post-title Stephanie Kloss and Joshua Zielinski | Instant Replay | Laura Mars Gallery | 24.02.-06.04.2024

Stephanie Kloss and Joshua Zielinski | Instant Replay | Laura Mars Gallery | 24.02.-06.04.2024

Stephanie Kloss and Joshua Zielinski | Instant Replay | Laura Mars Gallery | 24.02.-06.04.2024

Stephanie Kloss and Joshua Zielinski | Instant Replay | Laura Mars Gallery | 24.02.-06.04.2024

until 06.04.| #4179ARTatBerlin | Laura Mars Gallery shows from 24. February 2024 (Vernissage: 23.02.) the Exhibition Instant Replay by the artists Stephanie Kloss and Joshua Zielinski.

Lenin’s left ear lies by the Berlin City Palace. What sounds like a yellow press headline is a very abbreviated description of the first room of Instant Replay, the first joint exhibition by Stephanie Kloss and Joshua Zielinski at the Laura Mars Gallery. Here, Kloss has realized a fragment of the backdrop-like architecture of the reconstructed palace as a photo wallpaper. Zielinski’s Ausgleichsgewicht (Counterweight, 2023), a giant ear made of red granite, which for one day as a site-specific intervention on the Platz der Vereinten Nationen (formerly Lenin Platz) referred to the Lenin Monument, which was dismantled in 1992, thus becomes a fictitious archaeological find on the former position of the Palace of the Republic.

Repressed, poorly digested, overwritten and yet constantly resurfacing of history also manifests itself in the facades of the buildings in Kloss’ photographs in the second room: the Sonnenblumenhaus (Sunflower House) in Rostock- Lichtenhagen, the site of massive racist attacks by right-wing extremists against Vietnamese contract workers living there in 1992; the Zeppelin Tribune at the former Nazi Party Rally Grounds in Nuremberg, as well as the new Axel Springer building, in the middle of the former Berlin border strip, with black columns on the west and white ones on the east side. It is advertised by OMA (Office for Metropolitan Architecture) as a “building designed to attract the elite of the (German) digital bohemia” and symbolizes the transition from print to digital media. Kloss photographs the buildings close up, getting right up close to them and thus emphasizing a subjective perspective that focuses less on the architecture as such than on the images and events that we associate with these backdrops of political and media power.

Zielinski’s Waidmannsdank (Good hunting, 2023) also originally had an architectural reference: the two zinc casts made from a deer pelt, which here rest on wedge-shaped wooden plinths, were created in the context of an exhibition in the park of Schloss Liebenberg in Brandenburg, where they temporarily replaced the elk sculptures at the entrance to the hunting grounds that were destroyed during the Second World War. The spatial and thematic shifts in Zielinski’s works (from the public space to the gallery, from solitaire to dialogue with Kloss’s photographs) open up new spaces for thoughts and associations that extend beyond the one specific context. Elements from earlier installations are combined to form new sculptures: a roughly carved limestone balances in fragile equilibrium on the delicate half-column made of white marble, a street find.
The row of bronze wedges, which look like artefacts from an excavation, are casts of wooden door wedges that Zielinski has collected over the years from various museums. The casting fixes the status of the more or less worn everyday objects for eternity and ennobles them as museum artefacts. The casting channels and funnels left on the casts give them an individual, sometimes almost figurative character.

Instant Replay is the name given to video evidence in sports broadcasts; the replay in slow motion and with the help of cameras, whose focused perspective reveals more than can be seen in the total shot. The exhibition presents historical fragments, artefacts and trophies as evidence of failed ideologies for reenactment against the backdrop of a fragile present.

ARTatBerlin-Laura Mars-Instant Replay

Stephanie Kloss, RP1, 2023 Courtesy Laura Mars Gallery

Stephanie Kloss, born in Karlsruhe. She lives and works as a visual artist in Berlin. She studied architecture at the Berlin Technische Universität (diploma), and media art at the Hochschule für Gestaltung Karlsruhe under Marie-Jo Lafontaine and Günther Förg, as well as photography under Thomas Struth and Candida Höfer. Stephanie Kloss’s photographic works deal
with sociological, political, and spatial phenomena. She is represented in numerous solo and group exhibitions. In addition to her artistic work, she teaches as a lecturer at the Berlin University of the Arts (UdK), curates exhibitions and runs the Berlin project space “Die Möglichkeit einer Insel”.

Joshua Zielinski, born 1986 in Michigan, USA, lives and works as a visual artist with the focus on sculpture in Berlin. From 2005 to 2008 he studied Fine Arts at Western Illinois University (Bachelor’s degree by Prof. Don Crouch) and from 2009 to 2013 he studied sculpture at the Kunsthochschule Weissensee (Meisterschüler by Prof. Berndt Wilde). From 2013 to 2014
he was an artist in residence at the Cité Internationale des Arts Paris and from 2015 to 2018 he studied the postgraduate program “Art in Context” at the UdK Berlin (Master of Arts by Prof. Heike Föll). Since 2017, he has held several teaching positions at the Weißensee Art Academy Berlin, at the Burg Giebichenstein Art Academy in Halle and at Western Illinois
University USA. Zielinski’s works have been shown at the Project Space Festival Berlin (2023), the Kunsthalle Kotha, Helsinki, Finland (2021), the Burg Galerie, Halle (2020), the Foundation, Vienna (2018), and the Yayasan Biennale, Jogjakarta, Indonesia (2017), among others.

Vernissage: Friday, 23. February from 7 pm

Exhibition period: Saturday, 24. February until Saturday, 6. April 2024

to the gallery

 

 

Image caption: Joshua Zielinski, Waidmannsdank (detail), 2023 zinc casting, 115 x 70 x 45 cm Courtesy Laura Mars Gallery

Exhibition Instant Replay – Laura Mars Gallery | Zeitgenössische Kunst Berlin | Contemporary Art | Exhibitions Berlin Galleries | ART at Berlin

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