Verkleidete Distanzen: migratory aesthetics and counter-public spheres in
the gdr
The exhibition, curated by Elisa R. Linn, explores the impact of borders on the formation
of counter-publics at the intersection of art, literature, and activism in the GDR during and after the fall of the Berlin
Wall.
It features artistic works, lyrical texts, archival materials, and “a
library from below.” It asks how artists developed a mode of “border thinking” (Gloria Anzaldúa/Walter Mignolo)—a way of thinking
about and across the border between ideologies, languages, identities, and normative understandings of the body, sexuality,
and civic belonging. How did this way of thinking enable them to resist the architectures of state representation and subjectification,
as well as the “scissors in their heads,” that is, inner self-censorship?
The contributions to this exhibition make borders
visible—whether physical, ideological, bodily, cultural, or media-based—and transcend and occupy them as diasporic sites of
articulation. These aesthetic strategies unfold in public, semi-public, or intimate spaces, sometimes subverting official
iconographies of identity—such as socialist realism’s vision of the “new man” promoted by the GDR state. Others search for
the liberating word in lyrical and narrative texts, where ambiguity becomes a tool for metamorphosis and “becoming-minor”
as generative strategies of resistance against discursive silencing. Some artists use autonomous, often illicit, approaches
to new media—creating “intermediate transgressions” through short film experiments that occupy legal gray zones. Others pursue
performative, actionist, and photographic explorations of the body as a political space. Still others confront colonialist,
de-subjectifying ascriptions of otherness with artistic obstinacy and subjective expression—beyond their official daily routine
as contract workers in a so-called “brother country.”
The contributions gathered in the exhibition navigate between
precisely this autonomy and confinement in condensed space, between repulsion and (sexual) desire, and between community and
experiences of isolation and exile. In doing so, they encourage us to understand the transcendence and migration from one
place, one identity, or one gender to another, not only as a state of emergency, a moment of alienation, or a potential threat.
Instead, they encourage us to invalidate boundaries, to reappropriate them, to locate them in favor of their liminality, and
to go beyond territorial and categorical ways of thinking.
Far from attempting to provide a linear, comprehensive overview,
the exhibition explores the aesthetic potential of these contributions from the subjective perspective of a post-reunification
generation: as nonconformist practices that devised alternative artistic forms of life, action, and democratic community,
thereby sometimes questioning conformity to the norms and property relations of West Germany's patriarchal capitalist society.
What potential do these practices hold today, at a time when nativism and isolationism are increasingly underpinning the realpolitik
of a supposedly “strong,” united Germany?
Curated by Elisa R. Linn.
With contributions by Jürgen
Wittdorf, Clara Mosch, Núria Quevedo, Mahmoud Dabdoub, Gabriele Stötzer, Raja Lubinetzki, materials from the GrauZone archive,
Bärbel Bohley, Ulrich Polster, Annemirl Bauer invited by Sandra Teitge, César Olhagaray, Ronald M. Schernikau, Marina Gržinić
& Aina Šmid, Künstlerinnengruppe Erfurt, Geraldo Paunde, De-Zentralbild, Lutz Dammbeck, frau anders, Jayne-Ann Igel, Jürgen
Baldiga, Ladies Neid, Namenlos, Sarah Schulman.
The exhibition architecture is designed by Lennart Wolff.