23 new photographs
23 new photographs are uploaded to the iMomus Flickr page, detailing with texture rather than text my meatspace doings since I got back last week to Berlin.

The photographs mostly cover art openings; I had to write a trial column for an Austrian art magazine which may employ me as a regular Berlin correspondent, so I went (for the first time!) to Wedding, Berlin's other up-and-coming creative district (my own beloved Neukolln being the one I've mostly talked about here) and was most impressed by the Kolonie Wedding events, and especially by the East Europeans and Russians participating. I get the impression that Poles, Serbs, Romanians and Russians are the only people really exicted, these days, about art as a source of off-kilter energy, rather than a status symbol or investment.
There was also a great series of shows and openings at Kreuzberg's art treasure house, the Kunstlerhaus Bethanien. Currently, apart from the usual shows by their residency artists, there are two wonderful exhibitions there, Fluxus East (printed ephemera from the Fluxus movement, and especially its abortive East European offshoots) and Take Me To the Edge of Heaven at Kunstraum Kreuzberg, an all-women show containing work by Kei Takemura and many others (I particularly liked the clothes art of Cécile Belmont).
The photos also document a YouTube party at Sunshine Wong's flat, a studio visit to Luc and Tomoko's place, a game of French billiards with Tomo from Kyoto and Naoko Ogawa (who's put up a website since I blogged about her jewelry!), some silly clothes from Momus and the concept of "post-occupancy" courtesy Rem Koolhaas.
I know, I know, this blog used to be all about concepts, but I've spent so much of this week generating text for art magazines (interviewing Paul Noble in Ramallah, for instance, for Art World) that right now all you're getting is live mp3s and photos. Sorry!

The photographs mostly cover art openings; I had to write a trial column for an Austrian art magazine which may employ me as a regular Berlin correspondent, so I went (for the first time!) to Wedding, Berlin's other up-and-coming creative district (my own beloved Neukolln being the one I've mostly talked about here) and was most impressed by the Kolonie Wedding events, and especially by the East Europeans and Russians participating. I get the impression that Poles, Serbs, Romanians and Russians are the only people really exicted, these days, about art as a source of off-kilter energy, rather than a status symbol or investment.
There was also a great series of shows and openings at Kreuzberg's art treasure house, the Kunstlerhaus Bethanien. Currently, apart from the usual shows by their residency artists, there are two wonderful exhibitions there, Fluxus East (printed ephemera from the Fluxus movement, and especially its abortive East European offshoots) and Take Me To the Edge of Heaven at Kunstraum Kreuzberg, an all-women show containing work by Kei Takemura and many others (I particularly liked the clothes art of Cécile Belmont).
The photos also document a YouTube party at Sunshine Wong's flat, a studio visit to Luc and Tomoko's place, a game of French billiards with Tomo from Kyoto and Naoko Ogawa (who's put up a website since I blogged about her jewelry!), some silly clothes from Momus and the concept of "post-occupancy" courtesy Rem Koolhaas.I know, I know, this blog used to be all about concepts, but I've spent so much of this week generating text for art magazines (interviewing Paul Noble in Ramallah, for instance, for Art World) that right now all you're getting is live mp3s and photos. Sorry!
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Does this mean it´s time for me to break out my only KKK macro?
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The funky funky eyepatch
Re: The funky funky eyepatch
Re: The funky funky eyepatch
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(Anonymous) 2007-11-04 02:00 am (UTC)(link)The fact that so much of the present population of Wedding exists below the poverty line is not good but would it be a shame to see these areas lose their present character to yuppification.
Berlin fortunately does seems to resist these tides better than most cities but once avaricious property investors start targeting a city - as is the case with Berlin - it would only seem to be a matter of time.
Thomas S.
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(Anonymous) 2007-11-04 05:17 am (UTC)(link)Will you ever be coming back to Los Angeles?
-Memo
http://urbanmemo.blogspot.com/
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he simply hasn't been invited here! He would come if a) accommodation was paid for, b) rooms were paid for, or c) there's a solid venue he can play/speak at.
He can sleep in my Hello Kitty decorated bedroom if he wants, all we need is airfare and a venue!
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