
Vika Kirchenbauer
2021Zwillinge
Florian Gottschick
Stefan Schönenberg, Tobias Schönenberg
On the eve of his wedding Daniel meets again with his true love-his identical twin brother Jan. For the last five years he's been running away from his feelings. Now, on his stag night he is being tested once more.
Twins
M/M
Drew Lint
Antoine Lahaie, Nicolas Maxim Endlicher
Wayward Canadian, Matthew, crushed by the isolation of being new to Berlin, turns his sexual desires toward Matthias that spiral into a dark fixation of assumed identity. Soon, this obsessive power struggle between the two, careens toward brutal passion and violence in a bid for dominance.
M/M
She Whose Blood Is Clotting in My Underwear
Vika Kirchenbauer
Max Göran, Vika Kirchenbauer
Made for the performance project Cool For You, this video follows an artist’s research on thermal vision and the enhanced gazes of modern warfare. She uses these technical means to discuss intimacy and the body.
She Whose Blood Is Clotting in My Underwear
Please Relax Now
Vika Kirchenbauer
PLEASE RELAX NOW uses the screen as a source of light and darkness drawing attention to the issue of art consumption as individual vs. collective experience and extending it into physical space. Motivational language is interwoven with metaphysical gestures of salvation characteristic of economics as well as of what is considered "Political Art."
Please Relax Now
The Capacity For Adequate Anger
Vika Kirchenbauer
Vika Kirchenbauer
The Capacity For Adequate Anger constitutes an attempt at a personal and self-reflexive form of artistic critique that considers contemporary art, in its production as well as its presentation, from a perspective of class. Alongside questions around the intersections of negative affect and political agency, the work problematises notions around upward mobility that the field of contemporary art both produces and presupposes. Deploying an essayistic approach, the video work reflects upon the manifold meanings of distance in both its subjective and social senses.
The Capacity For Adequate Anger
You Are Boring!
Vika Kirchenbauer
YOU ARE BORING! discusses the troublesome nature of “looking” and “being looked at” in larger contexts including labour within the new economy, performer/spectator relations, participatory culture, contemporary art display and queer representational politics.
You Are Boring!
Kingdom Comes: Rituals
Vika Kirchenbauer, Martin Sulzer
This is a large projection of aerial footage that has been shot by pigeons equipped with lightweight digital cameras. With heavy wind and the nervous flapping of wings the viewer gets only a fractured impression, though immediately identifiable, of a political demonstration.
Kingdom Comes: Rituals