne Wölk
Flyer XMAsKunstKlatsch, Copyright: Studio Henrieke Ribbe

Comet Landscape, 2020, 18 x 13 cm, pencil on paper, sold
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The People’s Choice Award “Beton Fuchs”
Art Prize Beton Fuchs at Galerie M, Project space, Marzahner Promenade 46, 12627 Berlin.
Opening: 12.11.2022 6 pm
The exhibition will run from 12.11. 2022 – 18.01.2023

Copyright: Photo Credit Wolfgang Strack
You can vote for your favorite work a month-long from now. The award ceremony for the 1st Marzahn People Choice Award will be on December 18, 2022.
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Tirana International Biennial of Graphic Arts
Opening of the first edition of Tirana International Biennale of Graphic Arts.
25th October 7pm at Tirana Art Gallery
copyright by Tirana Art Gallery 2022
The Tirana Art Gallery is pleased to announce the first edition of the “Tirana International Biennale of Graphic Arts.” From October 25 to November 25, the exhibition opens at the Tirana Art Gallery & the National Historical Museum in Tirana. The event presents international artists who work in different Graphic Arts mediums, and the idea is to promote print art from around the World. By organizing the International Biennale, the gallery wants to build a unique global platform for cultural exchange.
The Biennale will be held under the patronage of the Ministry of Culture of Albania, and the Tirana Art Gallery is an institution associated with the Municipality of the capital.
The curatorial committee was Beste Gursu (Turkey), Helidon Haliti (Albania, and Zake Prelvukaj (Kosovo). They have decided to select the artists in a two-staged selection process. In the first step, they invited local artists, and during the second phase, they chose international artists through an international Open Call.address:
Galeria e Artit Tiranë
Rruga. Kavajes, Godina e Prefektures Tirane
Kati. 1, Zip Code. 1001, Tirana, Albaniamore info:
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100072534483088
https://gat.tirana.al
My artwork “Nights over Finnland” becomes part of the collection of the Tirana Art Gallery Museum in Albania. My linocut was selected by the Biennale Jury (Beste Gursu (Turkey), Helidon Haliti (Albania, and Zake Prelvukaj (Kosovo).
get a framed Linocut Print from Singulart Gallery Paris:
link to purchse: https://www.singulart.com/en/artworks/anne-wölk-nights-over-finland-nächte-über-finnland–1589010
copyright by Tirana Art Gallery 2022
Press release:
The Graphics Biennale is an important event in the year 2022 in Tirana, organized for the first time in Albania. The vision of the Tirana Art Gallery is to present an extraordinary group show with artists from all over the world. More than 400 works will be exhibited at the GAT halls starting from October 25, where you will all have the opportunity to experience the beautiful emotions of the upcoming opening and a unique exhibition. Many artworks will become part of the GAT fund, thanks to the artists who send their graphic prints to Albania!
We are grateful and proud that with a detailed curated biennale, the name of our country will be able to be mentioned at the same levels as other great galleries in Europe!

copyright by Tirana Art Gallery 2022
artist list:
Arben Koliqi, Blegina Hasko Bezo, Dorina Arapi, Dritan Thoma, Holta Roci Arapi, Hajdar Danjolli, Jozita Shkreli, Kamela Belshaku, Merita Selimi, Mikel Temo, Emanuel Sali Koka, Lindita Zeneli Marku, Nasuf Myftari, Nikolin Nenshati, Olsen Gripshi, Pellumb Bylyku, Senad Xhexhovi, Suela Qemali, Umberto Pali, Eniela Vevecka, Eduart Karaj, Lindita Dedukaj, Alessia Podgorica, Anjeza Mema, Anxhela Pipero, Arbi Zhabjaku, Arlind Perkeqi, Aura Pali, Bruk Velo, Denisa Brahimi, Denisa Paho, Edison Bregu, Edison Pirani, Egi Pipero, Elisa Koceku, Elsaid Bandula, Ergi Bega, Ernia Isufi, Ilma Gega, Jasina Murati, Juli Miftari, Kejda Milo, Klodiana Docaj, Klejda Hysenaj, Klodjana Mirashi, Mateo Mosho, Olta Canka, Paola Myftari, Rabie Collaku & Silvi Nadufi, Rajmonda Dardha, Rei Kercova, Sibel Nimani, Skeralda Mashku, Sindi Thatori, Visar Piranaj, Xhoel Muca, Joseph Madisia, Judy Woodborne,
Bernhard Cociancig, Inge Stornig, Traude Pirker, Julia Sheveldina,
Liliana Esteban, Alejandra Coirini, Monika Golla, Patricia Iwes Negreia, Floki Gauvry, Guillermo Velásquez, Ana Maria Giuffrida, Marsia Blanca Saccomano, Silvana Blosbalg, Gabriel Bude, Silvia Burruezo, Flavio Man, Alberto Bonus, Edwin García Moldonando, Fernando Alvarez, Maria Lucia Ribeiro, Thiago Modesto, Stanislav Bojankov, Rossen Stanoev, Martin R. Baeyens, Frédéric Wim, Md Khalequz Zaman, Nityananda Gaine, Muslim Mia, Nikola Kasterovic, Guy Lengevin, Danny Lam, Patricia Gaspar, Alex Thomson, Alfred Krupa, Katerina Vaclavkova, Monique Van Haasteren, Iris van Lavieren, Hans Overliet, Bert Hemsteede, Deák Németh Mária, Csaba Pal, Gyula Kohegyi, Zoltan Csomos, Lam Yuk Lin, Victor Lipkin, Malgorzata Chomicz, Sandro Chinellato, Benna Gafan Maris, Antonella Giovampietro, Giuseppe Vigolo, Marcela Miranda, Lorenzo Gori, Daniela Savini, Miriana Pino, Alberto Balletti, Fiorita Ragazzino, Haoyi Jiang, Elisa Peillizzari, Valeria Luccioni, Eleonora Del Giudice, Najsa Dishnica, Guendalina Cristiano, Jetmira Kraja, Sofi Haykazuni, Wang Hanhao, Yusuf Yusuf, Anjur Codmolo, Nuton Kishar Nishad, Swapnesh Vaigankar, Meghna Devburm, Karuna Vishnu Maplekar, Ankur Kumar, Alka Chavda, Ranju Kumari, Ashish Deshmukh, Suguresh Sultanpur, Shweta Urane, Sagar Kondaval, Dnyaneshwar Randhai, Neetu Gaikwad, Jayant Sharma, Anamitra Das, Somnath Sarkar, Adarsh Palandi, Ahmet Metis, Avni Xh Behluli, Qamil Llapashtica, Denis Gashi, Tafil Peci Boletini, Albabiona Vitia, Adriana Nimani Kutllovci, Ermira Rexhepi, Krenare Shala, Jelena Jovancov, Olga Beloborodova, Lada Uchaeva, Musa Prelvukaj, Ioulia Akhmadeeva, Carla Ibarra, Paul Lozano, Raul Cabelo, Gabriela Morales Cruz, Adolfo Angel Ruiz, Silvia Neiger, Edgar Ibarra Luna, Nancy Valdez, Diana Moreno, Alejandro Juarez Arcos, Marie Jacqueline Juarez Arcos, Victor Manuel Hernandez Castilletes-Lo, Goran Ristovski, Nadezda Selheim, Khristenko Vladislav, Kosiak Kateryną, Marianna Maslova, Tationa Kolesnykova, Patricia Gaspar, Ildon Yakhim, Valentyna Ariepieva, Pablo Ferrari, Valerie Syposz, Pablo Caviedes, Wang Nanhao, Vitae Etsuko Naito, Taichi Kodama, Masaaki Sugita, Dan Obana, Haruko Cho, Kevin Flores Altuna, Irina Gonzales, Nelson Flores, Filip Wierzbicki, Ana Trojanowska, Adam Czech, Magda Split, Henryk Królikowi, Tomasz Winiarski, Joanna Paljocha, Agata Perzynska, Anna Kodz, Łukasz Koniuszy, Vinicius Libardoni, Alicja Habisiak-Matczak, Marcin Bialas, Majką Dokudowicz, Martyną Rzepecka, Paulina Bobak, Mala Waseem, Semejan E. Felicia, Ovidiu Petca, Elena Drāgulelei Dumitru, Mihai Voicu, Roxana Niculae, Dragoș Răzvan-Petrisor, Sandu Vasile, Adrian Sandu, Vasile Adrian, Niolae Constantinescu, Elena Safta, Ioana Bartha, Miulescu Sarah Raluca, Costin Brateanu, Diana Andrescu, Marilena Murariu, Florin Gradinaru, Tutuianu Gheorghe, Lucia Puscasu, Lidia Corladi, Constantinescu Marianna, Oana Mazarache, Gu Kexin, Liu Zhenjing, Yu Xiaodong, Hong Shan, Cui Xiaohua, Liu Fu, Zhang Minjie, Jin Yun, Fang Ju Liu, Qian Zhang, Chiang YuHsuan, Lan Chin Lee, Hsi-Ying Wang, Hannah Shihhan Wang, Tania Chou, Eman Osama, Fatma Adel, Eve Eesmaa, Marjan ZahedKindersley, Julian Walker, Marie Maca’n, Stefania Patrikiou, Naustika Papatheodoroeu, Gianna Akexopoulou, Panis Dimitrios, Ana Vakili, Matias Piantanida-Kobolder, Elizaveta Ostapenko, Elisabeth Kirschbaum, Julia Ludwig, Anne Wölk, Lorenzo Gori Flavio Agulera, Yolanda Garrafales Ferreiro, Elisabeth Kinschbaw, Barbara Shunyi, Ana Bellido Zambr, Martin Sevcovic, Makar Robert, Patrik Sevcik, Peter Valiska-Timecko, Vesna Filipovic, Sejma Fere, Magdolna Balla, Miroslav Mandic, Suliaeva Margarita, Jovana Djordevic, Mikael Kihlman, Tibor Jaeger, Solveig Lehtonen, Alja Kosar, Lim Guin Lim, Ilyejeong Kwon, Taweechab Pinthog, Kuntida Wonjongkam, Surasak Sormsena, Keizan Kibar, Hatice Camtepe, Derya Avci, Thy Nguyen, Sabine Amstad, Otto Heigal -
Art Eindhoven 2023
After the successful eight edition of Art Eindhoven 2022 the director Els van Lent is looking forward to the edition of 2023 on 4 and 5 February.

High level art in the Klokgebouw!


copyright Art Eindhoven The balloting committee consisting of Paulo Martino (director of Museum Van Bommel van Dam), Olga Coolen (director Philips Museum) and Peter Buisman have selected my paintings out of 172 entries for the upcoming Art Eindhoven 2023. I will have a Solo-Presentation in one booth. The selected artists will exhibit their work in the Klokgebouw, an impressive Philips’ industrial heritage building. Every year many art lovers, collectors and buyers visit this high level Art Fair. Here you can read news about the upcoming show:www.arteindhoven.nl
artist list:
Veronica Berkvens, Swanica Ligtenberg, Inge van den Hoven, Linda van der Toorn, Frank Vanhooren, Olga Ottenheijm, Brighart, Jutta Kabelitz, exto, Monique Kroes, George Gheorghe, Kees van den Boogaart, Ulf Enhörning, Roger Wanrooij, Ebby Hauser, Peter Janssen, Ivan Iliev, Hendrik Gheerardyn, Agnes Oolthuis, Bart Ocket, Tatiana An, Erik van Vugt, Erna Böhre, Elia Alunni, Dorette Gilling, Kinga Wieczorek, Henny Borra, Dorota Roszkowska – doroART, Frank Heijnen, Judy Hooymeyer, Marcelle van der Leeuw, Eric Zilverberg, Rolf Weijburg, Marco Breur, Nicolaas Meijboom, Ruben Stallinga, Joost Tholens, Menke Bol, Marlon Groot Zevert, Dina Furrer, Tessy Willems, Willem van Krieken, Annelies van Tetering, Sophie Teunissen, Constanza Mulder, Gonnie Paul, Maarten Versteeg, Jolanda van Hattum, Anni van Dal, Monica de Wit, Studio AterlAt, Erik Simons, Anne Wölk, Hannah Blom, Danai Fuengshunut, Majbrit Lund, Riny van As, Edwin Smet, Caroline Kieboom, Lisette Janssen, Wil Westerweel, Sarina Latumahina, MARINAbags, Bonno Blaauw, Frank Heijnen, Giselle Weegels, Willem Berkers, Riki Rooijakkers, Erik Klein Schiphorst, Paul Breddels, Simona Vergani, Têtêvi Koffi, Jan Willem Davids, Tanja ten Wolde, Els Wydaeghe, Svanhilde Zuidhoek, Ronit Cohen, Ludo Knaepkens, Tali Farchi-van der Wouden, Marian Marchal, Johanna van der Woude, Herbert Immer Willems, Wim Kannekens, Sarah van Rossem, Ilona Bal, Maggia Swets, Peter van Tilburg, Marianne Berenschot, Hongyun He, Mark RijkersIf you have any questions send an email to: info@arteindhoven.nl
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ArtEindhoven/

copyright Art Eindhoven -
Round Table 5 Berlin / Charity Art Auction 2022

The committee of Round Table 5 selected my painting „Enrosadira” for their upcoming art auction. The Charity show is an in-person Live Auction Event. Artists whose works are selected will be included in a pop-up exhibition at the Hardenberg-Atrium of the Goldberger Saal —on view November 25, 2022—and be featured prominently in an Art Auction catalog. The event draws a large audience of new and seasoned art collectors.
More info:
https://rt5.de
Enrosadira, 2021, 30 x 40 cm, oil on canvas All proceeds from Round table 5 sales will benefit the
Eastend Berlin e.V.; Holzkirche e.V.; Round-Table School of Hope e.V.; Elisabethstift Berlin; Statthaus Böcklerpark; BeeBob Hilft e.V.; Fruchtalarm; KiTa-Pateaddress:
Ludwig-Erhard-Haus
Hardenberg-Atrium des Goldberger Saals
Fasanenstraße 85
10623 Berlin
Preview 6.30 pm
The auction starts at 7 pm on November 25, 2022
artist list:
Norbert Bayer | Wiebke Becker | Sarah Bender-Kronberg | Frauke Bergemann | Joseph Broghammer | Tina Buchholtz | Ben Cottrell | Mattia Cozzio | Kerstin Dzewior | Mareike Felsch | Oskar Ferschke | Anna Fiegen | Matthias Fitz | Elfi Fröhlich | Janine Gerber | Barbara Haag | Sabine Herrmann | Michael Jastram | Manzur Kargar | Silke Eva Kästner | Klaus Killisch | Beate Köhne | Anett Lau | Julia Ludwig | Christin Lutze | Doris Marten | McLOVLA | Mikos Meininger | Sara Möbius | Sibylle Möndel | Uwe Mühlhäußer / DAN | Robert Niemann | Stephanie Nückel | Lilla von Puttkamer | Marzia Orate | Fulvio de Pellegrin | Ines Pröve | Eva Reiber | Jakob Roepke | Michael H. Rohde | Mathias Roloff | Victoria Rosenman | Christian Rothmann | Michael Sachse | Eckart F. G. Schadt | Susanne Schirdewahn | Constantin Schroeder | Antony Sojka | Wanda Stang | Heinz Stoewer | Björn Streeck | Songwen Sun-von Berg | Ramona Taterra | Enzo Tedeschi | Brigitte Waldach | Robert Weber | Christof Wegner | Anne Wölk | Jan Ziegler -
Dead Darlings Amsterdam
DD#1 5: Issue! 2
The auction will take place on July 31st at Vrij Paleis in Amsterdam’s city center. All works will be on display from July 29th onwards.
address: Vrij Paleis, Paleisstraat 107, 1012 ZL Amsterdam, the Netherlands
catalogue available here or at:
https://deaddarlings.nl/about/
Auction Dead Darlings, copyright Kyle Tryhorn (on Instagram: @gingerhorn) 
Auction Dead Darlings, copyright Kyle Tryhorn (on Instagram: @gingerhorn) 
Artist list: Alena Alexandrova, Alex Fischer, Alexandra Centmayer, Anika Schwarzlose, Annabel Howland, Anne Wölk, Anne-Laure Ruffin, Anneke Hymmen, Aquin Copier, Barbara Rink, Baukje Spaltro, Benny van der Plank, Brent Dahl, Camp Delgado Aguilera, Chris Rijk, Corinna Rosteck, Desiree Tazelaar, Eva Schippers, Franziska Wicke, Friederike Hammann, Gunilla Jähnichen, Hugo Rocci, Hui Ma, Itamar Heifetz, Jean-Philippe Pausier, Jessie Yingying Gong, Joep Neefjes, Johannes Schwartz, Joseph Miceli, Kyle Tryhorn, Lina Ozerkina, Lorena van Bunningen, Maria Barnas, Markus Willeke, Mel Chan, Melanie Bonajo, Melanie Ouwehand, Miklos Gaál, Noa Giniger, Orna Wertman, Peter Spaans, PJ Bruyniks, Qiushi Zhang, Rika Maja Duevel, Robert Pennekamp, Shushanik Droshakiryan, Sjoerd Tim, Soji Shimizu, Sonią Mangiapane, Svenja Kaufmann, Thomas Nondh Jansen, Tzvika Gutter, Vita Buivid

Auction Dead Darlings, copyright Kyle Tryhorn (on Instagram: @gingerhorn) about:
Dead Darlings #15 — Issue
Hello Amsterdam — We’re back!!!
The first live auction in Amsterdam since the lockdown will take place on 31 July 2022 (and then again on 11 December 2022) at the heart of the city: Dead Darlings #15 — Issue! 2 will be presented in two instalments, with a summer edition and a winter edition. That means double the artworks and double the fun!
Inspired by the original function of Vrij Paleis as a printing press, but also the swelling tide of issues in our times, we have entitled our upcoming auction: Issue! Yes, as in the issue of a newspaper but also, the matter in question, a predicament, a consequence, a version of something, a thing under discussion and the list goes on…
Le Voyage dans la Lune, 2021, 23 x 17 cm, Pencil and Crayon on paper,
sold by Dead Darlings Collective, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Dead Darlings is an anonymous art auction founded in Amsterdam in 2005 as a platform to explore the complex love triangle between artist, artwork, and collector.
Our events combine elements of performance and exhibition. Our focus is on artifacts whose value is ambiguous: dead darlings. Works that for whatever reason have not yet come to light. A dead darling is something artists would not normally sell; sometimes B-sides of the artistic process, sometimes greatest hits that were just never played before!
We give these works a second chance for love and love to tell their story. Since they have been “killed”, the starting prices are very low, giving everyone the opportunity to bid for an original, often unique artwork. What we try to do as a collective is bring something “unseen” to the public sphere while challenging notions of value, demand, desirability and commerce.
Artworks are auctioned anonymously, so the buyer can focus on what they love! All participating artists are listed, but the names are not revealed in relation to the piece until after the hammer drops! Our philosophy is to feature established artists along-side upcoming and more obscure artists all mixed together. This makes things more exciting, but also, urges collectors to buy the work they connect to without knowing who made it!
Auction Dead Darlings, copyright Kyle Tryhorn (on Instagram: @gingerhorn) Dead Darlings is an international collective, so the event will be conducted mainly in English. There will be a helpful team on the floor to walk you through the process and answer any questions. If you win an auction lot, you pay the exact bidding price, with nothing added on and take the darling home with you right away! Proceeds will go directly to the artist who made the work, or their chosen charity, with a percentage going toward production costs and our fabulous hand-made catalog. We like to reflect on why a particular work has been cast aside by the maker. For this event we asked the artists: Can this piece be placed center stage, or does it belong in the shadows? Is it an understudy or does it have the potential to be a protagonist? The wonderful theatrical backdrop of our Berlin auction inspires us to consider all those works that haven’t yet had their moment in the spot-light and to ask why.
Come to our auction and find out!
*Bring cash to pay for your auction paddles, catalogs, drinks and other fun DD merchandise! For bigger art purchases it will be possible to pay with a card. Stay tuned for our online catalogue to preview all the dead darlings going under the hammer.
Stay tuned for our online catalogue to preview all the dead darlings going under the hammer!
Auction Dead Darlings, copyright Kyle Tryhorn (on Instagram: @gingerhorn) 
Auction Dead Darlings, copyright Kyle Tryhorn (on Instagram: @gingerhorn) 
Auction Dead Darlings, copyright Melanie Ouwehand (on Instagram: @melanie_ouwehand) -
Solo Show Artspring Gallery Space
Save the date! I will present a selection of my latest drawings and paintings at the Artspring Project Space and Popup Shop. 8.-9.6. 2022 2 pm – 7 pm
Solo Presentation
Address:
Schönhauser Allee Arkaden
Schönhauser Allee 80 Berlin 10439
1.Obergeschoss Laden 57 (Platform 1)
more info:
https://www.artspring.berlin/pop-up-store/

Text German:
Artspring Berlin präsentiert sich und eingeladene Künstler_innen und Projekte im artspring Pop up Store.
Kunst im Einkaufscenter? Wir finden es gut. Das Einkaufszentrum ist ein Ort, an dem man die Nachbarn trifft. Und wir wollen mit ihnen in Kontakt treten. Ein Ort, der dazu da ist, um sich mit den Dingen des täglichen Bedarfs einzudecken, ist ein passender Standort für die KunstDer artspring Pop up Store ist Atelier und Projektraum, Galerie und Treffpunkt, Büro und Netzwerkknoten. Die großen Schaufenster des Stores im Obergeschoss der Schönhauser Allee Arcaden geben den Blick frei auf das Entstehen von Kunstwerken und laden zur Teilhabe ein. Hier treffen verschiedenen Arbeitsweisen – und Welten aufeinander, werden Projektideen verfolgt und ausprobiert. Im Rahmen der der einzelnen Projekte werden regelmäßig Veranstaltungen, Werkschauen, Konzerte und offenen Werkstätten stattfinden. So entsteht an einem bisher ungewöhnlichen Ort ein Experimentierfeld für Kunst und Öffentlichkeit.



Video Tour inside of the exhibition -
Support the Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund
🔴 The artwork is sold 🔴 The watercolor has found its way to a new home in the United States…🇺🇦 A big thank you to the generous buyer 💙💛
Support the #ukrainesupportpledge and buy this artwork! You can donate the money directly to Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund.
#artistsupportpledge #supportukraine
#supportukraine

Inferno, 2022, Watercolor on paper, 23 x 29 cm About the artwork:
Title: Inferno, 2022,
Media: Watercolor on paper,
Size: Framed size: 30 x 40 cm
available at Singulart:
https://www.singulart.com/de/kunstwerke/anne-wölk-inferno-1601007
artist: Anne WölkThe watercolor shows a burning birch grove in Ukraine. You can see an explosion caused by the impact of a Russian missile. The rising flame mushroom is representative of the conflagration that this country is currently experiencing. Several fires have also broken out in the restricted area around the former Chernobyl nuclear power plant. It was there in 1986 that the worst nuclear accident in the history of civilian use of atomic power occurred.
The Putin system uses bombs as a form of collective punishment because the government in Kyiv does not surrender to Moscow. Ukrainian civilians are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance.
The artist donates her share of the painting sale to the Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund. With the purchase of this work of art, you support the people of Ukraine. (https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/ukrainesupportpledge). The Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund provides clean drinking water, food, and shelter for Ukrainian refugees.How it works:
Buyers message the artist or Singulart to confirm availability, donate to the page Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund. The collectors screengrab their donation to prove purchase, and the work will be shipped by the artist to the buyer.Homepage for donations:
https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/ukrainesupportpledgeAbout:
If you would like to simply donate any amount your generosity will be hugely appreciated as every penny counts. Thank you!
About the Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund:
Millions of people in Ukraine are caught in an escalating military conflict and are in growing need of urgent humanitarian assistance. Your donation to this fund will support affected communities in Ukraine, with a focus on the most vulnerable, including children, who need access to education, food, medical services, and psychosocial support.
Before the invasion an estimated 3.4 million people needed humanitarian assistance in eastern Ukraine, and now the crisis has deepened immeasurably. Thousands of civilians have already been killed and injured, and millions driven from their homes.All donations to the Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund will support humanitarian assistance in impacted communities in Ukraine and surrounding regions where Ukrainian refugees have fled. GlobalGiving’s local partners in Ukraine are bringing relief to displaced families and people in high-risk areas, and they need resources to continue and expand their vital work.
Your donation to the Ukraine Crisis Relief Fund will provide:
– Food, shelter and clean water
– Access to education
– Health and psychosocial support
__________________________
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