Flooded Modernity, 2024

Digital print, free mounted
Frame: Alder, grey lacquered, ArtGlas AR70 2mm
Sheet size (H x W): 36.7 x 55.1 cm
Frame dimensions (H x W): 45.3 x 63.7 cm
Ed. 1/5

Lot number: 16
Minimum bid: 300,- EUR / Estimate: 600,- to 800,- EUR

 

 

©2024 Jordis Schlösser, Ostkreuz
©Asmund Havsteen-Mikkelsen
©2024 Jordis Schlösser, Ostkreuz
@Nikolaj Rentzmann
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  • The Fluss Bad Berlin project is an attempt to live differently with the water, acknowledging it as a force – but also healing power.
  • Über das Werk: A common trait between Fluss Bad Berlin and Flooded Modernity is the attempt to 'unwork' the devastating impact of modernist industrialisation. The aim of the Fluss Bad Berlin is to bring a small part of the river Spree closer to its original state as a clean river with flush riverbeds, suitable for humans and the natural inhabitants of the river – thereby 'undoing' the polluting effects of industrialisation and agricultural farming. It represents a critique of the idea of using the river as an easy garbage dump and of controlling the water by leading it through canals, and instead opens the river towards to other qualities of water: Water being a shelter, a harbour of life, a medium to access that can refresh the body and mind. The Fluss Bad Berlin project is an attempt to live differently with the water, acknowledging it as a force – but also healing power.
  • Asmund Havsteen-Mikkelsen
  • Asmund Havsteen-Mikkelsen (b. 1977, Denmark) studied in Denmark, Germany and Japan, and between 2007-2015 was based in Berlin. For more than a decade he has focused on painting, publishing and depicting modernist architecture, highlighting its utopian properties as well as its monumental failures. In 2018 he semi-submerged a scale model of one of Le Corbusier's most famous buildings in the Vejle Fjord in Denmark. He has exhibited and published extensively in Denmark, Germany and throughout Europe. His work is held in collections in Europe, USA and South Korea.
projekt nachhaltigkeit
projekte des staedtebaus
senat berlin