At Exile Gallery |
I strolled to Tanja Wagner and also she was sitting outside in the sun together with her team. We talked about the use of art fairs and how in the long run it might be better to make sure your artist’s work gets shown in institutions. I’m a fan of Tanja Wagner. Her gallery has a program, she’s passionate about art, she doesn’t talk art speak. She’s also the only gallerist in Berlin who dominantly represents women in her gallery and she manages not to be called a female art gallery. This time she had a show on by a new artist of hers, Nilbar Güreș. “Do you remember her work at the Berlin Bienniale in 2010?” she asked. And I did remember it, which is good sign.
Nilbar Güreș at Tanja Wagner Gallery |
Ceal Floyer at Esther Schipper |
I finished my ice-cream just while walking through the door of Future Gallery and the gallery assistant was so nice to toss the paper in the trash. I never understood the art work exhibited at Future Gallery and I didn’t understand it this time. It’s art for Millennials. I had my finger on the bell of Barbara Wien gallery when I realized I had seen this exhibition before and had written about it for this blog. Let’s not show my face there yet, I thought, you never know...
In the evening the place to be was König Gallery, where “Hansa” had curated a group show in the tower of St. Agnes. I don’t know Hansa but apparently he’s a household name of the 1980s. “Did you get paid?” I asked an exhibiting artist. “No,’ he said. I wonder if Hansa got paid for curating the show. Johann König is a notorious cheapskate. I tried to get into the tower but there was a long line waiting on the stairs. Somebody told me that Isa Genzken had refused to show her art work at the last moment. But she was supposed to make an appearance that night. I’m a big fan of Isa Genzken but I don’t necessarily need to meet her in person. So I made my own appearance a short one.
A few days later, on another warm April day, and now better equipped with shades, pink lip gloss, and my new cool jacket of Claudie Pierlot (check me out at Gallery Weekend, I plan to wear the same outfit), I visited Aernout Mik’s exhibition at Carlier Gebauer. In a still two-channel video a couple of heavily weaponed terror police performing an awkward choreography in the deserted night streets of Ostend (my favorite town in Belgium). The police officers are not white, which seems important to mention. I stayed for a while, not knowing what to think about it. But then concluded that to be confused by an art work is not a bad thing to be.