Posts Tagged ‘Art & Culture’
Artconnect Berlin
Adrian Pasen chats to Julia Mari Bernaus about the comprehensive online hub she's built for Berlin’s art community... With its heady mix of freedom of creative expression, liberalism and affordable living, it’s little wonder that Berlin continues to serve as the unofficial hub for peripatetic creatives from all corners of the globe.It makes for an incalculably large talent pool, all looking for new outlets, new inspiration and new collaborative opportunities. But the sheer number and [...]
Kunst Werke Institute For Contemporary Arts
A jewel in Mitte's art scene crown... Berlin’s Auguststrasse isn’t short on galleries. This well known Mitte street is a main artery for contemporary art in the city, long ago earning the sobriquet “East Berlin's art mile” for its impressive wealth of independent galleries that line both sides of the street and show everything from sculpture and fine art to photography. Of all the street’s venues, the Kunst Werke Institute For Contemporary Arts at number 69 is perhaps the most [...]
Fête de la Musique
Paul Sullivan chats to the local organisers of the famous Fête de la Musique event... On June 21st, Berliners will once again celebrate the longest day of the year and the official beginning of summer with a city-wide music festival, the Fete de la Musique. With performances on over 80 open-air stages, the street festival offers everything from reggae and jazz, to hip hop, electronic music and klezmer. Some of the city's larger venues, like the Haus der Kulturen der Welt and the [...]
The Art Of Urban Sketching
Berlin Illustrator Rolf Schroeter talks about his passion for Urban Sketching and the relationship between art and place... I was born in a small town near Cologne in West Germany. After an apprenticeship as a stonemason I travelled to Italy, then took a degree in architecture from RWTH Aachen. During all that time, and especially during my architectural studies, I used sketchbooks. I worked as a tutor alongside Professor Heiner Hoffmann, who put a strong emphasis on filling sketchbooks with [...]
Q&A: Guido Steenkamp, Photographer
Paul Sullivan chats to Berlin street photographer Guido Steenkamp... Where were you born and what sparked your interest in photography? I grew up in a small town in West Germany, close to the Dutch border. I moved to Berlin about 12 years ago to start my first job. I began to take pictures more or less by accident when a friend gave a camera to me. Right from the beginning the darkroom was a kind of magical place for me: the moment you see the first contours of a picture on what was a piece [...]
Bauhaus Archive & Museum
Berlin’s Bauhaus museum offers a comprehensive overview of Germany’s most famous design movement... Though short lived, Germany's Bauhaus design school went on to become one of the 20th century’s most influential and pervasive movements. Almost every major European and American city features some example of the Bauhaus style, whether one of the school's linear, flat-topped buildings or one of the many lamps, tables and chairs produced through the years. As Annemarie Jaeggi, [...]
Q&A: Nils Frahm, Composer & Musician
A Berlin-based composer with a penchant for piano improvisation Raised on a musical diet of classical and jazz, Nils Frahm started playing the piano as a young student of Nahum Brodski, himself a student of Tchaikovsky’s last protégé. When the budding musician wasn’t hovering over a keyboard, he was sifting through his father’s vast collection of ECM records. Now, aged 27, Frahm has become a masterful improvisational pianist. In December he released his first two [...]



