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Urbane Künste Ruhr 2018-2023
Between a Romanticised Past and a Not Yet Redeemed Future

Editor

Britta Peters, Alisha Raissa Danscher, June Drevet, Kerstin Finkel

Texts

Etel Adnan, Beatriz Colomina, Daniel Talesnik, Ellen Wagner, Angharad Williams, Serhij Zadan e.a.

Designer

Lamm & Kirch

Year
2024
Publisher
BOM DIA BOA TARDE BOA NOITE
ISBN
978-3-96436-080-9
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Nine printed issues of the Urbane Künste Ruhr magazine were published from 2018-2023. The magazine documented the institution's projects, in particular the Ruhr Ding exhibition format, and reflected on them in accompanying texts.

From the outset, 500 copies of each edition of the magazine were set aside for later use. The individual issues are now brought together in a 670-page catalogue. It has also been expanded to include an index of people and places as well as an editorial by Artistic Director Britta Peters. New projects can always be discovered by leafing through the catalogue, while the index enables a playful, retrospective discourse analysis.

In academic, essayistic and pop-cultural contributions by numerous authors and artists, the publication explores the special features of the Ruhr region and the relationship between art and the public sphere ‘between a glorified past and a future not yet realised’. 

  • Open Article

    Montage im Ruhrgebiet

    Editorial

    The author Wolfgang Welsch, in his 1987 book Unsere postmoderne Moderne (Our Postmodern Modern), introduces a vivid anecdote meant to aid in understanding the concept of postmodernity: he presents to the reader a person who is meandering through Munich. His gaze falls on an advertising text which had been put up on posters all around the city prior to the 1972 Olympic Games.

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  • Open Article

    Climate Grief and the Visible Horizon

    Essay

    The second book in the Metamorphoses by the Roman poet Ovid opens with a story that can be read as a climate metaphor. Phaëthon, the hot-headed son of Phoebus, the Sun God, is living on Earth with his mortal mother and feels the god has not acknowledged him as his rightful son. Hoping to prove his parentage, Phaëthon goes up into the sky and asks Phoebus for a sign that the god is indeed his father. “Ask me whatever favor you want,” says Phoebus, “and I’ll bestow it.” The boy responds: “I want to drive the chariot.” The request chills the Sun God to his core.

    ©Heinrich Holtgreve

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  • Open Article

    The 24/7 Bed

    Essay

    When John Lennon and Yoko Ono married secretly in Gibraltar on March 20, 1969, the ceremony lasted only three minutes. But these minutes, so elaborately protected, were in fact the end of privacy. They promptly invited a global audience into their honeymoon bed, a weeklong Bed-In for Peace held from March 25 to 31, 9am to 9pm, in room 902 of the Amsterdam Hilton International Hotel. Two of the most public people in the world put themselves in a literal fishbowl, the glass box of the Hilton. But the workday didn’t end at 9pm. John and Yoko repeatedly declared that they wanted to conceive a baby during that week. The bed is both protest site and factory for baby production: a fucktory.

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  • Open Article

    Hollow space, Hologram, Holy Earth, Holzwickede, Home office

    Essay

    The Urbane Künste Ruhr magazines #1 to #9, created from 2018 to 2023, form the core of the book at hand. Inspired by the idea of summarising the years past, but also of portraying the processuality of an artistic programme playing out in public space, we decided to create a structural approach to navigating the already existing content – rather than conceiving a whole new publication.

    ©Heinrich Holtgreve

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Choir of Missed Connections

Aram Bartholl

A man looks at a futuristic lamp with integrated surveillance cameras.

© Daniel Sadrowski

© Daniel Sadrowski

Wir stehen unter einem Kronleuchter, der statt Kerzen fünf 360°-Kameras in Glühbirnenform trägt. Diese suchen pausenlos nach einer Internetverbindung, aus der Audioschleife von Verbindungsaufbau und Reset – „Entering peering mode“ und „Power on!" – wird ein Chor aus Fehlermeldungen, der uns im Grand Snail Tour Trailer umgibt.

Aram Bartholl – Medienkünstler, Aktivist und Professor – stellt seit Dekaden unser Medienverhalten und die Ökonomien sozialer Netzwerke zur Diskussion. Im heutigen Internet sieht er die zentralen Probleme im Rückzug in private und kommerzielle Nutzung, in Überwachung, Manipulation und den endlosen Datenfluten. Dabei ist Kontrolle durch Licht kein neues Phänomen: Straßenbeleuchtung dienten nicht zuletzt dazu, Sichtbarkeit im öffentlichen Raum herzustellen, um längere Arbeitszeiten zu ermöglichen, Bewegungen zu erfassen, Menschen zu kontrollieren. Geprägt von seiner Nähe zum Chaos Computer Club, überführt Bartholl Lücken und Absurditäten des digitalen Alltags in Objekte und Interventionen. Mit Dead Drops (seit 2010) zementierte er USB-Sticks in Mauerwerke – Speicher für einen anonyme Datenaustausch ohne Cloud, ohne Algorithmus, ohne Konzern. Für Skulptur Projekte Münster entwickelte Bartholl 2017 thermoelektrische Installationen an historischen Orten der Stadt, die das Feuer als ursprüngliches Kommunikationsmedium in Energie umwandelten: Ein ofenbeheizter Offline-Router am Fernmeldeturm, lagerfeuergespeiste Ladestationen für Mobiltelefone am Pumpenhaus – und einen Kronleuchter aus teelichtbetriebenen LED-Lampen in der Schlossunterführung. 

Choir of Missed Connections zieht nun als Soundskulptur durch abgelegene Kleinstädte, sucht Verbindungen – und wird im kommunikativen Sinne vielleicht auf unerwartete Weise fündig.

Artist

Open Artsit

©Friso Gentsch

Aram Bartholl

In his sculptural works and workshops, Aram Bartholl explores digital media, surveillance and platform capitalism in public space.

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