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CONVERSAS #14
Max Schreier runs Aunt Linda with his partner Anita Iannacchione. He also works at Artsy. The focus of Aunt Linda is on the familial sense of having a gallery in an apartment. Their idea is to invite people into their home. Previous shows in their apartment include works of Leah Dixon, Mathias Euwer, Michael Burditt Norton, Michael Rocco Ruglio-Misurell and Julia Colavita.
Joseph Craig is in Berlin for his exhibition "Home is Where the Hearth is" at Centrum. Opening on 8 April, this exhibition examines the ways which fireplaces cinch us to dated traditions and histories, obscure outliers, and prevent us from moving forward. Within Joseph’s installation, a contemporary fairy tale will unfold, through which he inserts himself into the dormant passages that anchor us to festive traditions, cinematic illusions and our great aunt's ashes. These cavities no longer scorn at party pashes or laddered fishnets, they become an entrance to something higher.
Jasmijn Visser is a Dutch artist who lives in Utrecht and Berlin, and works on the intersection of art, writing, research and design. She has a deeply rooted fascination with the structural foundation of contemporary society and geopolitical conflicts. In large scale projects, Visser uncovers mechanisms and perceptions that are shaped by man-made structures. During Visser’s recent three months residency period at Delfina Foundation, she studied cartography, demography, patterns of migration and urbanisation. Visser recently finalised her work on the monumental Conflict Atlas, geopolitics and contingencies on the Malvinas- Falklands archipelago, in collaboration with design collective Metahaven.
Joseph Craig
Max Schreier
Jasmijn Visser
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