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Zu Gast
Jahrgang 2021

© Daniel Sadrowski

For the 2020/2021 edition, the focus will be on artists whose work deals in the broadest sense with 'climate' and 'sleep', the thematic brackets of the Ruhr Ding editions 2021 and 2022.

The residencies, which generally last three or twelve months, are initially awarded independently of specific project proposals and enable artists to familiarise themselves with the region, incorporate this experience into their existing work or develop new ideas from it.

For the first time in 2021, the Haus der Geschichte des Ruhrgebiets in Bochum and the Halfmannshof in Gelsenkirchen have opened their doors to artists who want to use the specific digital or content-related research opportunities for their work on site. Since the start of the programme, there have been collaborations with the KunstVereineRuhr, an association of various art associations and artists' houses in the region, as well as the Ringlokschuppen Ruhr and the Makroscope - Centre for Art and Technology in Mülheim an der Ruhr.

Artists

Open Artsit

©Daniel Sadrowski

Yuki Jungesblut

Yuki Jungesblut seeks out potentialities and instances of overlap between imagination, fiction and reality, often exploring underdetermined states and liminality in general.

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Open Artsit

©Roland Baege

Viron Erol Vert

In his artistic practice, Viron Erol Vert probes – against the background of his own intercultural experiences – identity constructs and different aspects related to the self and the other.

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Open Artsit

©Roland Baege

Vanessa Nica Mueller

Vanessa Nica Mueller's films and artwork focus on aspects of memory, the relation of human, nature and urban space, the uncanny and the construction of conditions.

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Open Artsit

©Roland Baege

Thomas Taube

By means of multi-channel installations, associative, reflective and surreal sequences, Taube works against conventional cinematographic codes.

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Open Artsit

Nicoleta Moise

Nicoleta Moise is a visual artist, writer and researcher with different mediums combining photography, video and performance and focusses on making visible less known stories, characters or events.

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Open Artsit

©Roland Baege

Nadine Rangosch

Natural sciences, visual culture and mythological stories inspire Nadine Rangosch to build her own vocabulary, translating abstract concepts into spatial arrangements.

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Open Artsit

©Roland Baege

Laura Leppert

Laura Leppert works with film, installation and text. Her installations and cinematic spaces are constructed in fragments and are constantly in motion.

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Open Artsit

©Roland Baege

Kristina Paustian

Kristina Paustian examines cultural anthropological and socio-political topics. In cinematic images she focusses in particular on the themes of times of upheaval and technical utopias.

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Open Artsit

©Daniel Sadrowski

Julia Lübbecke

In her works, Julia Lübbecke deals with the relation between body and institution. She explores this connection to examine dominant structures of order and creates processes to make them fragile.

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Open Artsit

©Roland Baege

Jessica Arseneau

Jessica Arseneau explores the way human perception and subjectivity is shaped by social codes, patterns of behaviour, accelerating culture and technological progress.

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Open Artsit

©Daniel Sadrowski 

Guy Königstein

In his recent projects Guy Königstein researches the different ways we live the past in the present, for instance through practices of commemoration, archiving or archaeology.

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Open Artsit

©Daniel Sadrowski

David Reiber Otálora

In his cinematic / sculptural works David Reiber Otálora deals with exoticisms and colonial representations of the so-called other and explores possibilities to affirm them into ambiguous narratives.

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Open Artsit

©Roland Baege

Adriana Arroyo

Adriana Arroyo's works reference to geological activity, to reveal possible relationships between the movement of the Earth, politics and the fragility of the body and the mind.

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Marl

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.

Marl von Nikita Teryoshin

An older woman in a pink outfit with heart motifs leans against a white tiled wall. Behind her, a poster with red heart balloons is visible.

© Nikita Teryoshin

Two artificial hands with long, decorated nails stand in a store window. Next to them, a color palette displays various nail designs.

© Nikita Teryoshin

A small white dog looks out from a stroller behind a metal table with empty coffee cups. The scene is lit with strong lighting.

© Nikita Teryoshin

A mannequin in a store window with cold lighting. Additional mannequins and a reflection are visible in the background.

© Nikita Teryoshin

A dark underpass with a red-lit ceiling and a stained concrete wall. A graffiti tag reading "Banksy" is visible on the wall.

© Nikita Teryoshin

A man with a camera stands inside a clothing store with a SALE sign. In front of him, sweatshirts with the word "Perfect" are displayed.

© Nikita Teryoshin

A tray with two cups of coffee and pastries, held by a person wearing a white winter jacket. The pastries include a powdered sugar donut and a glazed fried ring.

© Nikita Teryoshin

Close-up of a tattooed man holding a dog leash. Beside him, a Chihuahua wearing a blue jacket sits attentively.

© Nikita Teryoshin

A vending machine labeled "Pink Date" in neon lights, surrounded by snack and drink dispensers. Inside the machine is an oversized plush panda costume.

© Nikita Teryoshin

Artist

Open Artsit

©Nikita Teryoshin

Nikita Teryoshin

Nikita Teryoshin, photographs defense exhibitions worldwide. His award-winning book “Nothing Personal” was published in 2024.

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