The biannual online magazine "Drain" features in its current Psychogeography issue (October, 2008 - Vol. 5, No.2) some images from my "mixed messages" series. The magazine states about this issue:
In 1955, Guy Debord described psychogeography as “the study of the specific effects of the geographical environment, consciously organized or not, on the emotions and behavior of individuals.” Debord’s psychogeographical map The Naked City (1957) challenged traditional ideas of mapping relating to scale, location, and fixity, and drew on the work of urban social geographer Paul-Henri Chombart de Lauwe’s concept of the city as a conglomeration of distinct quarters, each with its own special function, class divisions, and “physiognomy,” which linked the idea of the urban plan to the body. An important strategy of the pyschogeographical was the dèrive, “a technique of transient passage through varied ambiences”.
The ‘psychogeographical’ has had a pervasive if somewhat amorphous role in contemporary art and culture. As a creative, social and political tactic, wandering through psychogeographic spaces is pertinent to a diverse range of practices including the use of GPS systems, Internet art, photography as well as sound and performance art.
This issue of Drain has gathered a series of essays, artworks and creative writings to reflect upon the legacies of psychogeography and consider its current manifestations.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Book Cover

The German monthly "Das Magazin" will run an excerpt of the book along with some additional images of mine in February 2009.
After 2 months ...

In the meantime, I have been working on the extended version of "Critical Distance". I have been invited by the Thuringian Visual Artists Association (Verband Bildender Künstler Thüringen) to have solo show under the same title next September in Erfurt.
Sunday, September 14, 2008
Not Public! - Point Proven!


Saturday, September 13, 2008
"mixed messages" in Drain Magazine
A few images from my series "mixed messages" will be featured in the up-coming Psychogeography issue of the online magazine Drain - Journal of Contemporary Art and Culture (scheduled for the end of September).

Friday, September 12, 2008
Not Public!
Although I have been busy planning my up-coming wedding in Germany (9/27), I contributed ideas, time and a project to ArtistsMeeting's (AM) group effort at Conflux Festival here in NYC. In fact, my project -- "Not Public!", red barricade tape with the before-mentioned phrase to be used to temporarily block off privately owned so-called public plazas in NYC -- is the closest interpretation of AM's initial idea for this festival (for more information, see blog entry/press release below). I will share installation pictures as they become available.

Here is my "official" blurb:
In a more critical gesture, Daniel Blochwitz wishes to point out the ambiguous nature of the privately owned public spaces or POPS. He questions whether the trading of (prime real state) space for (public) space between developers and the City really creates valuable communal and green urban areas. After all, most of these so-called public spaces seem to be dark niches, corners and alleyways dressed up with a few mall features and shrubs, and often discourage leisurely use and lingering. And as gated, guarded, and surveilled as the POPS are, one has to wonder about their role within a larger system of control. To highlight this the group will use barricade tape marked with the words “NOT PUBLIC!” to symbolically block off several of the POPS spaces.
Not Public!, Date: Sept. 11-14, Time continuous, Financial District, various locations, Artist - Daniel Blochwitz

Here is my "official" blurb:
In a more critical gesture, Daniel Blochwitz wishes to point out the ambiguous nature of the privately owned public spaces or POPS. He questions whether the trading of (prime real state) space for (public) space between developers and the City really creates valuable communal and green urban areas. After all, most of these so-called public spaces seem to be dark niches, corners and alleyways dressed up with a few mall features and shrubs, and often discourage leisurely use and lingering. And as gated, guarded, and surveilled as the POPS are, one has to wonder about their role within a larger system of control. To highlight this the group will use barricade tape marked with the words “NOT PUBLIC!” to symbolically block off several of the POPS spaces.
Not Public!, Date: Sept. 11-14, Time continuous, Financial District, various locations, Artist - Daniel Blochwitz
ArtistsMeeting at Conflux Festival NYC
Artists Meeting - Public Exhibition Space @ Conflux Festival NYC
Interventions in Privately Owned Public Space
Downtown Manhattan - District 1
September 11 - 14, 2008
Brought together by chance, circumstance, and a common purpose, Artists Meeting members gather in person and via technology. Free of commercial influence, participants draw on each other’s expertise to refine concepts, further experimentation and engage each other in collaboration. Artists Meeting members participating in Public Exhibiton Space include Leesa & Nicole Abahuni, James Andrews, Daniel Blochwitz, Eliza Fernbach, G.H. Hovagimyan, Thomas Hutchison, Christina McPhee, Mayuko Nakatsuka, Raphaele Shirley, Maria João Salema, Lara Star Martini, Abigail Weg, Lee Wells and Edita Zulic.
Artists Meeting, a light hearted group of artists who have been working together for two and a half years, is presenting a series of performance / interventions in the POPS Plazas of the Financial District in Lower Manhattan. The Artists Meeting Project titled “Public Exhibition Space” is part of a larger Arts Festival called Conflux that is taking place downtown Sept. 11 - 14th. POPS plazas (privately owned public space) are plazas which real estate developers have created over the years to receive special favors from the city such as a tax abatement or the approval to build a much higher building than zoning allows. The POPS spaces have recently come under scrutiny in the press because many of the owners have reneged on their agreements and privatized the spaces making them inaccessible to the public. (see: New York Times, Real Estate Section, BIG DEAL; Home Sweet Home on the Plaza, By JOSH BARBANEL, Published: December 17, 2006) and (New York Times:NEW YORK REGION / THE CITY | May 25, 2008 East Side: A New Study Faults Plazas as Public in Name, Private in Look By GREGORY BEYER)
For more information and a detailed list and map of Conflux Artists Meeting related interventions, performances and events please goto the AM website at: http://www.artistsmeeting.org
About CONFLUX
Starting September 11th, over one hundred local and international artists will transform New York City streets into a laboratory for exploring the urban environment at the Conflux Festival. Located in Greenwich Village at the Center for Architecture (a.k.a. Conflux HQ), the four-day event includes art installations, street art interventions, interactive performance, walking tours, bicycle and public-transit expeditions, DIY media workshops, lectures, films and music.
For more information about CONFLUX go to: http://www.confluxfestival.org/conflux2008
Interventions in Privately Owned Public Space
Downtown Manhattan - District 1
September 11 - 14, 2008

Artists Meeting, a light hearted group of artists who have been working together for two and a half years, is presenting a series of performance / interventions in the POPS Plazas of the Financial District in Lower Manhattan. The Artists Meeting Project titled “Public Exhibition Space” is part of a larger Arts Festival called Conflux that is taking place downtown Sept. 11 - 14th. POPS plazas (privately owned public space) are plazas which real estate developers have created over the years to receive special favors from the city such as a tax abatement or the approval to build a much higher building than zoning allows. The POPS spaces have recently come under scrutiny in the press because many of the owners have reneged on their agreements and privatized the spaces making them inaccessible to the public. (see: New York Times, Real Estate Section, BIG DEAL; Home Sweet Home on the Plaza, By JOSH BARBANEL, Published: December 17, 2006) and (New York Times:NEW YORK REGION / THE CITY | May 25, 2008 East Side: A New Study Faults Plazas as Public in Name, Private in Look By GREGORY BEYER)
For more information and a detailed list and map of Conflux Artists Meeting related interventions, performances and events please goto the AM website at: http://www.artistsmeeting.org
About CONFLUX
Starting September 11th, over one hundred local and international artists will transform New York City streets into a laboratory for exploring the urban environment at the Conflux Festival. Located in Greenwich Village at the Center for Architecture (a.k.a. Conflux HQ), the four-day event includes art installations, street art interventions, interactive performance, walking tours, bicycle and public-transit expeditions, DIY media workshops, lectures, films and music.
For more information about CONFLUX go to: http://www.confluxfestival.org/conflux2008
Monday, September 8, 2008
Deborah Kelly and Martha Rosler
On Saturday night, I attended the opening reception of my friend and fellow fleas member Martha Rosler at Mitchell-Innes & Nash . Although I couldn't stay for too long, I was impressed by Martha's exhibition, Great Power. It included a batch of new anti-war photomontages, binders with newspaper clippings about the current war in Iraq, a huge moving prosthetic leg, a dance arcade game, and a turnstile at the entrance. The latter, prevented me -- at first -- to enter the exhibition, because I had no cash on me. Eventually, I had to beg for a quarter at the front desk. Martha's "show-and-tell" in the online edition of the New York Times (09/05/08): Cut and Paste.
Another friend of mine and member of the fleas, Deborah Kelly, has been invited to bring her Beware of the God project to the Singapore Biennale 2008. Deborah's work is incredibly smart and engaging, or as a press release from the Biennale states, "watch out for Deborah Kelly’s transient projection, Beware of the God, which demands that we ponder our realities and beliefs while encountering a moment of wonder and discovery."

Monday, June 23, 2008
A brief June update

Also, there are a couple group exhibitions in the works. One will be organized by Michael Bühler-Rose. It will center around his idea of "New Geographics" and will focus on former students of Andrea Robbins and Max Becher. I will probably show works from my "mixed messages" series. I will exhibit works from the same series at "Contemporary Flânerie: Reconfiguring Cities", organized by fellow University of Florida alumni Vagner Whitehead (March 2009). A third group show, "The Prairie", is organized by another UF-alumni, Summer Zickefoose (February 2009). For this exhibition, I will produce a new, map-like work from images I have taken in the mid-West last year. Both group shows will likely be traveling. There are more exhibitions planned, but it is yet too early to share the information here. Please check back later. I also hope to get the opportunity to show the works in progress that I am currently producing: "Critical Distance" (see previous book announcement) and other works relating to East Germany. In the fall of 2009, after all, it will be the 20th anniversary of the social and political changes, the "Wende", in the former GDR.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
The Bechers at the MoMA

The MoMA shows many work groups that most of us are already familiar with. But it is always a pleasure to look at these prints up-close and in context. I also enjoy how the Bechers draw wider (art-)historical connection, like their take on Walker Evans' photograph of Bethlehem, PA. The Bechers certainly owe a lot of their success to photographers like August Sander as well as to the emergence of conceptual art in the early 1970s, but I find it amazing how much they have -- in return -- influenced photographers ever since, whether they were their students, like the Struffkys, or all the stripes and shapes of contemporary typologists. I just find it sad, though, how typologies have become such an uncritical, widespread and easily marketable trend in photography. Is it just a too-easy formula for today's art students, from Leipzig to New York, often neglecting the passion and dedication the Bechers had for their subject matter and project? Or is it rather the art market that too-easily "recognizes" typologies as (salable/desirable) "Art"? Probably both.
Well, in any case, if you are in New York, please plan a trip to MoMA's photography gallery and indulge in truly fine works of Bernd and Hilla Becher.
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Photo Festival in Dumbo

The best show was definitely Tim Barber's Various Photographs. I liked how he leveled the playing field, allowing each of the invited photographers, whether well-known or emerging, the same image size, displaying all 300 photographs democratically in a wall-spanning grid. Suddenly, the star photographer found himself dwarfed by the work of the newcomer next to him. Unfortunately, Barber didn't look to hard outside his "Vice" circles for talents, making the exhibition a rather homogeneous one despite the vast number of images.

The best work in The Ubiquitous Image, curated by Lesley A. Martin, was for me Claudia Angelmaier's reflections on reproduction and seriality. I had encountered her work before at the open studio exhibition of the HGB Leipzig in 2005. I am intrigued by her concept and execution, and found myself lost in the details of the reproductions of reproductions of old drawings and prints. However, I think Angelmaier enlarged the images beyond their capacity, which is obviously a nod toward the market and in step with the more recent German photographic traditions.
Martin Parr’s exhibit, New Typologies, seems almost redundant. How many times can we rehash this serial tradition in photography? Of course, the simplicity of this comparative strategy with its often aesthetically pleasing photographs is a safe way to "bring order to the chaos around us," as the festival website states. I find it rather boring. And I am rather annoyed that even photographers like Parr can't resist to curate a show based on typologies. To write at least something positive about this particular exhibition, I would say Jan Kempenaers' series of old concrete structures and monument was quite intriguing.
All in all, I would say the first attempt of New York Photo Festival was almost successful, but could not, as I mentioned before, fulfill my expectations. There was just too much hype prior to the festival and somewhat mediocre execution of the actual event. It definitely wasn't Houston. But with more restraint on attitudes and prices, and more emphasis on quality, the next installment of this festival could become an actual success.
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Review: Talents II

This time around, a few blocks down from New York's Neue Galerie, Zielony shows an international selection of youths: from Halle/Neustadt, Los Angeles, Marseille, and Bristol/Newport. Besides the global street wear fashion, all these kids seem to share working class or marginalized backgrounds and bleak neighborhoods. They are photographed in the twilight between day and night as well as child- and adulthood. The dominant colors are the greens and oranges of the neon and street lights, and the blue hues of the night.
Zielony succeeds in depicting a sense of desperation and urgency behind the apparently universal display of boredom and posing of his adolescent subjects. Many of his images seem to be the documentary equivalent of Gregory Crewdson's staged photo-productions and carry the intimacy of Ryan McGinly pictures - just not as optimistic.
Zielony claims that he is more of an accomplice to these kids than a mere observer. But I don't think so. There is an apparent distance between him and them. While McGinley, for example, imagines himself amongst his models in an utopian world of everlasting fun, sex, drugs and games, Zielony seems deeply skeptical of the life in front of his camera. He might empathize, but he would not trade his life for theirs. I suspect that he seeks to justify his gaze, but I think his critical view is justification enough.
The representation of life on the margins follows a long tradition, and the emotional weight of Zielony's images, whether they depict depressed East German or French immigrant neighborhoods, might help to define for our generation where all these neo-liberal societies fail.
Sunday, February 17, 2008
BorderBlog update

BorderBlog
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Monday, February 11, 2008
Helen Levitt
This Sunday, I had the chance and special honor to meet -- if only briefly -- Helen Levitt. I visited the 94-year old photographer with a bouquet of flowers on behalf of the Sprengel Museum Hannover (Germany) to congratulate her. Levitt was awarded this year's "Spectrum" Prize of the Foundation Lower Saxony in collaboration with the Sprengel Museum. On display at the latter is a comprehensive retrospective of Levitt's work (through May 25th).
Levitt had discovered her interest in photography early, and was mentored during her first steps by Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Walker Evans in particular. She started to document the streets of New York and has created through her straight but intimate approach some of the most iconic images of this city and its people ever since. She now almost stands as a synonym for the genre of "street photography".
Levitt had discovered her interest in photography early, and was mentored during her first steps by Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Walker Evans in particular. She started to document the streets of New York and has created through her straight but intimate approach some of the most iconic images of this city and its people ever since. She now almost stands as a synonym for the genre of "street photography".
Monday, January 28, 2008
Review: Archives and Collections at the ICP


One of my favorite works in the exhibition was Fazal Sheikh's "Afghan Images", a series of black and white photographs depicting hands holding small photos of loved ones who were killed or disappeared, mostly during the Soviet-Afghanistan War. Accompanied by wall texts with the back stories, these images provide a glimpse into the complicated, complex and painful recent history of Afghanistan, especially in light of the simplistic and rather reactionary film "Wilson's War", which just hit the theaters.
I always love to see a film by Harun Farocki being included in an exhibition, even though I am not quite sure why one encounters his work lately more in visual art institutions and biennials rather than movie theaters and film festivals. "Videograms of a Revolution" is a fine piece of work about the end of Ceauşescu rule in Romania, but definitely not my favorite film by this underappreciated German filmmaker. Anri Sala's "Intervista" on the other hand, seems more successful in investigating the fault lines of recent Eastern European history. Sala found an old 16mm reel depicting his mother with then-Albanian-communist-leader Enver Hoxa. Anri Sala had little information about this event and the film's audio track was lost. So, Sala set out to document his investigation about the content and context of this film reel.
Other works in the show included a poignant series of staged photographs by Zoe Leonard, called "The Fae Richards Photo Archive", found images arranged by Tacita Dean ("Floh"), and Sherri Levine's notorious "After Walker Evans" photographs. All these works challenge authenticity and authorship, and question the meaning of images and their archives as valid historical inscriptions. And then there were the usual suspects. I am actually getting tired of encountering Struffskys in ever new contexts of various group exhibitions. But yes, "Archive Fever" also includes Thomas Ruff and two of his "Machines" photographs. I wonder why Enwezor didn't opt for the Bechers instead. I mean one won't find a more rigorous archive than their building typologies.
But the one thing I really would love to know from the curator is: What was the huge stack of white letter-size paper for? It was placed at the entry of the exhibition with a sign encouraging visitors "Take One". A blank sheet of paper? For notes? My personal archive? I just couldn't decipher the purpose. Perhaps I need to read some more Derrida. In any case, I would definitely recommend this exhibition to anyone academically minded and/or interested in the subject of the archive and documentary.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Re-Printed: Critical Distance

You can order a signed copy of "Critical Distance" (2007) right here. Please use this e-mail link also for all other inquiries. Thank you for your interest.
Monday, January 14, 2008
Thursday, January 10, 2008
A New Year

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