art berlin

art berlin

Tempelhofer Damm 45, Hangar 5 and 6 Berlin, 12101, Germany Thursday, September 27, 2018–Sunday, September 30, 2018 Preview: Thursday, September 27, 2018, 4 p.m.–8 p.m. Booth 3.C.7


untitled by erinc seymen

Erinc Seymen

Untitled, 2015

Price on Request

untitled by erinc seymen

Erinc Seymen

Untitled, 2015

Price on Request

dikefalos by erinc seymen

Erinc Seymen

Dikefalos, 2018

Price on Request

barricade (from the set of works 'demonstration‘) by simon wachsmuth

Simon Wachsmuth

Barricade (from the set of works 'Demonstration‘), 2008

Price on Request

Zilberman Gallery is pleased to present Heba Y. Amin, Pedro Gómez-Egaña, Zeynep Kayan, Erinc Seymen and Simon Wachsmuth at Art Berlin 2018. 

Coming from geographically, demographically and historically different backgrounds, Amin, Egaña, Kayan, Seymen and Wachsmuth's photos, installations and videos center on topics such as time politics and machines, cultural (re)construction of histories, and queer positionings. 

The words exhibited delve into various topics from why Greenwich was determined as the prime meridian to balance and its relation to existence, and the critique of normative values and the aesthetics of barricades and demonstrations. Such rigorous topics address themselves in the small yet vigorous gestures. 

Zeynep Kayan’s photos and videos almost act as an archive of an installative performance of torn, repeating images and protruding objects, flirting with the surrounding architecture. Research based works of Simon Wachsmuth and Heba Y. Amin explore micro stories or hidden moments in the history through archival material or contemporary news. As in the work Operation Sunken Sea (Anti-Control Room) being exhibited at the Berlin Biennial 2018, Amin speculates about new futures, using art as an imaginary space. 

In a similar fashion, taking their narration from enlightenment ideas, the gestures and absurdities around colonialism, Pedro Gómez-Egaña’s automatas are based on research and reimagine histories. Sounds such as a repetitive chirr accompany his installations with layers of references to colonial power. Erinc Seymen’s oeuvre dwell on the critique of (hetero)normative patterns and normative masculinities by interrogating and recontextualizing the meaning of (his) symbols. Militarism and sexuality; codes of dressing and normative family structures embellish his well-crafted paintings and sculptures.