Christoph Schlingensief, “Church of Fear”, German Pavilion, Biennale di Venezia 2011, View of main room
related posts
A Church of Fear vs. the Alien Within
A Church of Fear vs. the Alien Within. Stage installation of Schlingensief`s Fluxus Oratory in the German Pavilion, Altar view with film projection. Photo: (c) Roman Mensing, artdoc.de
A Church of Fear vs. the Alien Within
A Church of Fear vs. the Alien Within
A Church of Fear vs. the Alien Within
A Church of Fear vs. the Alien Within
A Church of Fear vs. the Alien Within
Ball of Bad Taste
Christoph Schlingensief, Vienna 1998. Ball of Bad Taste. Sausage stand on Burgring, on the way between the Vienna Opera Ball and the Ball of Bad Taste © Peter Rigaud
A Church of Fear vs. the Alien Within
A Church of Fear vs. the Alien Within. Stage installation of the Fluxus-oratorio by Christoph Schlingensief in the German Pavilion, Altar view with film projection
Photo: (c) Roman Mensing, artdoc.de
Terror 2000
Audio: Funeral
Terror 2000 (Intensive Station Germany), Germany, 1991-92, Directed by Christoph Schlingensief © Filmgalerie 451
100 Years Adolf Hitler
Audio: At Table
100 Years Adolf Hitler (The Last Hour in the Fuhrerbunker), Germany, 1988-89, Directed by Christoph Schlingensief © Filmgalerie 451
United Trash
Audio: The birth of Peter Panne
United Trash, Germany 1995-6, directed by Christoph Schlingensief © Filmgalerie 451
Menu Total
Audio: Theme Music (Helge Schneider)
Menu Total, Germany, 1985-86, Directed by Christoph Schlingensief © Filmgalerie 451
The German Chainsaw Massacre
Audio: Border Control
The German Chainsaw Massacre (The First Hour of German Reunification), Germany, 1990, Directed by Christoph Schlingensief © Filmgalerie 451
Schlingensief’s opera village in Africa: A “Conversation” at the German Pavilion
Christoph Schlingensief pursued his idea of an opera village in Burkina Faso passionately. He imagined it as a “social sculpture,” a place of encounters and of dialogue. The Goethe-Institut supported Schlingensief in this project from the very beginning and continues to be committed to its development. In March, it began the “Conversations” series in Ouagadougou: workshops and discussions both in Africa and in Europe intended to support the realization of the opera village by providing creative stimuli and promoting inner-African dialogue. Now, on 2 June the second meeting will be held at the German Pavilion. Planned participants include Aino Laberenz, Susanne Gaensheimer, Francis Kéré, Chris Dercon and Simon Njami.
Elisabeth Schweeger: A Personal Perspective on Christoph Schlingensief
“The great power, however, rests in uncertainty, in the conviction that there are no solutions but only transformations and changes of form … that, to me, is not fatalism, it is a very big yes to life.” (Christoph Schlingensief)
Dear Christoph
Sunday, August 22, 2010, eight o’clock. Stunned by the news of your death that came yesterday—in the end, it was a surprise after all—and having slept only a few hours, I gaze into the morning sun, little big Scorpio brother, and find no way forward in my gloom. As though paralyzed, my mind keeps returning to something Bazon Brock made us take to heart: Death must be abolished, this damn mess must stop. Your fiftieth birthday was to be in a few weeks, the opera village project in Africa needed ongoing work, and of course you had hoped to make a personal appearance in Venice next year, where you were to design the German biennial pavilion. It would have been an honor for you to represent the nation and to irritate it as well, to challenge and provoke. more…
Via Intolleranza II
The provisional final performance of ‘Via Intolleranza II’ in Munich has already take place without Christoph Schlingensief, who had to leave for reasons of illness, and showed that it works – sadly – even without him. 90 concentrated minutes about the colonial situation in our heads, Schlingensief and his team included just as much as the pleasant Africans who are also in Europe looking for agents and careers. The framework is provided by a couple of remembered quotations from Nono’s ‘Intolleranza’, socially-aware avant-garde opera from distant times, where one still knew exactly where morality and progress were leading. The debate is as Gordian as it is fruitful, and after the dilemmas and their intractability have been repeatedly raised, examined and allowed to collapse in a compact performance, an African version of Bayreuth almost seems to be the logical consequence. At the end a Schlingensief double sits behind a pane of glass surrounded by a projected scratchy film, bangs hesitantly on the glass and asks the good old futile question of all artists like Mr Punch: “Another weird bit of performance art. Is anybody there?” Be warned: this is not a homage to Schlingensief, but a notable production!
Franz Wille
A production of the Festspielhaus Afrika gGmbH in co-production with Kampnagel Hamburg, Kunstenfestivaldesarts Brussels and Bayerische Staatsoper Munich. In cooperation with Burgtheater Vienna, Impulstanz and Wiener Festwochen
World premiere 15 May 2010
Interdisciplinary Symposium: Der Gesamtkünstler Christoph Schlingensief
The interdisciplinary Symposium Der Gesamtkünstler Christoph Schlingensief organized by the Elfriede-Jelinek-Research Centre in cooperation with the Kunsthalle Wien and the Thyssen-Bomemisza Art Contemporary will be held from 6th – 10th April 2011.
The symposium will include discussions about Schlingensief’s artistic and theatrical aesthetics, the form of his works, the networking of Arts and the resulting media compaction and collisions.
For further information about the program and venue, please visit the website https://www.elfriede-jelinek-forschungszentrum.com/veranstaltungen/schlingensief-symposium-2011/.
A Chance Acquaintance
By 1984 I had grown tired of meeting market deadlines in my writing about movies. No launching date? No text! So it was welcome news that the people at Hamburg’s Abaton theater had put together a series of Unknown films by unknown young German directors. I went, curious to see a movie, any movie, without the constraint of having to deliver a review. Tunguska—Die Kisten sind da [Tunguska—The Boxes Have Arrived], by a guy whose name I would learn over time to pronounce without stumbling. Schlingensief. more…
Immediate Demolition of Venice!
June 23, 2010
To be honest, i don’t get what that lead architect there is saying? It strikes me as a canard. Nazis and communists have one thing in common, they always have to annihilate something to make room for themselves. They’ll rebuild the palace of the republic, too, in a few years, and some day they’ll build that disney imbecility the city palace as well, and then there will be an ordinance some day that we citizens of the federal republic have to run around in historic costumes. There is no limit to the architectonic imbecility in germany. more…