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Emscher Folly

Emscher Folly, a bicycle sculpture by Nicole Wermers, consists of over 50 bicycles arranged in a triangular shape, symbolizing mobility and urban transformation in the Ruhr area.

© Henning Rogge

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Kläranlage Duisburg-Alte Emscher
Alsumer Straße 215 
47166 Duisburg

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The artist Nicole Wermers has created a sculpture out of over 50 bicycles and a triangular bicycle stand she designed. 

She thus shifts an image familiar from urban space to a place marked by industrial work, abandoned and seemingly inhospitable, metaphorically speaking: in the engine room of everyday life between sewage plant and steelworks, the bicycles seem mysteriously out of place. Freed from their use, their design emerges all the more clearly. Close to the former mouth of the River Emscher, Emscher Folly also refers to the artificiality of a landscape as strongly shaped by man as the Emscher region.

Nicole Wermers lives and works in London and Emsdetten. She has been a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich since 2017. She was a fellow of the German Academy Villa Massimo in Rome in 2012 and was nominated for the Turner Prize in 2015. In her sculptures, photographs and collages, the artist combines formal questions with investigations of urban space and its social, economic and psychological inscriptions.

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Nicole Wermers

Nicole Wermers uses sculptures and collages to depict urban space, social structures and the recomposition of everyday objects.

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Xanten

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.

Xanten by Jul Gordon

Black and white illustration of a house with a front yard in Xanten. Text: "We are not talking about work here, we are talking about... front yards."

© Jul Gordon

Hand-drawn illustration of a house entrance with a palm tree and decorative figures. Text: "There is a lot of work here... and very careful work."

© Jul Gordon

Drawing of two lion statues in front of a door with dialogue. Text: "So, I just wanted to say, I won’t set an alarm or anything." – "Why? If something happens...?"

© Jul Gordon

Black and white illustration of a frog with binoculars sitting on a table in front of a door. Text: "Do you remember Simex?"

© Jul Gordon

Artistic drawing with flying birds and a ribbon. Text: "She has become a cat." – "Could we maybe redirect this?"

© Jul Gordon

Hand-drawn illustration of a creative front yard decoration with stacked shapes. Text: "She is really awesome."

© Jul Gordon

Minimalist drawing of a house with a lion figure in front of the door. Text: "And prevent more of this mess."

© Jul Gordon

Critical illustration of an advertising poster with the text "You belong" and a crowd. Text: "E.g. fascism."

© Jul Gordon

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Jul Gordon

Jul Gordon lives in Hamburg and works as a comic artist. In addition to drawing, she curates exhibitions and works as a lecturer at the HAW Hamburg.

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