Here Are 11 Must-See Shows and Events During Berlin Art Week, From Ryan Trecartin’s Dystopia to a Mobile Art Planetarium

Here are our recommendations for the shows to see during this year's action-packed edition of the citywide art event.

"The New Infinity. Neue Kunst für Planetarien“: Innenansicht des Domes auf dem Mariannenplatz, © Berliner Festspiele, Foto: Mathias Völzke

The annual Berlin Art Week kicks off its eighth edition this week, with fairs and exhibition openings uniting culture vultures across the city. To top it all off, there is another celebration of togetherness coinciding with this year’s affair: the German capital is commemorating 30 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall. To mark this very special week, galleries are pulling out all the stops, presenting work by homegrown art stars like Anne Imhof as well as international names such as Ryan Trecartin.

To help you navigate all there is to see, we’ve highlighted 11 must-see shows and events below.

 

“Micro Era. Media Art from China” at Kulturforum

Cao Fei Asia One (2018). © Cao Fei / Sprüth Magers & Vitamin Creative Space.

WHAT: Chinese artist Cao Fei and Lu Yang have invited fellow artists Fang Di and Zhang Peili to participate in what has been deemed the first major presentation dedicated to Chinese media art in Berlin. The show is an offshoot of “29 Contemporary Artists From China,” presented at the Hamburger Bahnhof in 2001. But “Micro Era” dives deep into the digital realm, looking at how contemporary Chinese artists have responded to the economic, political, ideological, and technological transformation in China over the past 30 years.

WHERE: Kulturforum, Matthäikirchplatz, 10785 Berlin

WHEN: September 5–January 26, 2020

 

 “Re’Search Wait’S” – Ryan Trecartin at Sprüth Magers

Ryan Trecartin, Ready, (2010), HD video, sound, 26:47 min, © Ryan TrecartinCourtesy of Ryan Trecartin; Regen Projects, Los Angeles; and Sprüth Magers

WHAT: American artist Ryan Trecartin’s video installations are known to interweave multiple threads into one very tripped-out narrative. His latest exhibition presents four interrelated films that tell the story of an imagined industry whose biggest commodity is personality traits. The gallery calls the work a “‘tweenaged’ microcosm” of his well-known “Any Ever” series, which premiered at the MoMA PS1 in 2011 before going on a worldwide tour that brought the artist international recognition.

WHERE: Sprüth Magers, Oranienburgerstrasse 18, 10178 Berlin

WHEN: September 12–December 21, 2019

 

Portraits” – Manuel Solano at Peres Projects

Manuel Solano, Bjork. Courtesy Peres Project, Berlin

WHAT: Mexican artist Manuel Solano, who became blind after an HIV-related infection in 2014, continues to create vibrant, saturated, expressive paintings. After losing their sight, Solano (who uses gender-neutral pronouns) paints almost exclusively from memory, trusting his friends and other assistants to help fill in the details of his simple yet textured paintings. The artist describes their work as intimate, nostalgic, queer, and provocative. Their latest exhibition features a new series of portraits  with vibrant backdrops that look like psychological color fields or auras.

WHERE: Peres Projects, Karl-Marx-Allee 82, 10243 Berlin

WHEN: September 13–October 25, 2019

 

Melly Shum hates her job” at KLEMM’S

Ken Lum, Melly Shum hates her job. (1989/2019). Courtesy by the artist and Galerie NagelDraxler

WHAT: You don’t have to step inside a gallery or museum to encounter art in Berlin this week. Work by the celebrated Canadian conceptual artist Ken Lum is on view on a billboard at Moritzplatz, one of the city’s more congested and rapidly developing intersections. Organized by Klemm’s in collaboration with Galerie Nagel Draxler, the billboard Melly Shum Hates Her Job offers catharsis for those with professional frustration. The work runs in parallel to a group show at the Klemm’s nearby, called “Form, Class & Beauty,” featuring work by Lum alongside artists Gabriele Beveridge, Viktoria Binschtok, and Ulrich Lamsfuss.

WHERE: KLEMM’S, Prinzessinnenstrasse 29, 10969 Berlin and Moritzplatz, Berlin

WHEN: Through September 21, 2019

 

 

Adjacency” – Luke Willis Thompson at Nagel Draxler Kabinett

Luke Willis Thompson, Drawing for Adjacency (Fragment), (2019), Courtesy: the artist and Galerie Nagel Draxler, Berlin/Cologne

WHAT: The New Zealand-based artist and nominee for the 2018 Turner Prize, Luke Willis Thompson, puts social injustice in relief through his poignant film installations and performances. In his upcoming show, “Adjacency,” Thompson will turn his lens on police violence in the US through films that incorporate footage from the Civil Rights Movement.

WHERE: Nagel Draxler Kabinett, Rosa-Luxemburg-Strasse 33, 10178 Berlin

WHEN: September 14–November 2, 2019

 

“Imagine” – Anne Imhof at Galerie Buchholz

Anne Imhof, Courtesy Galerie Buchholz Berlin/Cologne/New York

WHAT: German artist Anne Imhof is getting her first gallery show in Berlin, a somewhat belated accolade after she nabbed the Preis der Nationalgalerie in 2015 and took home the Venice Biennale’s Golden Lion in 2017. But rather than unveiling one of the sexy, moody performances she has become known for, Imhof is presenting colorful abstract oil paintings of sunsets that become disorienting when hung vertically.

WHERE: Galerie Buchholz, Fasanenstrasse 30, 10719 Berlin

WHEN: September 13–October 26, 2019

 

“There is no nonviolent way to look at somebody” – Wu Tsang at Gropius Bau

Wu Tsang, One emerging from a point of view, (2019), Courtesy: die Künstlerin & Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin

WHAT: A rich trove of films by Los Angeles-based artist Wu Tsang will be brought into dialogue with her lesser-known sculptural practice, which is built on the interaction of light, text, and glass. The exhibition includes a new stained glass work especially commissioned for the Gropius Bau.

WHERE: Gropius Bau, Niederkirchnerstrasse 7, 10963 Berlin

WHEN: September 4, 2019–January 12, 2020

 

Preis der Nationalgalerie 2019 Shortlist Exhibition at Hamburger Bahnhof

The four nominees for the Prize of the National Gallery 2019: Pauline Curnier Jardin, Simon Fujiwara, Katja Novitskova und Flaka Haliti. Foto: David von Becker

WHAT: The tenth edition of Germany’s prestigious and career-making prize for young artists will be awarded on September 12. The international jury has nominated four Germany-based artists who make very different work: Simon Fujiwara, Flaka Haliti, Pauline Curnier Jardin, and Katja Novitskova. Each one has debuted new work at the Hamburger Bahnhof in an effort to take home the prize.

WHERE: Hamburger Bahnhof, Invalidenstrasse 50-51, 10557 Berlin

WHEN: August 16, 2019–February 16, 2020

 

“Horizontal Vertigo” – WangShui at the Julia Stoschek Collection

WangShui, From Its Mouth Came a River of High-End Residential Appliances, (2018), Production still (Detail). Courtesy of the artist.

WHAT: For its first European solo exhibition, the amorphous art studio WangShui has created hallucinatory moving-image installations including Gardens of Perfect Exposure, in which silk worms work away on a small metallic landscape. In another room, the studio has brought a magnificent, flickering LED screen typically used for skyline advertisements indoors, giving viewers a chance to get up close to an object that typically towers overhead. Walking up to it, with pieces of mica crunching under your feet, feels like an almost holy experience.

WHERE: Julia Stoschek Collection Berlin, Leipzigerstrasse 60, 10117 Berlin

WHEN: September 12–December 15, 2019

The New Infinity / New Art for Planetariums in Kreuzberg

The New Infinity. Neue Kunst für Planetarien © Berliner Festspiele, Makusu Matsutake

WHAT: After a successful first run last year, the Berliner Festspiele returns for Berlin Art Week with a mobile dome housing new work by Metahaven and the 2017 Preis der Nationalgalerie winner Agnieszka Polska. Assorted live programming will be held for two weeks inside the dome, which is installed in Kreuzberg’s Mariannenplatz.

WHERE: Berliner Festspiele, Mariannenplatz, 10997 Berlin

WHEN: Through September 16, 2019

 

Off Kedzie at Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi

Diamond Stingily, Off Kedzie, (2019), Courtesy the artist and Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin

WHAT: American artist and poet Diamond Stingily uses simple materials like hair, worn doors, and baseball hats to explore racial identity and gender. September promises to be a big month for the artist in Germany: a week after her show at Isabella Bortolozzi, she will open a solo presentation at Kunstverein Munich.

WHERE: Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Schöneberger Ufer 61, 10785 Berlin

WHEN: September 17–November 2, 2019

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