Posts Tagged ‘Caique Tizzi’
The Week August 15–21, 2022
Openings and events at Project Space Festival, Tanz im August, Grzegorzki Shows, Galerie Thomas Fischer, WIRWIR, Galerie Wedding, Pansion Projects, HWK, HAU, Berliner Festspiele, silent green,…[read on]
Berlin Art Week 2022 Hotel & Restaurant Guide
Aug. 12, 2022
Berlin Art Week is coming up September 14–18. Whether you’re on a budget or ready to splurge, we’ve shortlisted some of our top suggestions for beautifully designed places to stay and…[read on]
FuturePerfectLand Reorders Time at Former Reinickendorf Distillery
by Alison Hugill // Sept. 16, 2021
Through a series of fun fair “rides”—seven temporary installations dotting the grounds of the former distillery in Reinickendorf—the artists involved in the project…[read on]
Touching the Surface: An Interview with Adam Fearon
by Alison Hugill // July 8, 2021
We spoke to Fearon inside his show at Ashley, where he elaborated on the connections between his paintings, his writing and his sculptural works, and how the tactility…[read on]
Social-Distance Friendly Pop-Up Restaurant ‘Limbo’ by Caique Tizzi
Article by Elizabeth Schippers // June 19, 2020
Though cafes and restaurants are opening their doors again, life has by no means gone back to normal. There are still numerous restrictions we have to keep in mind when meeting up with people outside of our households…[read on]
THE WEEK October 17–23, 2016
Openings at Image Movement, Insitu, ID Festival, Non Berlin, Rainbow Unicorn, UDK, Kindl, Agora, Daad Galerie, Grimmuseum, Hamburger Bahnhof, …[read on]
Announcement // ‘Augury’ Summer Programme at BQ Berlin
Article by Caitlin Eyre in Berlin // Thursday, Jul. 07, 2016
or their upcoming summer show, BQ Berlin presents ‘Augury’, an extensive month-long exhibition and event programme that explores the theme of reading and literature in the art world. Compiled by Adam Ferron, John Holten, Caique Tizzi and… [read on]
Unbound. Agora Rethinks the Artist Book
Blog entry by Virginia Wagner – in Berlin; Saturday, Nov. 5, 2011.
“Something very important and very weird is happening to the book right now: It’s shedding its papery corpus and transmigrating into a bodiless digital form, right before our eyes. We’re witnessing the bibliographical equivalent of the rapture.”
Lev Grossman, New York Times
Lev Grossman, New York Times