





Larissa Fassler
Building Worlds
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| Editor(s) | Kunsthalle Lingen |
| Author(s) | Meike Behm |
| Design | Correspondence (Justus Gelberg, Berlin & Lukas Engelhardt, Amsterdam) |
| Size | 12.5 x 19 cm |
| Cover | Softcover with neon dust jacket |
| Pages | 176 |
| Illustrations | 57 |
| Language(s) | German, English |
| ISBN | 978-3-96912-245-7 |
The drawings and sculptures of Larissa Fassler (born 1975 in Canada, lives in Berlin) both document and question the modern metropolis, its public squares, train stations, and functional buildings. Fassler researches her chosen locations extensively in city archives and online. She tracks trends such as economic disparity, gentrification, homelessness, or drug consumption. She supplements these statistical facts with her own subjective survey methods, such as repeatedly visiting and observing the sites. All of the information gathered finds its way into Fassler’s complex cartographic drawings and sculptures, which reflect the socioeconomic and geopolitical challenges of our time. This book accompanies Fassler’s exhibition at the Kunstverein Lingen.
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Michelle Jezierski
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10 Jahre Württembergische Volksbühne
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nolde/kritik/documenta (English)
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Kuball continued his research at the invitation of the documenta archive, Kassel. Based on his findings, the exhibition project “nolde / kritik / documenta” illuminates the ways in which life and oeuvre are interwoven and inquires into the contradictions of modernism, which Emil Nolde as a man and artist may be said to have embodied. The focus of the new project is on the staging of Nolde’s works at the first three editions of the documenta exhibition series (1955, 1959, 1964), which were instrumental to establishing the “Nolde myth.”
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Dietmar Lutz
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Ruth Wolf-Rehfeldt – Wie eine Spinne im Netz
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Judit Reigl
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On occasion of Reigl’s centenary and the gift of three major works, the Neue Nationalgalerie mounts the artist’s first solo exhibition at a museum in Germany. The book surveys the oeuvre of one of the most important protagonists of European art in the second half of the twentieth century.
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Ernst Wilhelm Nay
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