Mariona Berenguer, Elisa Jule Braun, Lynn Gerstmair, David Kroell, Lukas Liese, Yael Esther Mor, Katharina Ruhm, Veronika Weber, Teresa Weißert

UNRAVEL AT NIGHT

Project Info

  • 💙 Studio Hanniball
  • 💚 Studio Hanniball
  • 🖤 Mariona Berenguer, Elisa Jule Braun, Lynn Gerstmair, David Kroell, Lukas Liese, Yael Esther Mor, Katharina Ruhm, Veronika Weber, Teresa Weißert
  • 💜 Lynn Gerstmair, Veronika Weber, Teresa Weißert
  • 💛 Henriette Seibert

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Veronika Weber
Veronika Weber
UNRAVEL AT NIGHT
Veronika Weber
Veronika Weber
Veronika Weber
Veronika Weber
Mariona Berenguer
Mariona Berenguer
Mariona Berenguer
Mariona Berenguer
Veronika Weber
Veronika Weber
Lukas Liese
Lukas Liese
David Kroell
David Kroell
David Kroell
David Kroell
David Kroell
David Kroell
David Kroell
David Kroell
Katharina Ruhm
Katharina Ruhm
Katharina Ruhm
Katharina Ruhm
Katharina Ruhm
Katharina Ruhm
Veronika Weber
Veronika Weber
Teresa Weißert
Teresa Weißert
Elisa Jule Braun
Elisa Jule Braun
Teresa Weißert
Teresa Weißert
Lynn Gerstmair
Lynn Gerstmair
"Unravel at Night" deals with motifs found in the story about Penelope in Greek mythology. The exhibition examines her role as Odysseus' waiting and faithful wife from a feminist perspective. Penelope weaves and waits at home for her husband to return, while Odysseus wanders from place to place on his Odyssey in the Mediterranean. To avoid being married again, she gives herself over to the activity of weaving. Only when the weaving is finished will she be able to take a new husband.  At night, she secretly unravels the woven again, in order to never reach the end of her work.  
This exhibition understands Penelope's woven creation as an independent artistic position.
The latter arises from her seeming powerlessness in the face of a changing world that is inaccessible to her. Her activity stands for self-empowerment within a very limited scope of action.  “Unravel at Night” shows works by artists which deal with the resistance of cyclical processes, time, dissolution and decay. The supposed meaninglessness of destroying what has been created before, but also the process of working slowly, continuously and repetitively, can enable the works to poetically and politically reflect on the present age. Concept by: Lynn Gerstmair, Veronika Weber, Teresa Weißert
Lynn Gerstmair, Veronika Weber, Teresa Weißert

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