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Jordi Colomer

Jordi Colomer's (*Barcelona 1962) practice spans film, photography, sculpture and installation, often involving collective participation. All his activity is tinged with a marked performative sense, testing through actions the habitual uses of architecture and urban space. Colomer is interested in the system of representations of the city and our ability to subvert them. From that investigation, underlying themes such as nomadism, the popular imagination, humor, community, suburbia, traditions, fiction and utopia emerge. In 2008, the Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume in Paris dedicated a major retrospective to him. Colomer has participated in two editions of Manifesta, in  St. Petersburg  (2014) und Palermo (2018). In 2017, he was chosen to represent the Spanish pavilion at the 57th Venice Biennale. In 2024, he presented the exhibition “Façana Foto Festa Futur Fideus” at MACBA in Barcelona, his most ambitious solo shw to date. The exhibition brought together around fifty works dating from the late 1980s, in various formats including sculpture, collages, photography, video, installations, and live actions. For this exhibition, he received the 2024 City of Barcelona Award for Visual Arts.

Schermbeck

The Grand Snail Tour will be accompanied by literary, photographic and illustrative artists, who will collect impressions and reflections from the same city at the same time as the Trailer is there and put them into visual or literary form. The result is a paratext on the three-year tour, a travel chronicle in the form of a kaleidoscope of stories, connections and snapshots in the 53 cities of the region, revealing the simultaneities and non-simultaneities of the Grand Snail Tour.

Schermbeck by Stephanie Kiwitt

Weekly market in Schermbeck with mobile stalls and customers. Two food trucks sell fresh baked goods and cheese

© Stephanie Kiwitt

Historic alley in Schermbeck with red brick walls, cobblestones, and half-timbered houses.

© Stephanie Kiwitt

Parking lot in Schermbeck with cars and old brick industrial buildings in the background.

© Stephanie Kiwitt

Whitewashed historic chapel in Schermbeck with red roof tiles and parked cars around.

© Stephanie Kiwitt

Residential buildings in Schermbeck featuring a mix of half-timbered, brick, and modern architecture.

© Stephanie Kiwitt

Old and modern buildings in Schermbeck with a church tower in the background, typical of the cityscape.

© Stephanie Kiwitt

Historic brick wall in Schermbeck with green vegetation and parked cars beside it.

© Stephanie Kiwitt

Backyard with old brick walls and modern residential buildings in Schermbeck. Contrast between old and new.

© Stephanie Kiwitt

Artist

Open Artsit

©Andreas Schulze

Stephanie Kiwitt

Stephanie Kiwitt captures the transformation of rural areas in her photographic work - most recently in Saxony-Anhalt with “Flächenland”.

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