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PRAXES: CYCLE ONE

Jutta Koether: "Luise" (detail), 2013. Courtesy of Campoli Presti.

Oh Berlin, you do summer SO well. However all good things must pass, and this weekend ushers in September (a little sooner than expected, as ever).

Coinciding perfectly with the seasonal tipping point, PRAXES Centre for Contemporary Art- a new not-for-profit venue presenting half-yearly offerings of ‘Cycles’, ‘Papers’ and ‘Parlours’ based around two unassociated artistic practises- opens on Saturday the 31st of August. Cycle 1 brings us the work of Irish artist Gerald Byrne and HfbK professor Jutta Koether, and opens with Byrne’s three-channel film work ‘Subject’ (2009) and Koether’s ‘Viktoria’ (2013). While PRAXES has plenty timetabled across the next six months, perhaps paying a visit on Saturday will stretch August out that little bit longer.

CYCLE 1: 31.08.13. – 14.12.13.
Opens Saturday 31st of August, 19:00 – 22:00.

PRAXES Centre for Contemporary Art,
Alexandrinenstrasse 118-121,
10969 Berlin
Wednesday – Sunday, 13:00 – 18:00, free admission.

24 HOURS HOLIDAY

Wandering around the city without ID, cards, money, cell phones, the photo of your mum or lover etc. to find food and shelter… Inevitably, spontaneous encounters would also be included. This challenge of 24 hours is organized by the artist group KABA HAT from Istanbul as a part of B_Tour Festival that explores the city of Berlin with guided tours as an artistic strategy. Inspired from the ongoing resistance in Turkey, KABA HAT aims to question the themes such as ’solidarity, communal lifestyle, social life, art tourism and monetary values’.  The tour will start from Apartment Project Berlin at 5pm on 31 August where the artists have also been living and producing since mid-July.

KABA HAT_24 HOURS HOLIDAY
31.08.2013-01.09.2013
17:00
Apartment Project e.V.
Hertzbergstrasse 13 12055
Berlin
24 hrs, in English

ALTERNATIVES IN PRINT: 032C

It’s interesting to see the impact of the Internet on printed media, and not just on the superficial level of distribution and advertising, but also how it’s affected the content of printed media as a reaction to the overwhelming overload of information in the digital age. Mostly, it appears to have triggered a counter-reaction, with print magazines seeing their future in slowing down, thoroughly editing and filtering editorial content for bite-sized consumption, falling back onto classic design – the success of titles such as Fantastic Man, Apartamento or The Travel Almanac proving it to be a working strategy.

On the other end, one might interpret the over-eager quest of Monocle to take it all in now or Pin-Up’s view of architecture as one giant three-dimensional collage board as a direct response to the hyper-ventilating pace of digital life. But maybe no title has soaked up the anything goes excitement of the Internet more than our friends at 032c, whose latest issue is possibly their best to date. Juxtaposing Nicolas Ghesquiere’s utter modernity with a draft on the friendship between David Hockney and RB Kitaj, opposing Werner Herzog’s old-fashioned eccentricity with German teenage literature scandal Helene Hegemann, or presenting ethereal Cate Blanchett in bondage gear – 032c have arrived at a dizzying, mind-expanding level that is loosely held together by an overbearing excitement for the new and the now, loosely connecting dots and making cross-references that are as obscure as they are refreshing. Reflected in the wonderfully irreverent design by Mike Meiré that is at the exact opposite end of his ultra classic design for brand eins, the Internet has spawned an intellectual sparring partner in print that leaves you just as exhilarated, confused, entertained, overfed and stimulated.

ENOISMS #01: OBLIQUE STRATEGIES

In case you were wondering where the title or the admittedly rather obscure subtitles throughout our new issue with Brian Eno come from, they were all taken from the wonderful project Oblique Strategies by Eno and the artist Peter Schmidt, conceived in 1974 as a simple deck of cards offering simple advice in case of a ‘creative block’. Functioning similar to Tarot cards, the idea is that a random answer to a specific question might just nudge you in the right direction of approaching an issue from a different and unexpected angle. Whether it works or not presumably depends on many things, but in themselves, the cards are nothing short of pure poetry. Hear Eno talk to Jarvis Cocker about the Strategies here, or simply order your own set here. Alternatively, there are several sites who have created a digital random version of Oblique Strategies, for instance here.

MONDAYS PRETTY ICONS

The Glasgwegian band Belle & Sebastian favour us with a collection of rarities and non-LP tracks compiled for the new album ‘The Third Eye Centre’, with really nice rewired versions of ‘I’m a Cockoo’ and ‘I didn’t see it coming’. Everyone in Glasgow will have the chance to meet the likeable band today at Monorail to ensure a copy of the record!

Belle & Sebastian
The Third Eye Centre
Released by Rough Trade
Release Date: 26 August 2013

THE SHOWCASE OF THE FEMALE

Sunday read in The Wire. The article looks at the appearance of female DJs at festivals. The statics proved that there is a massive imbalance. The reaction is a festival dedicated to female DJs. Perspectives is going to take place in Berlin, with workshops, talks, club nights with DJs and live performances. You can find the full program on the festival website. Very promising!

PERSPECTIVES Festival
12th – 13th September 2013
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Markgrafendamm 24c
10245 Berlin

Happily ever after being major scaled



Shifting minor to major, let’s drop some fluoxetine and then click here.

THE NOISE GOES ON

We haven’t heard from our mono.kultur #33 star Kim Gordon for a while. Here she is again, with an exhibition at White Columns in New York. Design Office With Kim Gordon – since 1980 is the first survey exhibition of Gordon’s ongoing art practice. The exhibition will be accompanied by a limited vinyl edition, followed by a publication about her activities as an artist. Not to be missed, if in NY!

Opening Reception: 07 Septmeber 2013 / 6-8 pm
White Columns
320 West 13th Street
New York, NY 10014

NOTTING HILL CARNIVAL SUNDAY

It’s that time of year again. If you find yourself in London, this Sunday and Monday see Notting Hill Carnival, Europe’s biggest street festival, returning to wend its Red Stripe-fuelled way around Ladbroke Grove and Westbourne Park.

For those who can’t make it (or are running their own party free from the West London crowds, TfL tube failures and overpriced beer- but sometimes that’s part of the fun!), the incredible NTS Radio will be streaming from the festival from 12:00-18:00 UK time today. Soundtrack sorted.

LAST CHANCE: KADER ATTIA AT KW

Last chance to see the exhibition Kader Attia REPAIR. 5 ACTS at KW Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin before it closes end of this week!

Photo: Kader Attia, REPAIR. 5 ACTS, installation view, Act 4: Nature: MIMESIS AS CONTROL, courtesy: the artist, Galerie Nagel Draxler, Galleria Continua, Galerie Krinzinger, photo: Tina Wessel