The Julia Stoschek Foundation is pleased to present one of the most extensive solo exhibitions by British artist Mark Leckey (b. 1964, Birkenhead, Great Britain) to date, opening 10 September 2025 in Berlin. “Enter Thru Medieval Wounds” combines key video works from the Julia Stoschek Collection dating from 1999 to 2010 with more recent works, offering a comprehensive insight into Leckey’s artistic practice and showcasing more than 40 of his works.

MARK LECKEY: ENTER THRU MEDIEVAL WOUNDS

JSF DÜSSELDORF CLOSED FOR RENOVATION - REOPENING SPRING 2026
After almost two decades of exhibitions, a structural renovation of the Julia Stoschek Foundation’s Düsseldorf headquarters begins. Since 2007, the industrial building has housed the collection of time-based art on more than 3,000 square meters.
The extensive remodeling is being carried out by Berlin architects Kuehn Malvezzi, who were responsible for the original adaptation of the 1907 building into an exhibition space for media art 20 years ago.
The Julia Stoschek Foundation will reopen in April 2026 with a new exhibition. Until then, the Julia Stoschek Foundation will remain present in Düsseldorf’s city scape: throughout 2025, the program will continue with a series of exhibitions, screenings and events at different locations across town.

LISA LONG DEPARTS FROM JSF
After nearly seven years as Artistic Director and Curator, Lisa Long will depart from her position at the Julia Stoschek Foundation, effective 30 April, 2025.
Since 2018, Long has played a pivotal role in shaping the foundation’s profile, strengthening its international reputation through an extensive program of exhibitions, performances, and publications. Some of her most significant projects include „A Fire in My Belly“, „at dawn“ (2022), „Unbound: Performance as Rupture“ (2023), and „After Images“ (2024), as well as solo exhibitions by Lynn Hershman Leeson and Ulysses Jenkins. She also initiated the Double Feature format and curated performances with artists such as Colin Self, caner teker and LABOUR.
Informed by her experiences at JSF and the growing need for alternative working models in the art world, Long is departing to found the curatorial agency Companion Culture to foster new synergies within the art ecosystem and build sustainable structures for innovative artistic projects.
The Julia Stoschek Foundation thanks Lisa Long for her outstanding dedication and wishes her all the best for her upcoming projects.

Screening: PERSONA – ALTER EGOS IN VIDEO ART
As part of the exhibition LYNN HERSHMAN LEESON: ARE OUR EYES TARGETS? at the Julia Stoschek Foundation Düsseldorf, this screening explores how alter egos in video art are used to challenge identity, authorship, and media representation. The screening will be accompanied by a conversation between Tabea Marschall, Collection Assistant JSF, and artist Mara Mckevitt (in English).
At its core are Lynn Hershman Leeson’s Roberta Breitmore (1973–78) and Mara Mckevitt’s Val (2019–23), two works that blur the boundaries between reality and performance. Hershman Leeson’s Roberta Breitmore was a meticulously constructed persona that embodied the complexities of identity and surveillance long before the digital age. Mckevitt’s Val, emerging from today’s media landscape, critically examines the commodification of the artist figure and the performativity of authorship.
The screening expands these themes through works such as Andrea Fraser’s Museum Highlights: A Gallery Talk (1989), which employs the persona of an overenthusiastic museum docent to critique institutional authority; Martine Syms’s She Mad (2015), which interrogates Black identity in mass media through a fictionalized version of the artist; and Luzie Meyer’s Incognito Ergo Non Sum (2020), a poetic reflection on identity as a layered performance shaped by social structures.
By placing these works in dialogue, the screening highlights the alter ego as both a mode of self-invention and a critical tool for subverting systems of power, authorship, and visibility.
The following works will be presented:
Mara Mckevitt, Val, 2019-23, video, 15’, color, sound.
Andrea Fraser, Museum Highlights: A Gallery Talk, 1989. Live Performance at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia. Video documentation 29′51″, color, sound.
Martine Syms, A Pilot For A Show About Nowhere, 2015, video 25′, color, sound.
Luzie Meyer, INCOGNITO ERGO NON SUM, 2020, video 14′33″, color, sound.

DRIVE MY CAR PLAYLIST: SCREENING DAKIĆ CLASS FOR FILM AND VIDEO
The feature film Drive My Car (Japanese: ドライブ・マイ・カー, Doraibu mai kā) by director Ryūsuke Hamaguchi (2021) serves as the inspiration and foundation for the project of the same name, created by students of the Class of Film and Video.
The exhibition and screening, which take place in the cinema space of the Julia Stoschek Foundation and at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, explore themes of self-discovery, narratives of love and death, communication and language, identity and role models, and the interplay between humans and machines. For the video screening at the Julia Stoschek Foundation, Danica Dakić and Daniela Kinateder have curated a selection of eight video works that emphasize sound and acoustic spaces as central elements of cinematic storytelling.
The screening is part of the collaboration between the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf and the Julia Stoschek Foundation.

JOB OFFER: HEAD OF COMMUNICATION
We are looking for a Head of Communications (m/f/d) in a full-time position at our Berlin location, starting on April 1, 2025. Become part of our team!
RESPONSIBILITIES
– Press and Public Relations: Strategic communication for exhibitions and programs, including creating press materials, media relations, and building an international network
– PR & Marketing: Development of strategies to strengthen the brand and increase visibility, as well as budget planning and implementation of targeted measures
– Digital Communication: Management and further development of our social media channels, website, and newsletters
– Corporate Design & Brand Management: Ensuring a consistent brand identity
– Publications: Production management
PROFILE
– Degree in communications, media, cultural studies, or a related field
– At least 3 years of experience in public relations/marketing (ideally in a cultural institution)
– Strategic development and implementation of communication strategies
– Strong knowledge of contemporary art and networking within the media landscape
– Strong communication skills, creativity, and organizational talent
– Fluent German and English
APPLICATION
Send your motivation letter and CV by January 31, 2025, via email to Robert Schulte, Director of JSF, at [email protected].
We encourage you to apply even if you do not meet all the requirements. Your motivation and potential are what matter most to us!

RESEARCH ROOM OPENING IN BERLIN
The collection spans from works of the 1960s, featuring artists such as Bruce Nauman, Carolee Schneemann, Jack Smith, and VALIE EXPORT, to contemporary pieces by Arthur Jafa, Anne Imhof, and Kandis Williams. The reference library offers key publications on collection artists as well as art-theoretical texts on philosophy and aesthetics.
Around thirty-five percent of the nearly 1,000 works by 300 artists are accessible online on our website and at the collection locations in Düsseldorf and Berlin. After inaugurating the Research Room in Düsseldorf in 2021, registered visitors in Berlin can now access the complete holdings of the collection, including works not currently on public display. The inventory of the reference library can be viewed online at the following link.
Open Monday to Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. (by appointment only, at least one week in advance). To register, please email [email protected] and provide the following information:
– Your name
– Your institution or profession (optional)
– A brief description of your research project and the purpose of your visit
– Your preferred date and time

EXHIBITION OPENING: AFTER IMAGES
AFTER IMAGES features over 30 works, including six new commissions and interventions that embrace an expanded definition of time-based art.
The group exhibition AFTER IMAGES proposes a recalibration of our relationship to seeing and to contemporary image culture. Departing from image-based practices like film and video, for which the Julia Stoschek Foundation is best known, the exhibition expands the visual realm to encompass the haptic and the multisensorial, and moves from the space of the screen to the embodied and experiential path of the visitor. The featured works introduce a broad definition of time-based art, to include kinetic sculptures, sound and light installations, film-based installations, olfactory interventions, scores, and extended reality.
Artist list: Jo Baer, Rosa Barba, Theresa Baumgartner, Paul Chan, Trisha Donnelly, Laurel Halo, Lotus L. Kang, LABOUR (Farahnaz Hatam & Colin Hacklander), Ghislaine Leung, David Medalla, Carsten Nicolai, Norbert Pape & Simon Speiser, Giovanna Repetto, Chaveli Sifre, Jesse Stecklow, Anicka Yi

MAGDALENA MITTERHOFER & SHADE THERET: GAIA'S CORNER
PERFORMANCE
28. August 2024, 7:30 p.m.
LOCATION
Grabbeplatz 5 (Entrance museum K20), 40213 Düsseldorf
The Julia Stoschek Foundation is pleased to present Gaia’s Corner (2024), a new site specific work by Magdalena Mitterhofer and Shade Théret on the occasion of DC Open.
The performance will take place by the water feature in front of the main entrance of K20 on Düsseldorf’s Grabbeplatz, accompanied by live music. Gaia’s Corner refers to the myth of the Greek goddess Gaia, the mother of all life, and to the question of how architectural spaces and urban structures influence our perception of nature and artificiality.
Gaia’s Corner is organized by Tabea Marschall as part of the exhibitions Lynn Hershman Leeson: Are Our Eyes Targets? and Digital Diaries, on view at JSF Düsseldorf, and is commissioned by the Julia Stoschek Foundation.
The performance will be followed by drinks at Salon des Amateurs with music by Arnold Trautwein.

A NEW PODCAST ON PERFORMANCE AND VIDEO
A Julia Stoschek Foundation podcast available on Soundcloud, Apple Podcasts, and Spotify.
UNBOUND, a podcast mini-series extending upon the exhibition “Unbound: Performance as Rupture.” Join us on this audio journey hosted by the exhibition’s curators Line Ajan and Lisa Long to discover the thought-provoking theories, stories, and artworks instrumental to the histories of performance and video at large. Following the exhibition’s premise, the podcast offers a comprehensive look at the intersection of image technologies and performance art from the late 1960s to today, and how artists have used their bodies in relation to the camera to signify different ruptures.
Across all episodes, we’ll hear from a fantastic group of artists, scholars, and writers to expand on the various themes of the show. Speakers include Salim Bayri, Marilena Borriello, Nao Bustamante, peter campus, Greg de Cuir Jr., Ulysses Jenkins, Amelia Jones, Stanya Kahn, Tarek Lakhrissi, Uri McMillan, mandla, Peggy Phelan, and Howardena Pindell.

Summer Party and Book Launch in Düsseldorf
25 July 2024
6–10 p.m.
With readings by Lou Ferrand, Kat Kitay, Günseli Yalcinkaya from the publication accompanying the exhibition “Digital Diaries”, music by Jan Schulte, drinks and food.

EXHIBITION OPENING: LYNN HERSHMAN LEESON + DIGITAL DIARIES
OPENING
9 April 2024, 6–10 p.m.
ARTIST TALK
9 April 2024, 6:30 p.m.
LYNN HERSHMAN LEESON: ARE OUR EYES TARGETS? is the first solo exhibition by the renowned artist and media pioneer in Düsseldorf, and the first presentation of Leeson’s work as part of the Julia Stoschek Collection.
The Julia Stoschek Foundation will also open the group exhibition DIGITAL DIARIES in Düsseldorf with works by twelve artists and one collective that examine the use and transformation of diaries in video and other technologies of representation from the 1970s onward.

DOUBLE FEATURE: TAREK LAKHRISSI
From 6 January in Berlin and Düsseldorf
Since September 2023, the Julia Stoschek Foundation presents a series of solo presentations by emerging artists called DOUBLE FEATURE, which takes place across JSF Berlin and Düsseldorf simultaneously.
For the second iteration of Double Feature, three films by French artist and poet Tarek Lakhrissi will take center stage. Through text, film, installation, and performance imbued with speculative potential, Lakhrissi explores sociopolitical narratives that relate to diasporic and queer embodied experience in Europe. Lakhrissi often sets his work in surrealist environments and gives them magical attributes, with an approach that seeks to transform situations.

ARTIST TALK: YOUNG-JUN TAK
Screening: 7:30 p.m.
Free admission. Limited capacity. No reservation needed.
Since September 2023, the Julia Stoschek Foundation presents a new series of solo presentations by emerging artists called DOUBLE FEATURE, which will take place across JSF Berlin and Düsseldorf simultaneously.
For its inaugural edition, Berlin-based artist Young-jun Tak presents two recent films, Wish You a Lovely Sunday (2021) and Wohin? (2022), which will play in a loop in the galleries. Both shot in Berlin, these works consider how place, architecture, movement, and belief inform community and queerness.
In conversation with Lisa Long, Artistic Director of JSF, Young-jun Tak talks about his work.

KUNSTAKADEMIE DÜSSELDORF X JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION
Die Kunstakademie Düsseldorf und die Julia Stoschek Foundation geben langfristige Kooperation bekannt.
Im Rahmen des 250-jährigen Jubiläums der Kunstakademie Düsseldorf geben die beiden Institutionen, initiiert durch die Klassenprojekte der 250-Jahre und durch Robert Fleck, der die Studierendenprojekte mitbetreut, eine längerfristig angedachte Kooperation in verschiedenen Bereichen bekannt.
Den Auftakt bildet ein Screeningprogramm, das drei anlässlich des Kunstakademie-Jubiläums realisierte Projekte von Studierenden der Kunstakademie Düsseldorf im Kino der JSF vorstellt.
past
DRIVE MY CAR PLAYLIST:
SCREENING CLASS DAKIC FOR FILM AND VIDEO
06 FEBRUARY 2025 – 09 FEBRUARY 2025
DOUBLE FEATURE: THEODOULOS POLYVIOU
01 SEPTEMBER 2024 – 06 APRIL 2025
Safe
28 AUGUST 2024 – 28 AUGUST 2024
LYNN HERSHMAN LEESON: ARE OUR EYES TARGETS?
11 APRIL 2024 – 06 APRIL 2025
DIGITAL DIARIES
11 APRIL 2024 – 06 APRIL 2025
DOUBLE FEATURE: TAREK LAKHRISSI
06 JANUARY 2024 – 04 FEBRUARY 2024
KUNSTAKADEMIE DÜSSELDORF X JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION
12 OCTOBER 2023 – 29 OCTOBER 2023
DOUBLE FEATURE: YOUNG-JUN TAK
02 SEPTEMBER 2023 – 17 DECEMBER 2023
OUT OF SPACE: DUSSELDORF VARIATION
31 AUGUST 2022 – 04 SEPTEMBER 2022
WORLDBUILDING
GAMING AND ART IN THE DIGITAL AGE
05 JUNE 2022 – 04 FEBRUARY 2024
SCREENING: LAURE PROUVOST
14 MAY 2022 – 29 MAY 2022
SCREENING: MARK LECKEY
09 JANUARY 2022 – 10 APRIL 2022
CHRISTOPH SCHLINGENSIEF
MESSAGE IN A BOTTLE
25 APRIL 2021 – 10 APRIL 2022
BEUYS 2021:
LUTZ MOMMARTZ
SOZIALE PLASTIK
SCREENING
17 JANUARY 2021 – 12 DECEMBER 2021
BEUYS 2021:
JAN BONNY & ALEX WISSEL
JUPP, WATT HAMWER JEMAHT?
SCREENING
17 JANUARY 2021 – 12 DECEMBER 2021
JSC ON VIEW: MYTHOLOGISTS
WORKS FROM THE JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION
17 JANUARY 2021 – 10 APRIL 2022
JEREMY SHAW
QUANTIFICATION TRILOGY
17 JANUARY 2021 – 10 APRIL 2022
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
FILMS BY DOROTA GAWĘDA AND EGLĖ KULBOKAITĖ
SCREENING
07 JUNE 2020 – 06 DECEMBER 2020
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
FILMS BY MOREHSHIN ALLAHYARI
SCREENING
08 MARCH 2020 – 03 MAY 2020
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
SOPHIA AL-MARIA
BITCH OMEGA
08 MARCH 2020 – 06 DECEMBER 2020
JSC ON VIEW II
WORKS FROM THE JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION
09 FEBRUARY 2020 – 06 DECEMBER 2020
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
FILMS BY TRINH T. MINH-HA
SCREENING
28 NOVEMBER 2019 – 02 FEBRUARY 2020
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
FILMS BY ANNA ZETT
SCREENING
17 OCTOBER 2019 – 24 NOVEMBER 2019
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
FILMS BY SKY HOPINKA
SCREENING
06 SEPTEMBER 2019 – 13 OCTOBER 2019
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
A.K. BURNS
NEGATIVE SPACE
06 SEPTEMBER 2019 – 02 FEBRUARY 2020
JSC ON VIEW I
WORKS FROM THE JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION
21 JULY 2019 – 22 DECEMBER 2019
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
FILMS BY CHELSEA KNIGHT &
SHANE ASLAN SELZER
SCREENING
30 JUNE 2019 – 28 JULY 2019
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
FILMS BY ARJUNA NEUMAN &
DENISE FERREIRA DA SILVA
SCREENING
15 MAY 2019 – 23 JUNE 2019
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
FILMS BY EDUARDO WILLIAMS
SCREENING
31 MARCH 2019 – 05 MAY 2019
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
RINDON JOHNSON
CIRCUMSCRIBE
31 MARCH 2019 – 28 JULY 2019
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO
JSC DÜSSELDORF / BERLIN
31 MARCH 2019 – 06 DECEMBER 2020
NEW METALLURGISTS
07 OCTOBER 2018 – 28 APRIL 2019
GENERATION LOSS
10 YEARS JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION
10 JUNE 2017 – 09 SEPTEMBER 2018
NUMBER THIRTEEN:
FACTORY OF THE SUN /
MISSED CONNECTIONS
15 OCTOBER 2016 – 26 FEBRUARY 2017
NUMBER TWELVE:
HELLO BOYS
13 FEBRUARY 2016 – 31 JULY 2016
NUMBER ELEVEN:
CYPRIEN GAILLARD
26 SEPTEMBER 2015 – 31 JULY 2016
WU TSANG
A DAY IN THE LIFE OF BLISS
15 APRIL 2015 – 02 AUGUST 2015
NUMBER TEN:
TRISHA DONNELLY
07 FEBRUARY 2015 – 31 JANUARY 2016NUMBER NINE:
ELIZABETH PRICE
06 SEPTEMBER 2014 – 01 FEBRUARY 2015
NATHALIE DJURBERG & HANS BERG
THE EXPERIMENT
08 APRIL 2014 – 01 JUNE 2014
NUMBER EIGHT:
STURTEVANT
05 APRIL 2014 – 10 NOVEMBER 2014
NUMBER SEVEN:
ED ATKINS / FRANCES STARK
07 SEPTEMBER 2013 – 22 FEBRUARY 2014
NUMBER SIX:
FLAMING CREATURES
08 SEPTEMBER 2012 – 29 JUNE 2013
NUMBER FIVE:
CITIES OF GOLD AND MIRRORS
02 JULY 2011 – 30 JUNE 2012
NUMBER FOUR:
DEREK JARMAN
SUPER8
11 SEPTEMBER 2010 – 26 FEBRUARY 2011
NUMBER THREE:
HERE AND NOW
27 OCTOBER 2009 – 29 JULY 2010
100 YEARS
(VERSION #1, DUESSELDORF)
10 OCTOBER 2009 – 29 JULY 2010
OUT OF SPACE 1:
CAO FEI
WHOSE UTOPIA
25 APRIL 2009 – 27 JUNE 2009
NUMBER TWO:
FRAGILE
11 OCTOBER 2008 – 01 AUGUST 2009
NUMBER ONE:
DESTROY, SHE SAID
18 JUNE 2007 – 02 AUGUST 2008
current
MARK LECKEY: ENTER THRU MEDIEVAL WOUNDS
11 SEPTEMBER 2025 – 03 MAY 2026
past
One Work:
Steina Vasulka, Violin Power (1970–78)
01 MAY 2025 – 20 JULY 2025
DOUBLE FEATURE: THEODOULOS POLYVIOU
12 SEPTEMBER 2024 – 27 APRIL 2025
AFTER IMAGES
12 SEPTEMBER 2024 – 20 JULY 2025
ONE WORK:
ANT FARM & T.R. UTHCO, THE ETERNAL FRAME (1975)
29 JUNE 2024 – 28 JULY 2024
DOUBLE FEATURE: TAREK LAKHRISSI
06 JANUARY 2024 – 28 APRIL 2024
DOUBLE FEATURE: YOUNG-JUN TAK
14 SEPTEMBER 2023 – 17 DECEMBER 2023
UNBOUND: PERFORMANCE AS RUPTURE
14 SEPTEMBER 2023 – 28 JULY 2024(LA)HORDE
27 APRIL 2023 – 30 JULY 2023
ULYSSES JENKINS: WITHOUT YOUR INTERPRETATION
11 FEBRUARY 2023 – 30 JULY 2023
PERFORMANCE:
JSC X REIF PRESENT EVENTIDE BY FA‘ PAWAKA & LABOUR
15 SEPTEMBER 2022 – 16 SEPTEMBER 2022
PERFORMANCE DINNER:
TROPICAL ANTHOLOGY, A SINGING DINNER
28 APRIL 2022 – 28 APRIL 2022
STEPHANIE COMILANG & SIMON SPEISER
PIÑA, WHY IS THE SKY BLUE?
28 APRIL 2022 – 04 DECEMBER 2022
at dawn
28 APRIL 2022 – 04 DECEMBER 2022
SCREENING: STEVE REINKE & JAMES RICHARDS
11 MARCH 2022 – 13 MARCH 2022
PERFORMANCE: CANER TEKER
KIRKPINAR
20 OCTOBER 2021 – 21 OCTOBER 2021
A FIRE IN MY BELLY
06 FEBRUARY 2021 – 30 JANUARY 2022
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
MERIEM BENNANI
PARTY ON THE CAPS
05 SEPTEMBER 2020 – 29 NOVEMBER 2020
JEREMY SHAW
QUANTIFICATION TRILOGY
05 SEPTEMBER 2020 – 29 NOVEMBER 2020
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
MARTINE SYMS –
INCENSE SWEATERS & ICE
ONLINE SCREENING
25 APRIL 2020 – 26 APRIL 2020
STAN DOUGLAS / SPLICING BLOCK
01 NOVEMBER 2019 – 29 MARCH 2020
ACUTE ART AT JSC:
BJARNE MELGAARD / KOO JEONG A
12 OCTOBER 2019 – 12 JANUARY 2020
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
WANGSHUI
12 SEPTEMBER 2019 – 15 DECEMBER 2019
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
COLIN SELF
SUBTEXT
PERFORMANCE
31 MAY 2019 – 01 JUNE 2019
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO:
PAULINE BOUDRY / RENATE LORENZ
ONGOING EXPERIMENTS WITH STRANGENESS
26 APRIL 2019 – 28 JULY 2019
HORIZONTAL VERTIGO
JSC DÜSSELDORF / BERLIN
31 MARCH 2019 – 06 DECEMBER 2020
KW PRODUCTION SERIES
BEATRICE GIBSON & JAMIE CREWE
27 SEPTEMBER 2018 – 25 NOVEMBER 2018
IAN CHENG
EMISSARIES
27 APRIL 2018 – 01 JULY 2018
ARTHUR JAFA
A SERIES OF UTTERLY IMPROBABLE,
YET EXTRAORDINARY RENDITIONS
11 FEBRUARY 2018 – 25 NOVEMBER 2018
JAGUARS AND ELECTRIC EELS
05 FEBRUARY 2017 – 26 NOVEMBER 2017
WELT AM DRAHT
02 JUNE 2016 – 13 NOVEMBER 2016
current
INCARNATE
LANGEN FOUNDATION
09 NOVEMBER 2025 – 22 MARCH 2026
past
FLATTEN THE CURVE
FILMWERKSTATT DÜSSELDORF
20 SEPTEMBER 2025 – 21 SEPTEMBER 2025
SHIFTING
DÜSSELDORFER SCHAUSPIELHAUS
24 APRIL 2025 – 30 APRIL 2025
KLARA LIDÉN: PARALYZED
DEUTSCHES FOTOINSTITUT E.V.
12 OCTOBER 2024 – 13 NOVEMBER 2024
ANTI-MONUMENTS
ARTMONTE-CARLO
13 JULY 2022 – 16 JULY 2022
MERIEM BENNANI
MISSION TEENS: FRENCH SCHOOL IN MOROCCO
FUTURE SPACE
18 JUNE 2022 – 25 SEPTEMBER 2022JSC X EYE FILMMUSEUM
14 MAY 2022 – 14 MAY 2022
KLARA LIDÉN
KASTA MACKA
LOOP FESTIVAL, BARCELONA PAVILION, SPAIN
16 NOVEMBER 2019 – 24 NOVEMBER 2019
RHINELAND INDEPENDENT
ART DÜSSELDORF
15 NOVEMBER 2019 – 17 NOVEMBER 2019
SAMSUNG x JSC
ART DÜSSELDORF
15 NOVEMBER 2019 – 17 NOVEMBER 2019
TIME KILLS
SESC, SÃO PAULO, BRAZIL
21 MARCH 2019 – 16 JUNE 2019
TURN ON
TIME-BASED MEDIA ART FROM THE JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION
TEL AVIV MUSEUM OF ART, TEL AVIV, ISRAEL
31 MARCH 2015 – 29 AUGUST 2015
THE NEW HUMAN
MODERNA MUSEET, MALMÖ, SWEDEN
MODERNA MUSEET, STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN
14 MARCH 2015 – 04 DECEMBER 2016
HIGH PERFORMANCE
TIME-BASED MEDIA ART SINCE 1996
ZKM | ZENTRUM FÜR KUNST UND MEDIEN, KARLSRUHE, GERMANY
16 MARCH 2014 – 22 JUNE 2014
I WANT TO SEE HOW YOU SEE
DEICHTORHALLEN, HAMBURG, GERMANY
16 APRIL 2010 – 25 JULY 2010
RHINE ON THE DNIPRO
JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION/ANDREAS GURSKY
PINCHUK ART CENTRE, KIEV, UKRAINE
28 SEPTEMBER 2008 – 14 DECEMBER 2008
VIDEO KOOP
KIT – KUNST IM TUNNEL, DÜSSELDORF, GERMANY
03 MAY 2008 – 27 JULY 2008
The JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION has always worked closely with other museums and art institutions both locally and at an international level. Like time-based media themselves, these collaborations expand, appropriate, reinterpret, and repurpose the collection in new and exciting ways, highlighting and discovering multiple historical threads and thematic clusters.
In past years, largescale presentations of the JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION were hosted at major museums and art institutionsin Germany and abroad. One of the first major collaborations, named after Pipilotti Rist’s work I WANT TO SEE HOW YOU SEE, took place at Deichtorhallen, Hamburg, Germany in 2010. Referencing the FIRE, EARTH, WATER, AIR exhibition, organized at the Deichtorhallen in 1993, I WANT TO SEE HOW YOU SEE paired seminal early film and video works by Marina Abramović, Vito Acconci, and Chris Burden with later pieces by Heike Baranowsky, Monica Bonvicini, and Nathalie Djurberg, among others.
In 2014, the collaboration with ZKM | Zentrum für Kunst & Medien, Karlsruhe, Germany, titled HIGH PERFORMANCE. Time-based media art since 1996, explored video as a form of scenic art, strongly influenced by the so-called performative turn which pervaded not only the humanities but also society and art at the time. The exhibition, curated by Bernhard Serexhe and Julia Stoschek, was divided into sections, investigating concepts of body and soul, public space, environment, and virtual reality through different artistic positions. It was one of the largest projects to take place outside the JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION exhibition spaces and featured over 25 artists, such as Doug Aitken, Francis Alÿs, Allora & Calzadilla, Trisha Baga, John Bock, Paul Chan, Keren Cytter, Simon Denny, Cyprien Gaillard, Christian Jankowski, Mike Kelley, Klara Liden, Helen Marten, Mika Rottenberg, Ryan Trecartin, Andro Wekua, Tobias Zielony, and others.
Further major collaborations include the exhibitions TURN ON at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Israel, in 2015, THE NEW HUMAN at Moderna Museet, Malmö, Sweden, in 2015, and TIME KILLS at Sesc São Paulo, Brazil, in 2019.
ADDRESS
JSF Düsseldorf
Schanzenstrasse 54
40549 Düsseldorf
Germany
OPENING HOURS
Closed for renovations.
ADMISSION
5 €
Tickets are valid for six months after the first visit. Admission is free of charge for visitors under eighteen, school pupils, students, trainees, the disabled, pensioners, the unemployed, and people on welfare as well as members of ICOM, AICA and IAA upon presentation of an ID. Card payment only.
GUIDED TOURS
The registration is required online via our booking system, from which you can also find the exact tour dates.
Duration: 90 minutes
Tickets: 10€ per person (card payment only).
Free of charge for children and young people under eighteen, as well as school children, students and trainees.
You can also find our offers on Musenkuss, the platform for cultural education in Düsseldorf.
SPECIAL GUIDED TOURS IN ENGLISH
During opening hours:
Saturday – Sunday, 12–6 p.m.
Tickets: 10€ per person for groups of 10 persons (card payment only).
Outside opening hours:
Tickets: 20€ per person for groups of 10 persons (card payment only).
If you are interested in booking a guided tour in English, please send us an e-mail to [email protected] stating the desired date and group size.
BARRIER-FREE ACCESS
The JSF Düsseldorf is accessible for those with wheelchairs or prams. If you would like to use the lift to travel between the floors of the exhibition space, just ask our service staff and they will be happy to assist you.
JSF RESEARCH ROOMS
The Julia Stoschek Collection comprises nearly 1,000 works by more than 300 artists, spanning from the 1960s—with works by Bruce Nauman, Carolee Schneemann, Jack Smith, and VALIE EXPORT—to contemporary artists like Arthur Jafa, Anne Imhof, P. Staff, and Sondra Perry.
The Research Rooms offer visitors in Düsseldorf and Berlin the opportunity to explore the collection and stream time-based works. They can also access artwork texts and video documentation of exhibitions, performances, and artist conversations organized by the foundation.
The adjacent reference libraries feature key publications on the collectionʼs artists, as well as art historical texts, to support visitors’ academic work. The library holdings can be reviewed in advance via the following link.
The Research Rooms are open from Monday to Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Please schedule your visit at least one week in advance.
Registration:
- Name
- Location (Berlin or Düsseldorf)
- A brief description of the purpose of your visit
- Desired date and time
Please send your registration via email to: [email protected]
ARCHITECTURE
The distinctive nature of the collection carries over into the space in which it is exhibited. The architecture of the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION, which is designed with installations and time-based works in mind, creates narratives that reflect the relationship between the interior and exterior, as well as the arrangement of the space itself. Between the cinema room in the basement and the roof terrace above the new attic floor, a whole series of spatial experiences unfolds – from the closed to the open, from the dark to the light. A media museum is no black box. On the contrary, the spatiotemporal works here challenge the architecture as an opponent that lends form and support as explicitly as it does discretely, that facilitates a range of spatial experiences and that never becomes conspicuous in its surfaces and materiality. A “room within a room” construction makes it possible to vary the intensity of the light on both exhibition levels. The openings in the inner shell can be altered in their relation to the windows in the outer shell. On one occasion this became the setting for an artistic intervention by Olafur Eliasson. He used a series of kaleidoscopic mirrors to transform one of the inner walls into the permanent in-situ work “When Love Is Not Enough Wall” (2007), which examines the act of looking at the outside world from inside an enclosed space.
The building, which dates to 1907, is a shining example of modern industrial architecture, combining as it does a reinforced concrete skeleton and roof structure of Polonceau trusses with large-scale elements such as the symmetrical towers flanking the main section of the building. Having served many different purposes over the course of its 100-year existence, the building reflects how industry evolved during the 20th century. Before 1945 it was used first as a theatre workshop, then as an engine and lamp factory, a production facility for corsets and mattresses, and by the metal and wood industries for – among other things – military purposes. After the war it was used as a picture frame factory by the Düsseldorf company F.G Conzen.
Renovation work in 2007 strengthened the generic, flexible character of the building, while making a clear typological intervention to reflect its contemporary use as an art repository and exhibition space. The spatial characteristics were revealed by removing small fixtures, exposing the skeleton structure and retaining the original staircases and steel windows. At the same time a modern roof extension where the company lettering used to stand updated the building in a way that clearly expresses its new use while also creating a connection to the city: from the ground the building is visible from far off, from the roof terrace visitors can look out over the urban landscape.
Wilfried Kuehn, architect
KUEHN MALVEZZI
Kuehn Malvezzi, founded in Berlin in 2001 by the architects Simona Malvezzi and Johannes and Wilfried Kuehn, has become a leader in exhibition and museum space design. Its references include the architectural design for Documenta 11 in Kassel (2002), the extension for the Friedrich Christian Flick Collection at the Museum für Gegenwart in the Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin (2004), the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION in Düsseldorf (2007), the renovations at the Liebieghaus sculpture museum in Frankfurt am Main (2008) and at the Belvedere in Vienna (2009). The team’s award-winning design for the Humboldt Forum in Berlin is a much-discussed contribution to the debate surrounding the reconstruction of Berlin City Palace and involves presenting the palace as a process and public display. The work of Kuehn Malvezzi architects has been shown in solo and group exhibitions around the world, including at the German pavilion at the 10th International Architecture Exhibition in Venice. Kuehn Malvezzi was awarded the Deutscher Kritikerpreis in 2009.
RENTAL
You are looking for a special location for a celebration or a corporate event?
As a monument to early modern industrial architecture, the JSF Düsseldorf offers a unique, historic architecture with an exclusive ambience. Celebrate exclusively in the rooms of an internationally renowned art collection.
We would be pleased to submit you an individual offer.
Contact:
Robert Schulte
[email protected]
Julia Stoschek Foundation
Düsseldorf
Julia Stoschek Foundation
BERLIN
ADDRESS
JSF Berlin
Leipziger Straße 60 (entrance: Jerusalemer Straße)
10117 Berlin
Germany
OPENING HOURS
Saturdays & Sundays, 12—6 p.m.
As well as every first Thursday of the month, 6—10 p.m. (free admission).
ADMISSION
5 €
Tickets are valid for six months after the first visit. Admission is free of charge for visitors under eighteen, school pupils, students, trainees, the disabled, pensioners, the unemployed, and people on welfare as well as members of ICOM, AICA and IAA upon presentation of an ID. Card payment only.
GUIDED TOURS
Every Saturday, 4 p.m.: Guided tour in English language.
Every Sunday, 4 p.m.: Guided tour in German language.
Every first Thursday of the month, 7 p.m.: Guided tour in English language.
Registration is required online via our booking system, from which you can also find the exact tour dates.
Tickets: EUR 10.00 per person (card payment only).
Free of charge for children and people under eighteen, school pupils, students, trainees, the disabled, pensioners, the unemployed, and people on welfare, as well as members of ICOM, AICA and IAA upon presentation of a valid ID.
SPECIAL GUIDED TOURS
If you are interested in booking a guided tour in English or German, please send us an e-mail to [email protected] stating the desired date and group size.
Tickets for groups as of 10 persons: 20 Euro per person (card payment only).
PARTLY BARRIER-FREE ACCESS
For visitors with strollers or in wheelchairs, please register in advance at [email protected] to ensure accessibility.
RESEARCH ROOMS
The Julia Stoschek Collection comprises nearly 1,000 works by more than 300 artists, spanning from the 1960s—with works by Bruce Nauman, Carolee Schneemann, Jack Smith, and VALIE EXPORT—to contemporary artists like Arthur Jafa, Anne Imhof, P. Staff, and Sondra Perry.
The Research Rooms offer visitors in Düsseldorf and Berlin the opportunity to explore the collection and stream time-based works. They can also access artwork texts and video documentation of exhibitions, performances, and artist conversations organized by the foundation.
The adjacent reference libraries feature key publications on the collectionʼs artists, as well as art historical texts, to support visitors’ academic work. The library holdings can be reviewed in advance via the following link.
The Research Rooms are open from Monday to Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Please schedule your visit at least one week in advance.
Registration:
- Name
- Location (Berlin or Düsseldorf)
- Desired date and time
Please send your registration via email to: [email protected]
ARCHITECTURE
The JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION is devoted to make its collection available to the public and, in cooperation with other institutions, curators, and artists, to provide a vibrant platform for interaction in the form of exhibitions and events.
In this spirit, it is appropriate that the collection has found a home in the former Czechoslovakian Cultural Institute, a structure that was built in the 1960s and united various functions such as a library, a movie theatre, showrooms, and administration spaces under one roof. Following the demise of the German Democratic Republic, when the cultural institute was closed, it was used for temporary, mostly cultural programs, yet it was never remodeled, thus making it a rare example of an unadulterated location in Berlin-Mitte which remains true to its original state.
The building’s new function, which is also its first official new use, was to be made possible and visible without eradicating the existing substance or history of the site. Many rooms of various sizes are connected in nested sequences, offering ideal conditions for mounting exhibitions of time-based art, but also required a new system to provide orientation.
A white curtain runs continuously through both floors, partially outside in front of the façade and partially inside covering the existing walls, marking the transition from light to dark space both inside and out. It cloaks the existing glass façade whilst folding it towards the inside, creating bright public spaces there as well.
These spaces accommodate receptions and circulation. They encourage visitors to linger, to pause during their visit, leaf through the catalogue and orient themselves in the collection before they focus on individual work. This is also where openings and public events are held. The furniture, most of which was designed especially for this site, supports these activities.
The white curtain dims and softens the light without darkening the rooms. Instead of making comprehensive structural changes, an additional layer was merely added, thus responding to the requirements of lighting, clear orientation and exterior visibility using one single element. The curtain gives the building a new identity, without eliminating the original one, rather like a new dress that can be taken off at any time – leaving the building open to change respectively to the collection and for subsequent use.
Johanna Meyer-Grohbrügge, architect
MEYER-GROHBRÜGGE
The Berlin architecture office Meyer-Grohbrügge searches for simple spatial answers to complex questions. In dialogue with its clients, it strives to develop new convictions. With a variety of projects, ranging from buildings in the art and exhibition sector to living spaces, office buildings and furniture design, the office examines the possibilities of creating new forms of living together and generating new identities.
Johanna Meyer-Grohbrügge worked at SANAA in Tokyo for five years after receiving her degree from ETH Zürich. In 2010 she cofounded the office June 14 Meyer-Grohbrügge & Chermayeff and in 2015 she initiated the office Meyer-Grohbrügge. She is a guest professor at DIA Dessau and has also taught at Washington University in St. Louis and at Columbia GSAPP.
RENTAL
You are looking for a special location for a celebration or a corporate event?
The premises of the JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION in Berlin-Mitte, with its 2,500 square meters, is one of the most impressive and versatile locations in the city.
The location between Leipziger Straße, Gendarmenmarkt and Friedrichsstraße as well as the possibility of highly customisable rooms will make your event at this venue a unique experience. Celebrate exclusively in the rooms of an internationally renowned art collection.
We are happy to provide you with a personalised offer.
Contact:
Sven Weigel
[email protected]
ONLINE COLLECTION CATALOG
The online collection catalog offers the opportunity to research and view over 900 works by 300 artists from the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION.
Over the next months, videos and films will be continually uploaded and made accessible online. They are accompanied by explanatory texts about the works. Or you can drop by our JSC Video Lounge directly.
A list of all accessible works can be found by clicking on „viewable online“ under „Tags“ and then selecting „Works“.
To date over 220 film-, video- and sound-based works by over 60 artists from the collection can be viewed in their entirety. Among the works in this first selection are pieces by John Bock, Monica Bonvicini, Klaus vom Bruch, Ian Cheng, Keren Cytter, Jen DeNike, Nathalie Djurberg & Hans Berg, Tracey Emin, Cao Fei, Fischli & Weiss, Dara Friedman, Kate Gilmore, Douglas Gordon, Christian Jankowski, Imi Knoebel, Klara Lidén, Lutz Mommartz, Elizabeth Price, Pipilotti Rist, Wolfgang Tillmans, Ryan Trecartin, Andro Wekua, and Tobias Zielony.
JSC’s long-term goal is to make the entire collection available online, thus creating a platform for time-based art that supports the accessibility and engagement of time-based art.
ABOUT THE COLLECTION
“Many of the works in this collection construct multi-temporal worlds; they harbor not one flow of events, but a labyrinth of diverging paths, each with its own pace and temporality. The collection is thus a complex archive of temporalities, storing passed moments and layers of time that can be technically repeated, in principle an infinite number of times.”
Daniel Birnbaum
from: Daniel Birnbaum, Repetitions, in Number One: Destroy, She Said (Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2007), 12.
Established in 2007 by Julia Stoschek, the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION has grown to be an expansive collection of time-based art spanning film, video, sound, performance, and computer and software-based works. At present, over 860 artworks by more than 282 contemporary artists across genres and generations offer an overview of time-based art from the 1960s to today with a strong focus on works made after 2000.
The term time-based art (or time-based media) describes works of art that unfold in time. Time-based art therefore encompasses all artworks in which duration is a dimension and comprises film, video, single- and multi-channel video installation, slide installations, multimedia environments, sound, performance, computer and software-based artworks such as virtual and augmented reality, and other forms of technology-based art. These works are often allographic, meaning they are only visible when installed or projected.
At the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION, early expanded cinema, video, and performance works by Bruce Nauman, Anthony McCall, Joan Jonas, or Marina Abramović meet Doug Aitken’s video installations, Ian Cheng’s live simulations, and Mika Rottenberg’s all-encompassing environments. The collection contains many artworks by pioneering female and feminist artists and experimental filmmakers from the 1960s and ’70s, among them Dara Birnbaum, VALIE EXPORT, Barbara Hammer, and Hannah Wilke. A younger generation of artists includes Ed Atkins, Loretta Fahrenholz, Cyprien Gaillard, Josh Kline, Jon Rafman, Rachel Rose, Mika Rottenberg, Anicka Yi, and Tobias Zielony, to name a few. The collection strives to build sustainable relationships with artists and galleries, focusing on key works and groups of works made throughout artists’ careers, growing with and reflecting their evolving practice.
The collection is characterized by an ever-growing technological convergence and interdisciplinary approach: “The video art of today is theater, performance, musical performance, sculpture, projection, moving image, moving bodies, dance, stage, screen, real space, real time, all in one,” writes Peter Weibel in the catalog accompanying the exhibition “High Performance,” jointly organized by JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION and ZKM | Center for Art and Media in 2015. Bringing these fields together, the collection is unique in its heterogeneity, but certain themes still manifest across the collection, in works that address sociopolitical questions; identity politics; forms of narrative, fiction, and documentary; the body and representation; performativity and performance; the gaze; and the relationship between our built environment and the natural world.
Some of these themes have been explored in exhibitions and programs at the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION in Düsseldorf and Berlin, as well as at several international institutions. 27 large-scale exhibitions have taken place at the collection’s exhibitions spaces in Düsseldorf and Berlin since 2007. Among these were significant solo exhibitions by Derek Jarman, Sturtevant, Elizabeth Price, Ed Atkins, Frances Stark, Trisha Donnelly, Cyprien Gaillard, Arthur Jafa, and Ian Cheng.
The first large-scale group exhibition at the collection, Number One: Destroy, She Said (2007–08), was named after a video installation by artist Monica Bonvicini and loosely explored the relationship between interior and exterior, construction and destruction. Number Two: Fragile (2008–09) focused on the body and corporality, bringing together video, performance, and body art. Number Three: Here and Now (2009–10) was dedicated solely to performance and the ephemeral, with performances and concerts by some of the most prominent contemporary artists working today scheduled all year long. Almost ten years later, Number Thirteen: Hello Boys (2015–16) revisited performance and feminist video, questioning the representation of female identity and the performance document. To celebrate its tenth anniversary, the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION invited artist Ed Atkins to curate a group exhibition in Düsseldorf, which he called Generation Loss (2017). The title refers to the process of quality deterioration as data carriers are copied successively and, at the same time, to the social upheavals from one generation to the next.
The inaugural exhibition in Berlin, Welt am Draht (2016), addressed the influences and shifts in our social reality, identities, and environment effected by processes of digitalization. Another group show, Jaguars and Electric Eels (2017), explored notions of indigeneity, of hybrids and synthetic forms of life, the migration of the species, and our constantly changing perceptions of reality. Large-scale solo presentations supplement the collection exhibition program. In 2018, the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION, Berlin, presented a comprehensive exhibition by Arthur Jafa, his first in Germany. In addition to exhibitions, smaller projects, talks, and ongoing screenings regularly accompany the program. There are two cinemas in Düsseldorf equipped to screen 16mm and 35mm films in their original format.
LOAN REQUESTS
Loan requests for works of the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION should be sent by e-mail to Anna-Alexandra Pfau, Director of Collections, [email protected]
The loan request will be processed if the following conditions are met:
Loan requests must be made at least 6 months before the desired start of the loan period. The request must contain the following information and documents:
Name and address of the institution submitting the loan request; name, function, telephone number, postal address and e-mail address of the contact person; exact name of the requested work; period, name of the exhibiting institution and location of the exhibition; detailed exhibition or project description in which the work is to be presented; a current facility report of the institution.
Please note that works that have a reference to Electronic Arts Intermix in the Courtesy line may not be lend through the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION. Please contact Electronic Arts Intermix, New York directly.

RESTORATION & PRESERVATION
Long-Term Archiving
The conservation requirements for time-based media (TBM) have changed drastically over the last ten years. Initially the medium—specifically videotapes and DVDs—was the main focus of conservational attention. Just like any other materials, media are also susceptible to aging processes that in the long run can lead to damage or even the loss of works.
Yet aging is only one aspect of the problem. There are also file formats and complex technical installations that are based on computer technologies or other hardware. All of these components can age: not only the media themselves are affected by the processes of decay, but even the content can become unreadable over of the years due to incompatibilities. Technological evolution constantly results in new file formats and software codecs that are adapted in the production process of video artists. This is why in addition to the material-related risks, careful observation is necessary to ascertain which technologies have a promising future—and which digital platforms and formats are on their way to becoming obsolete. To this end all new acquisitions must be thoroughly evaluated and documented to determine the exact type of digital format. The files are then transferred to a digital repository.
To meet all of the different requirements, a multistage strategy for long-term archiving was developed for the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION, based on the “three-pillar approach.” The goal is to consolidate the heterogenous collection on a digital level in just a few established and homogeneous target formats. This noticeably reduces the conservation effort since only a manageable number of formats need to be regularly checked and monitored to safeguard against formats that are becoming obsolete. This is flanked by individual solutions for artworks that do not support a standardized procedure. On a digital level, multiple backups that are independent and redundant give additional security, thus ensuring that the collection is preserved.

Media-Art Repository
The media art-depository is the heart of the collection. Since fluctuating temperatures and humidity factors cause damage to videotapes and film, this was one of the most important factors during the planning. Temperatures of around 15 degrees Celsius (59 degrees Fahrenheit) and 35 percent relative humidity (RF) are considered optimal for storing magnetic tapes and was therefore chosen for the repository. These conditions are also appropriate for film and slides.
The media art depot, designed and individually planned for the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION, has two airlocks: one prevents abrupt changes in climate when people enter, while the second airlock is conceived for tapes and media that are stored in the media depository. They can acclimatize slowly in the airlock before they are moved to special mobile shelving for storage. The mobile shelving system, which is equipped with ball-bearing mountings, ensures that the space is used optimally. The floor has a stove-enamel finish and was checked for leftover magnetic charge to eliminate all risks for the stored videotapes. In addition, the shelves are grounded to prevent any static electricity.
Since dust and air pollution represent a serious danger for media artworks, the air is filtered multiple times before and after the conditioning process. Smoke and water detectors as well as an alarm system simultaneously offer comprehensive hazard protection.
The elaborate technical amenities in combination with the custom mobile shelving make the media-art repository unique in Europe.
Time-based media conservator
ONLINE COLLECTION CATALOG
The online collection catalog offers the opportunity to research and view over 900 works by 300 artists from the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION.
Over the next months, videos and films will be continually uploaded and made accessible online. They are accompanied by explanatory texts about the works. Or you can drop by our JSC Video Lounge directly.
A list of all accessible works can be found by clicking on „viewable online“ under „Tags“ and then selecting „Works“.
To date over 220 film-, video- and sound-based works by over 60 artists from the collection can be viewed in their entirety. Among the works in this first selection are pieces by John Bock, Monica Bonvicini, Klaus vom Bruch, Ian Cheng, Keren Cytter, Jen DeNike, Nathalie Djurberg & Hans Berg, Tracey Emin, Cao Fei, Fischli & Weiss, Dara Friedman, Kate Gilmore, Douglas Gordon, Christian Jankowski, Imi Knoebel, Klara Lidén, Lutz Mommartz, Elizabeth Price, Pipilotti Rist, Wolfgang Tillmans, Ryan Trecartin, Andro Wekua, and Tobias Zielony.
JSC’s long-term goal is to make the entire collection available online, thus creating a platform for time-based art that supports the accessibility and engagement of time-based art.
ABOUT THE COLLECTION
“Many of the works in this collection construct multi-temporal worlds; they harbor not one flow of events, but a labyrinth of diverging paths, each with its own pace and temporality. The collection is thus a complex archive of temporalities, storing passed moments and layers of time that can be technically repeated, in principle an infinite number of times.”
Daniel Birnbaum
from: Daniel Birnbaum, Repetitions, in Number One: Destroy, She Said (Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2007), 12.
Established in 2007 by Julia Stoschek, the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION has grown to be an expansive collection of time-based art spanning film, video, sound, performance, and computer and software-based works. At present, over 860 artworks by more than 282 contemporary artists across genres and generations offer an overview of time-based art from the 1960s to today with a strong focus on works made after 2000.
The term time-based art (or time-based media) describes works of art that unfold in time. Time-based art therefore encompasses all artworks in which duration is a dimension and comprises film, video, single- and multi-channel video installation, slide installations, multimedia environments, sound, performance, computer and software-based artworks such as virtual and augmented reality, and other forms of technology-based art. These works are often allographic, meaning they are only visible when installed or projected.
At the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION, early expanded cinema, video, and performance works by Bruce Nauman, Anthony McCall, Joan Jonas, or Marina Abramović meet Doug Aitken’s video installations, Ian Cheng’s live simulations, and Mika Rottenberg’s all-encompassing environments. The collection contains many artworks by pioneering female and feminist artists and experimental filmmakers from the 1960s and ’70s, among them Dara Birnbaum, VALIE EXPORT, Barbara Hammer, and Hannah Wilke. A younger generation of artists includes Ed Atkins, Loretta Fahrenholz, Cyprien Gaillard, Josh Kline, Jon Rafman, Rachel Rose, Mika Rottenberg, Anicka Yi, and Tobias Zielony, to name a few. The collection strives to build sustainable relationships with artists and galleries, focusing on key works and groups of works made throughout artists’ careers, growing with and reflecting their evolving practice.
The collection is characterized by an ever-growing technological convergence and interdisciplinary approach: “The video art of today is theater, performance, musical performance, sculpture, projection, moving image, moving bodies, dance, stage, screen, real space, real time, all in one,” writes Peter Weibel in the catalog accompanying the exhibition “High Performance,” jointly organized by JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION and ZKM | Center for Art and Media in 2015. Bringing these fields together, the collection is unique in its heterogeneity, but certain themes still manifest across the collection, in works that address sociopolitical questions; identity politics; forms of narrative, fiction, and documentary; the body and representation; performativity and performance; the gaze; and the relationship between our built environment and the natural world.
Some of these themes have been explored in exhibitions and programs at the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION in Düsseldorf and Berlin, as well as at several international institutions. 27 large-scale exhibitions have taken place at the collection’s exhibitions spaces in Düsseldorf and Berlin since 2007. Among these were significant solo exhibitions by Derek Jarman, Sturtevant, Elizabeth Price, Ed Atkins, Frances Stark, Trisha Donnelly, Cyprien Gaillard, Arthur Jafa, and Ian Cheng.
The first large-scale group exhibition at the collection, Number One: Destroy, She Said (2007–08), was named after a video installation by artist Monica Bonvicini and loosely explored the relationship between interior and exterior, construction and destruction. Number Two: Fragile (2008–09) focused on the body and corporality, bringing together video, performance, and body art. Number Three: Here and Now (2009–10) was dedicated solely to performance and the ephemeral, with performances and concerts by some of the most prominent contemporary artists working today scheduled all year long. Almost ten years later, Number Thirteen: Hello Boys (2015–16) revisited performance and feminist video, questioning the representation of female identity and the performance document. To celebrate its tenth anniversary, the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION invited artist Ed Atkins to curate a group exhibition in Düsseldorf, which he called Generation Loss (2017). The title refers to the process of quality deterioration as data carriers are copied successively and, at the same time, to the social upheavals from one generation to the next.
The inaugural exhibition in Berlin, Welt am Draht (2016), addressed the influences and shifts in our social reality, identities, and environment effected by processes of digitalization. Another group show, Jaguars and Electric Eels (2017), explored notions of indigeneity, of hybrids and synthetic forms of life, the migration of the species, and our constantly changing perceptions of reality. Large-scale solo presentations supplement the collection exhibition program. In 2018, the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION, Berlin, presented a comprehensive exhibition by Arthur Jafa, his first in Germany. In addition to exhibitions, smaller projects, talks, and ongoing screenings regularly accompany the program. There are two cinemas in Düsseldorf equipped to screen 16mm and 35mm films in their original format.
LOAN REQUESTS
Loan requests for works of the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION should be sent by e-mail to Anna-Alexandra Pfau, Director of Collections, [email protected]
The loan request will be processed if the following conditions are met:
Loan requests must be made at least 6 months before the desired start of the loan period. The request must contain the following information and documents:
Name and address of the institution submitting the loan request; name, function, telephone number, postal address and e-mail address of the contact person; exact name of the requested work; period, name of the exhibiting institution and location of the exhibition; detailed exhibition or project description in which the work is to be presented; a current facility report of the institution.
Please note that works that have a reference to Electronic Arts Intermix in the Courtesy line may not be lend through the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION. Please contact Electronic Arts Intermix, New York directly.

RESTORATION & PRESERVATION
Long-Term Archiving
The conservation requirements for time-based media (TBM) have changed drastically over the last ten years. Initially the medium—specifically videotapes and DVDs—was the main focus of conservational attention. Just like any other materials, media are also susceptible to aging processes that in the long run can lead to damage or even the loss of works.
Yet aging is only one aspect of the problem. There are also file formats and complex technical installations that are based on computer technologies or other hardware. All of these components can age: not only the media themselves are affected by the processes of decay, but even the content can become unreadable over of the years due to incompatibilities. Technological evolution constantly results in new file formats and software codecs that are adapted in the production process of video artists. This is why in addition to the material-related risks, careful observation is necessary to ascertain which technologies have a promising future—and which digital platforms and formats are on their way to becoming obsolete. To this end all new acquisitions must be thoroughly evaluated and documented to determine the exact type of digital format. The files are then transferred to a digital repository.
To meet all of the different requirements, a multistage strategy for long-term archiving was developed for the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION, based on the “three-pillar approach.” The goal is to consolidate the heterogenous collection on a digital level in just a few established and homogeneous target formats. This noticeably reduces the conservation effort since only a manageable number of formats need to be regularly checked and monitored to safeguard against formats that are becoming obsolete. This is flanked by individual solutions for artworks that do not support a standardized procedure. On a digital level, multiple backups that are independent and redundant give additional security, thus ensuring that the collection is preserved.

Media-Art Repository
The media art-depository is the heart of the collection. Since fluctuating temperatures and humidity factors cause damage to videotapes and film, this was one of the most important factors during the planning. Temperatures of around 15 degrees Celsius (59 degrees Fahrenheit) and 35 percent relative humidity (RF) are considered optimal for storing magnetic tapes and was therefore chosen for the repository. These conditions are also appropriate for film and slides.
The media art depot, designed and individually planned for the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION, has two airlocks: one prevents abrupt changes in climate when people enter, while the second airlock is conceived for tapes and media that are stored in the media depository. They can acclimatize slowly in the airlock before they are moved to special mobile shelving for storage. The mobile shelving system, which is equipped with ball-bearing mountings, ensures that the space is used optimally. The floor has a stove-enamel finish and was checked for leftover magnetic charge to eliminate all risks for the stored videotapes. In addition, the shelves are grounded to prevent any static electricity.
Since dust and air pollution represent a serious danger for media artworks, the air is filtered multiple times before and after the conditioning process. Smoke and water detectors as well as an alarm system simultaneously offer comprehensive hazard protection.
The elaborate technical amenities in combination with the custom mobile shelving make the media-art repository unique in Europe.
Time-based media conservator
Basel Abbas
Basel Abbas & Ruanne Abou-Rahme
Ruanne Abou-Rahme
Marina Abramović
The Onion, 1996
video, 20′, color, sound
The Hero, 2000
C-print, 120 × 120 cm
The Hero, 2001
video, 14′21″, b/w, sound
Vito Acconci
Openings, 1970
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 14′, b/w, no sound
The Red Tapes, 1977
video, 141′27″, b/w, sound
Consisting of:
, 1977
, 1977
, 1977
Tape 1: Common Knowledge, 1977
video, 40’27’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Tape 2: Local Color, 1977
video, 57’50’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Tape 3: Time Lag, 1977
video, 44’15’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Theme Song, 1973
video, 33′15″, b/w, sound
Corrections, 1970
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 12′, b/w, no sound
Applications, 1970
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 19′32″, color, no sound
Three Relationship Studies, 1970
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 12′30″, b/w & color, no sound
Consisting of:
, 1970
, 1970
, 1970
Shadow-Play, 1970
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 2’40’’, b/w, no sound
Part of:
Imitations, 1970
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 4’26’’, b/w, no sound
Part of:
Manipulations, 1970
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 5’, color, no sound
Part of:
Manuel Acevedo
Pep Agut
Mon ombre est un mur, 1996
oil and stucco on canvas on wood, acrylic board, dymolabel, 184,5 × 266 cm
Peggy Ahwesh
Doug Aitken
Interiors, 2002
three-channel video installation, 27′40″, color, sound
Blow Debris, 2000
video, 20′27″, color, sound
Broken Glass in the Slipstream, 2003
C-print mounted to plexiglass, 120,6 × 233,7 cm
Khalid Al Gharaballi
Fatima Al Qadiri
Monira Al Qadiri
Aziz Al Qatami
Nanu Al-Hamad
Sophia Al-Maria
Abdullah Al-Mutairi
Francis Alÿs
Francis Alÿs in collaboration with Rafael Ortega
Barrak Alzaid
Ant Farm & T.R. Uthco
Eleanor Antin
Cory Arcangel
Richard Artschwager
Chair/Chair, 1980
chair; red oak, Formica, painted steel, hide, 99,1 × 101,6 × 132,1 cm
Chair/Chair, 1980
chair; red oak, Formica, painted steel, hide, 99,1 × 101,6 × 132,1 cm
Ed Atkins
Delivery to the Following Recipient Failed Permanently, 2011
HD video, 17′09″, color, sound
Untitled (8), 2013
collage; paper, wood, steel, 243,8 × 121,4 cm
Untitled (2), 2013
collage; paper, wood, steel, 243,8 × 121,4 cm
Us Dead Talk Love, 2012
two-channel HD video installation, 37′24″, color, sound
The Anthrophagus!, 2010
HD video, 8′15″, color, sound
Untitled (5), 2013
collage; paper, wood, steel, 243,8 × 121,4 cm
Untitled (9), 2013
collage; paper, wood, steel, 243,8 × 121,4 cm
Untitled (1), 2013
collage; paper, wood, steel, 243,8 × 121,4 cm
Untitled (7), 2013
collage; paper, wood, steel, 243,8 × 121,4 cm
Death Mask II: The Scent, 2010
HD video, 8′19″, color, sound
Untitled (3), 2013
collage; paper, wood, steel, 243,8 × 121,4 cm
Paris Green, 2009
HD video, 7′37″, color, sound
Death Mask III, 2011
HD video, 34′46″, color, sound
Even Pricks, 2013
HD-video, 7′32″, color, sound
Untitled (4), 2013
collage; paper, wood, steel, 243,8 × 121,4 cm
Warm, Warm, Warm Spring Mouths, 2013
HD video, 12′50″, color, sound
Charles Atlas
Kader Attia
Ilit Azoulay
Lutz Bacher
Sex with Strangers, 1986
9-part b/w photograph series, Each 182,8 × 101,6 cm
James Dean, 1986/2014
HD video installation (16 pairs of video stills on 2 monitors), loop, b/w, no sound
Jo Baer
Trisha Baga
John Baldessari
Jules de Balincourt
Heike Baranowsky
Schwimmerin, 2000
single-channel video installation, 2′, color, no sound
Gras, 2001
single-channel video installation, 2′, color, no sound
Mondfahrt, 2001
single-channel video installation, 6′22″, color, no sound
Matthew Barney
Hernan Bas
Gaëtan Begerem
Neïl Beloufa
Jaguacuzzi, 2015
mixed media video installation; TV screens, paint on fibreglass, paint on MDF, steel, pigments and cigarettes in resin, 16 videos, 140,97 × 340,36 × 226,06 cm
Consisting of:
, 2007
, 2007
, 2009
, 2010
, 2010
, 2010
, 2011
, 2011
, 2011
, 2012
, 2012
, 2012
, 2013
, 2014
, 2014
, 2014
APRIL THE SECOND, 2007
video, 13’40’’, color, sound
Part of:
KEMPINSKI, 2007
video, 13’, color, sound
Part of:
TOUR, 2009
video, 14’37’’, color, sound
Part of:
BRUNE RENAULT, 2010
video, 17’, color, sound
Part of:
SANS TITRE, 2010
video, 14’, color, sound
Part of:
SAYRE AND MARCUS, 2010
video, 30’, color, sound
Part of:
THE ANALYST, THE RESEARCHER, THE SCREENWRITER, THE CGI TECH AND THE LAWYER, 2011
video, 7’44’’, color, sound
Part of:
CATENACCIO SYSTEM, 2011
video, 4’20’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
PEOPLE’S PASSION, LIFESTYLE, BEAUTIFUL WINE, GIGANTIC GLASS TOWERS, ALL SURROUNDED BY WATER, 2011
video, 11’, color, sound
Part of:
PARTY ISLAND, 2012
video, 8’48’’, color, sound
Part of:
REAL ESTATE, 2012
video, 10’45’’, color, sound
Part of:
WORLD DOMINATION, 2012
video, 19’, color, sound
Part of:
TONIGHT AND THE PEOPLE, 2013
video, 81’, color, sound
Part of:
DESIRE FOR DATA, 2014
video, 47’, color, sound
Part of:
HOME IS WHENEVER I’M WITH YOU, 2014
video, 53’56’’, color, sound
Part of:
VENGEANCE, 2014
video, 14’24’’, color, sound
Part of:
Lynda Benglis
Helen Benigson
A Rude Girl Arse Glistens Like Silicone. Cluck, Cluck, Cluck 2, 2015
HD video, 1′22″, color, sound
A Rude Girl Arse Glistens Like Silicone. Cluck, Cluck, Cluck 5, 2015
HD video, 48″, color, sound
A Rude Girl Arse Glistens Like Silicone. Cluck, Cluck, Cluck 1, 2015
HD video, 1′21″, color, sound
A Rude Girl Arse Glistens Like Silicone. Cluck, Cluck, Cluck 3, 2015
HD video, 50″, color, sound
A Rude Girl Arse Glistens Like Silicone. Cluck, Cluck, Cluck 4, 2015
HD video, 1′20″, color, sound
A Rude Girl Arse Glistens Like Silicone. Cluck, Cluck, Cluck 6, 2015
HD video, 1′18″, color, sound
Meriem Bennani
MISSION TEENS: French School in Morocco, 2019
HD video, 36′33″, color, sound
Party on the CAPS, 2018
video, 25′28″, color, sound
Hans Berg
Bernadette Corporation
Thomas Bernstein
Walead Beshty
Joseph Beuys
Johanna Billing
Dara Birnbaum
Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman, 1978/79
video, 5′45″, color, sound
Pop Pop Video, 1980
video, 9′, color, sound
Björk
Hannah Black
David Blandy
Ice, 2015
HD video, 1′10″, color, sound
Moon, 2015
HD video, 1′06″, color, sound
Sea, 2015
HD video, 1′36″, color, sound
Ruin, 2015
HD video, 1′31″, color, sound
Sunset, 2015
HD video, 1′08″, color, sound
Mist, 2015
HD video, 1′04″, color, sound
Sean Bluechel
John Bock
Ein Haufen voller Flacker, 2012
nine-channel mixed-media video installation; wood, stools, color, sound
Consisting of:
, 2009
, 2010
, 2010
, 2010
, 2011
, 2011
, 2011
, 2011
, 2006
Die abgeschmierte Knicklenkung im Gepäck verheddert sich im weißen Hemd, 2009
video, 28’37’’, color, sound
Part of:
Im Schatten der Made, 2010
video, 74’16’’, color, sound
Part of:
Pi-Bean, 2010
video, 31’10’’, color, sound
Part of:
Seewolf, 2010
video, 28’37’’, color, sound
Part of:
Bauchhöhle bauchen, 2011
video, 46’55’’, color, sound
Part of:
Lichterloh Roh, 2011
video, 15’31’’, color, sound
Part of:
Monsieur et Monsieur, 2011
video, 36’49’’, color, sound
Part of:
Nichts unter der Kinnlade, 2011
video, 8’55’’, color, sound
Part of:
Lütte mit Rucola, 2006
HD video, 35’41’’, color, sound
Part of:
Zezziminnegesang, 2006
16mm film transferred to video, 27′22″, color, sound
Unheil, 2018
HD video, 90′57″, color, sound
Monica Bonvicini
Wallfuckin’, 1995
single-channel video installation, 60′, color, sound
Hammering Out (an old argument), 1998–2003
video, 31′55″, color, sound
Destroy She Said, 1998
two-channel video installation, 60′, b/w & color, sound
Alexander Bornschein
Carol Bove
Summer Solstice, Düsseldorf, 2031, 2006
site specific installation; bronze rods, wire, expanded metal, 457 × 244 × 244 cm
Panegyric (Vogue Photocollage), 2003
photo collage, 44,4 × 30,4 cm
Mia, 2005
drawing; ink on paper, 53,5 × 40 cm
Das Energi, 2005/06
mixed-media installation; wood and metal shelf, books, pamphlet, bronze object, peacock feather, antiqie mirror, 165,1 × 279,4 × 30,5 cm
Robert Boyd
Xanadu, 2006
four-channel video installation
Consisting of:
, 2004
, 2005
, 2006
, 2005
Patriot Act, 2004
video, 22’
Part of:
Heaven’s little Helper, 2005
video, 22’
Part of:
Judgement Day, 2006
video, 22’
Part of:
Exit Strategy, 2005
video, 5’35’’
Part of:
Tina Braegger
Kerstin Brätsch
Monika Bravo
Klaus vom Bruch
Lonnie van Brummelen
Lonnie van Brummelen & Siebren de Haan
Matthew Buckingham
Chris Burden
The T.V. Commercials, 1973-1977
video, 3′46″, color, sound
Documentation of selected works, 1971–1975
Super 8mm film, 16mm film, half-inch film, transferred to video, 34′38″, b/w & color, sound
Consisting of:
, 1972
, 1972
, 1973
, 1973
, 1971
Deadman, 1972
2’35’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Bed Piece, 1972
2’59’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Through the Night Softly, 1973
2’22’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Icarus, 1973
2’24’’, color, sound
Part of:
Shoot, 1971
1’51’’, s/w, sound
Part of:
Anthony Burdin
Desert Mix, „Go See um Black Feather“, 2003
video, 16′16″, color, sound
He Ain’t No Fuckin’ Drumma, Summer P-lot Tour 2003, Oxnard CA (1. Light My Fire, 2. Kashmiur), 2003
video, 16′55″, color, sound
Voodoo Vocals, Agent of Fortune Cassette Tour 1999 – Don’t Fear the Reaper, New York, 11 / 22 / 02, 2002
video, 4′52″, color, sound
Voodoo Vocals, Drive Hwy 101 N (1. You only live twice, 2. It was a very good year), 2005
video, 7′50″, color, sound
A.K Burns
A.K. Burns & A.L. Steiner
Jeff Burton
Untitled #151 (Picket Fence), 2001
C-print on aluminium, 67,5 × 101,5 cm
Untitled #176 (Rods and Clamps), 2003
C-print on aluminium, 67,5 × 101,5 cm
Untitled #182 (Spa Rules), 2003
C-print on aluminium, 67,5 × 101,5 cm
Andrea Büttner
Matt Calderwood
Lightning, 2005
video, 2′35″, color, sound
Tape, 2005
video, 1′32″, color, sound
Strips (vertical), 2005
video, 2′43″, color, sound
Gloss, 2004
video, 1′16″, color, sound
Screen, 2005
video, 3′08″, color, sound
Light, 2004
video, 47″, color, sound
Sophie Calle
Peter Campus
Paul Chan
Untitled (After St. Caravaggio), 2003–2006
single-channel video installation; translucent screen, 2′33″, color, no sound
Happiness (Finally) After 35,000 Years of Civilization (after Henry Darger and Charles Fourier), 2000–2003
single-channel video installation, 17′20″, color, sound
Patty Chang
Untitled (For Abramović, Love Cocteau), 2000
video, 4′13″, color, sound
Fan Dance, 2003
video, 28′47″, color, sound
Shaved (At A Loss), 1998
video, 5′19″, color, sound
Ian Cheng
Emissary in the Squat of Gods, 2015
live simulation and story, infinite duration, color, sound
BOB (Bag of Beliefs), 2018–2019
artificial lifeform, infinite duration, color, sound, dimensions variable
Emissary Sunsets The Self, 2017
live simulation and story, infinite duration, color, sound
Emissary Forks At Perfection, 2015
live simulation and story, infinite duration, color, sound
Jacob Ciocci
Jessica Ciocci
David Claerbout
Michael Clegg
Clegg & Guttman
Tony Cokes
Stephanie Comilang
Stephanie Comilang & Simon Speiser
Jacky Connolly
Matt Copson
Booty Call, 2015
sound file, 2′21″
Oh-reg-ah-no, 2015
sound file, 1′30″
Letter from War, 2015
sound file, 2′17″
Broadcast, 2015
sound file, 2′57″
Inherited Deficit, 2015
sound file, 1′44″
Anarchist, 2015
sound file, 1′56″
Jane Crawford
Jane Crawford & Robert Fiore
Jamie Crewe
Keren Cytter
DAS INSTITUT
Adele Röder For DAS INSTITUT Starline, 2010
slide projection, 160 glass-mounted 35mm slides, Dimensions variable
Apes and Shapes (I’ll see you again in 25 years), 2011
soft cover artist book, 38,1 × 29,8 cm
Vaginal Davis
Lieven Deconinck
Thomas Demand
Zaun (Fence), 2004
C-print, diasec, 180 × 230 cm
Badezimmer (Bathroom), 1997
C-print, diasec, 160 × 122 cm
Details (Sportscar), 2005
C-print, diasec, 78 × 78 cm
Lift, 2004
C-print, diasec, 196 × 150 cm
Jen DeNike
The Pimp, 2015
HD video, 5′22″, color, sound
Girls like me, 2006
video, 6′, color, sound
Sasha, 2003
C-print, diasec, 127 × 152,4 cm
Wrestling, 2002
video, 3′10″, color, sound
Anat, 2006
C-print, diasec, 127 × 152,4 cm
Dunking, 2003
video, 3′30″, color, sound
Fell, 2006
video, 1′20″, color, sound
The Deadman’s Float, 2005
video, 1′, color, sound
Shipwreck, 2005
video, 49″, color, sound
Simon Denny
Multimedia Double Canvas progression, 2009
installation
Consisting of:
, 2009
, 2009
, 2009
, 2009
, 2009
, 2009
Multimedia Double Canvas Toshiba, 2009
inkjet print on canvas, metal fittings, pedestal, 76 × 100 × 60 cm
Part of:
Multimedia Double Canvas Thomson, 2009
inkjet print on canvas, metal fittings, pedestal, 87 × 117 × 58 cm
Part of:
Multimedia Double Canvas Tevion, 2009
inkjet print on canvas, metal fittings, pedestal, 60 × 80 × 54 cm
Part of:
Multimedia Double Canvas Hantarex, 2009
inkjet print on canvas, metal fittings, pedestal, 141 × 60 × 43 cm
Part of:
Multimedia Double Canvas Philips, 2009
inkjet print on canvas, metal fittings, pedestal, 51 × 92 × 13 cm
Part of:
Multimedia Double Canvas Samsung, 2009
inkjet print on canvas, metal fittings, pedestal, 80 × 51 × 3 cm
Part of:
Maria Anna Dewes
Karl Wilhelm Diefenbach
Nathalie Djurberg
Nathalie Djurberg & Hans Berg
The Experiment, 2009
three-channel video installation
Consisting of:
, , 2009
, , 2009
, , 2009
Cave, 2009
video, 5′35″, color, sound
Part of:
Forest, 2009
video, 7′27″, color, sound
Part of:
Greed, 2009
video, 10′45″, color, sound
Part of:
We are not two, We are one, 2008
video, 5′33″, color, sound
It’s the Mother, 2008
video, 6′, color, sound
Cheryl Donegan
Trisha Donnelly
Untitled I (Double Alpha), 2007
C-print, 158,8 × 111,8 cm
Untitled, 2013
sculpture; rose-colored marble, 11,5 × 88,7 × 36,5 cm
Satin Operator, 2007
13 C-prints, Each 158,8 × 111,8 cm
Untitled, 2005
video, 20″, b/w, no sound
Untitled (mountain), 2008
photo print on RC paper, 61 × 50,5 cm
Untitled, 2011
SD-video, 30″, color, no sound
Sconce, 2013
2 wall objects; plaster, electrical wiring, Each 41,5 × 40,5 × 42 cm
Untitled, 2010
sound installation, 2′15″
Untitled, 2008
video, 6′, color, no sound
Untitled, 2012
HD video, 3′59″, color, no sound
Juan Downey
Ingar Dragset
Marcel Dzama
Thorben Eggers
Olafur Eliasson
Michael Elmgreen
Elmgreen & Dragset
Self-Portrait, No.41, 2016
engraved marble, 50 × 75 cm
Adaptation, Fig. 20, 2020
sculpture; stainless steel and plastic base, 267 x 56 x 40 cm
Powerless Structures, Fig. 101 (Maquette), 2015
resin, white super matte lacquer finish, 56,5 × 33 × 16 cm
Tracey Emin
I Can’t Love Anymore, 2016
sound file, 35″
You Must Have Hope, 2016
sound file, 20″
Just Let Me Love You, 2016
sound file, 19″
I Lay Here, 2016
sound file, 17″
Feel Your Touch, 2016
sound file, 20″
She Lay There, 2016
sound file, 37″
Sometimes the dress is worth more money than the money, 2001
video, 4′, color, sound
Encyclopedia Pictura & Björk
Brian Eno
Brock Enright
Jana Euler
Jan Paul Evers
Portrait Julia Stoschek, 2011
silver gelatin print on baryta paper, 98 × 84 cm
Große rekursive Funktion, 2010
silver gelatin print on baryta paper, 81,5 × 81,5 cm
Der Abstand zwischen den Gipfeln menschlicher Möglichkeiten, 2011
silver gelatin print on baryta paper, 71 × 65,5 cm
Place de Pyramide, 2009
silver gelatin print on baryta paper, 55 × 59,5 cm
Vorhang, 2010
silver gelatin print on baryta paper, 105,5 × 134 cm
VALIE EXPORT
Loretta Fahrenholz
Implosion, 2011
HD video, 30′, color, sound (excerpts)
My Throat, My Air, 2013
HD video, 17′, color, sound (excerpts)
Cao Fei
Whose Utopia, 2006
mixed-media installation
Consisting of:
, 2006
, 2006
My future is not a Dream, 2006
video, 20’, color, sound
Part of:
What are you doing here?, 2006
video, 35’, color, sound
Part of:
Hip Hop Guangzhou, 2003
video, 3′, color, sound
i.Mirror by China Tracy (AKA: Cao Fei), 2007
video, 28′, color, sound
RMB City – A Second Life City Planning by China Tracy, 2007
video, 6′, color, sound
Robert Fiore
Peter Fischli
Peter Fischli & David Weiss
Christiane Fochtmann
Gregory Fong
Ed Fornieles
Sleeping, 2015
HD video, 3′04″, color, sound
Climbing, 2015
HD video, 3′06″, color, sound
Bathing, 2015
HD video, 3′04″, color, sound
Sitting, 2015
HD video, 3′04″, color, sound
Swimming, 2015
HD video, 3′07″, color, sound
Falling, 2015
HD video, 3′03″, color, sound
Claus Föttinger
Light Object No. 10: Trisha Donnelly, 2015
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints, plexiglass, 56 × 24 × 24 cm
Hanoi/Saigon, 2007
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints on cotton paper, sewed on copper construction, Ø 100 cm, H 290 cm
I Want To See How You See, 2010
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, Ø 21 cm, H 54 cm
Light Object Welt am Draht, 2016
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, 46 × 24 × 24 cm
Light Object Kill, 2014
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, Ø 46,5 cm, H 55 cm
Light Object No. 11: Cyprien Gaillard, 2015
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, 52,5 × 30,5 × 19,5 cm
Fragile-Bar, 2008
light object bar; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints, sewed on steel construction, glass, 117,5 × 232 × 87 cm
Light Object No. 2: Fragile, 2008
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, Ø 20,5, H 40 cm
Light Object Jaguars and Electric Eels, 2017
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, 55 × 25 × 25 cm
Light Object No. 13: Hito Steyerl – Missed Connections, 2016
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, Ø 32 cm, H 53 cm
Ohne Titel, 2004
2 light objects; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, Ø 22,5 cm, H 53,5 cm
Light Object No. 3: Here and Now, 2009
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, Ø 25,5, H 49 cm
Light Object No. 12: Hello Boys, 2016
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints, steel contruction, 250 × 21 × 21 cm
Light Object: Arthur Jafa – A Series of utterly improbable, extraordinary renditions, 2018
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand
Light Object No. 4: Derek Jarman – Super8, 2010
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, Ø 32 cm, H 54,5 cm
Light Object No. 7: Ed Atkins – Frances Stark, 2013
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, Ø 23,5 cm, H 45 cm
Remix Luhmanneck for Cities of Gold and Mirrors, 2011
light object bar; mirrors, wood, steel contruction, glass, 120 × 298 × 63 cm
Barbarella, Matmos and Chief of Matmos, 2006
2 light objects; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewn on lampshade, lampstand, Ø 33,5 cm, H 69 cm; Ø 34 cm, H 54,5 cm
Light Object No. 8: Sturtevant, 2014
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, Ø 34 cm, H 40 cm
Light Object No. 1: Destroy, She Said, 2007
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, Ø 20 cm, H 40 cm
Light Object No. 6: Flaming Creatures, 2012
light object; pigmented and laminated inkjet prints sewed on lampshade, lampstand, 59 × 22,5 × 22,5 cm
Dara Friedman
Simon Fujiwara
Cyprien Gaillard
Ocean II Ocean, 2019
HD video, 10′56″, color, sound
Artefacts, 2011
HD video transferred to 35mm film, 9′43″, continuous loop, color, sound
Cities of Gold and Mirrors, 2009
16mm film, 8′52″, color, sound
Desniansky Raion, 2007
video, 30′, color, sound
L’Ange du foyer (Vierte Fassung), 2019
Holographic LED-Display, galvanized steel base, 162 × 75 × 24 cm
The Lake Arches, 2007
video, 1′39″, color, no sound
KOE, 2015
HD video, 4′17″, color, no sound
Nightlife, 2015
digital 3D motion picture, 14′, color, sound
Ryan Gander
GCC
General Idea
Isa Genzken
Untitled, 2017
plaster bust, paint, sunglasses, wood, lacquer, 176 × 27,5 × 40 cm
Weltenempfänger, 1998
concrete, antenna, 19 x 30,5 x 8,5 cm
Till Gerhard
Sondervorstellung, 2006
painting; oil and screen printing on canvas, 100 × 140 cm
Kleiner Hunger, 2006
painting; oil and screen printing on canvas, 50 × 40 cm
Captain America, 2004
painting; oil on canvas, 40 × 30 cm
Online Polonäse, 2006
painting; oil and screen printing on canvas, 50 × 40 cm
Die Ordnung der Dinge, 2004
painting; oil on canvas, 198 × 163 cm
Beatrice Gibson
Melanie Gilligan
Kate Gilmore
Sophie Gogl
Douglas Gordon
Staying home (18.14) and going out (21.14), 2005
2 polaroid color photographs, Total 23 × 37,5 cm (framed), each 10,8 × 8,9 cm
New Colour Empires, 2006–2010
HD video, 17′45″, color, no sound
The nature of relationships between few words, 2006
wall installation; vinyl, dimensions variable
New Colour Empire, 2006–2010
single-channel video installation, 108′3″, color, no sound
Staying home (18.16) and going out (21.16), 2005
2 polaroid color photographs, Total 23 × 37,5 cm (framed), each 10,8 × 8,9 cm
Manuel Graf
Shulmantonioni, 2004
mixed-media video installation; stool, 3′, color, sound
Gründer, 2014
mixed-media video installation; flat screen, chair (Wilhelminian period), HD video, 2′08″, color, no sound
1000 Jahre sind ein Tag, 2005
video, 4′, color, sound
Ping Pong, 2005
mixed-media video installation; sculpture; wire, plaster, papier-maché, video, 7′, color, sound
Über die aus der Zukunft fließende Zeit, 2006
video, 9′, b/w, sound
Dan Graham
Performer/ Audience/ Mirror, 1975
video, 22′52″, b/w, sound
Rock my Religion, 1982-84
video, 55′27″, color, sound
Two-way Mirror Power, 2006
pavillion; two-way mirror, stainless steel, 225 × 430 × 430 cm
Guerrilla Girls
Cao Guimarães
Andreas Gursky
Supernova, 1999
C-print, 52 × 42 cm
Untitled XII, No.4, 2000
C-print, diasec, 272 × 185 cm
Cocoon II, 2008
C-print, diasec, 209,3 × 503,6 cm
Gasherd, 1980
C-print, 101 × 74,5 cm
Centre Pompidou, 1995
C-print, diasec, 93 × 161 cm
Rhein II, 1999
Inkjet-print, 43,2 × 63,5 cm
Yair Martin Guttmann
Siebren de Haan
Doug Hall
Barbara Hammer
Double Strength, 1978
16mm film transferred to video, 14′03″, color, sound
Psychosynthesis, 1975
16mm film transferred to video, 6′05″, color, sound
Audience, 1982
16mm film transferred to video, 32′35″, b/w, sound
X, 1975
16mm film transferred to video, 7′04″, color, sound
Place Mattes, 1987
16mm film transferred to video, 7′36″, color, sound
Sanctus, 1990
16mm film transferred to video, 18′18″, b/w & color, sound
I Was/I Am, 1973
16mm film transferred to video, 5′35″, b/w, sound
No No Nooky T.V., 1987
16mm film transferred to video, 12′, color, sound
Synch Touch, 1981
16mm film transferred to video, 10′07″, color, sound
Paul Hance
Mathilde ter Heijne
Jeppe Hein
Leila Hekmat
Sean Hellfritsch
Lynn Hershman Leeson
Reach, 1986
Photograph; gelatin silver print, 80 x 61 cm
THE ELECTRONIC DIARIES OF LYNN HERSHMAN LEESON 1984–2019, 1984–2019
one-channel video or six-channel video installation , 74′, color, sound
Gary Hill
Primarily Speaking, 1981–1983
video, 19′23″, color, sound
Incidence of Catastrophe, 1987–1988
video, 43′51″, color, sound
Candida Höfer
Julia Stoschek Collection IV, 2008
C-print, 200 × 147 cm
Julia Stoschek Collection Düsseldorf VIII, 2008
C-print, 200 × 158,1 cm
Nancy Holt
Sun Tunnels, 1978
16mm film transferred to video, 26′31″, color, sound
Mono Lake, 1968-2004
video, 19′54″, color, sound
Nancy Holt & Robert Smithson
Martin Honert
Bernadette van Huy
Anne Imhof
Arthur Jafa
Apex, 2013
video, 8′22″, color, sound
Love is the Message, The Message is Death, 2016
mixed-media video installation; video, costum-designed tent, 7′25″, color, sound, 1524 × 762 × 399 cm (tent)
Christian Jankowski
Hollywoodschnee, 2004
16mm film transferred to video, 11′50″, color, sound
Die Jagd, 1992/1997
video, 1′11″, color, sound
16 mm Mystery, 2004
35mm film transferred to video, 5′, color, sound
What Remains, 2004
16mm film transferred to video, 11′33″, color, sound
Ulysses Jenkins
Dream City, 1983
video, 5'23'', color, sound
Mass of Images, 1978
video, 4'15'', color, sound
Two Zone Transfer, 1979
video, 23'52'', color, sound
Anna Jermolaewa
Rindon Johnson
I First you (11/11), 2018
HD video, 5′28″, color, sound
May the moon meet us apart, may the sun meet us together, 2021
virtual reality game, infinite duration, color, sound
Patrick Jolley
Joan Jonas
Vertical Roll, 1972
video, 19′38″, b/w, sound
Disturbances, 1974
video, 11′, b/w, sound
Songdelay, 1973
16mm film transferred to video, 18′35″, b/w, sound
Benjamin Jones
Isaac Julien
Jesper Just
K-HOLE
Martti Kalliala
Martti Kalliala & Daniel Keller
Exitscape 4, 2015
HD video, 3′24″, color, sound
Exitscape 1, 2015
HD video, 3′02″, color, sound
Exitscape 5, 2015
HD video, 3′19″, color, sound
Exitscape 3, 2015
HD video, 3′19″, color, sound
Exitscape 6, 2015
HD video, 2′51″, color, sound
Exitscape 2, 2015
HD video, 3′08″, color, sound
Daniel Keller
Mike Kelley
Extracurricular Activity Projective Reconstruction #36 (Vice Anglais), 2011
lenticular panel, lightbox, 82,6 × 122,6 × 8,3 cm
Extracurricular Activity Projective Reconstruction #36 (Vice Anglais), 2011
video, 25′15″, color, sound
John Kelsey
Zilvinas Kempinas
Jon Kessler
Amal Khalaf
Josh Kline
Forever 27 (Kurt), 2013
HD video, 14′39″, color, sound
Forever 48 (Whitney), 2013
HD video, 16′06″, color, sound
Designer’s Head in Tim Coppens (Tim), 2013
3D printed sculpture in plaster, inkjet ink, and cyanoacrylate, low-iron Starphire glass, Stella Artois beer, MDF, glue, 102,87 × 35,56 × 35,56 cm
Pierre Klossowski
Ganymède au col marin, 1986
colored pencil on paper, 215 x 130 cm
Roberte aux barres parallèles, 1984
drawing; pencil on paper, 189,5 × 53 × 2,9 cm
Imi Knoebel
Terence Koh
Snow White, 2008
mixed-media installation; 200 neon lights, porcelain-Chrysanthemums, mirror coffin, sound installation, dimensions variable
Sprungkopf, 2006
video, 1′42″, b/w, sound
The Camel was God, the Camel Was Shot, 2007
sculpture; cast of artist’s body, bronze, white patina
Andreas Korte
Self Coded, 2008
three-channel HD video installation, 23′16″, color, sound
Tanzfilm, 2011
HD video, 26′42″, color, sound
Sarah Kürten
Marie-Jo Lafontaine
Sigalit Landau
Lina Lapelytė
Hunky Bluff ACT 5, 2015
sound file, 2′41″
Hunky Bluff ACT 1, 2015
sound file, 1′25″
Hunky Bluff ACT 2, 2015
sound file, 2′57″
Hunky Bluff ACT 4, 2015
sound file, 3′
Hunky Bluff ACT 6, 2015
sound file, 1′41″
Hunky Bluff ACT 3, 2015
sound file, 2′07″
Mark Leckey
Parade, 2003
video, 7′19″, color, sound
Made in ‘Eaven, 2004
16mm film, transferred to video, 2′, color, no sound
Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore, 1999
video, 15′, color, sound
Shades of Destructors, 2005
video, 18′30″, color, sound
Cinema-in-the-Round, 2006–2008
video, 42′21″, color, sound
GreenScreenRefrigerator, 2010
digital video, 17′10″, color, sound
Felix Gets Broadcasted, 2007
digital video, 5′, color, sound
Leo Gabin
Aliens, 2015
sound file, 1′55″
The Heart Wants, 2015
sound file, 2′55″
Girlhood, 2015
HD video, 1′58″, color, sound
Lips, 2015
sound file, 1′15″
Fast Lost by Ho Ho Click, 2015
HD video, 1′, color, sound
Awesome, 2015
sound file, 50″
Ain’t Gon Do It, 2015
HD video, 24″, color, sound
Break Up, 2015
sound file, 2′53″
Surfer Ho Remix, 2015
sound file, 1′03″
Date Yourself, 2015
HD video, 2′10″, color, sound
Write your name, 2015
HD video, 1′51″, color, sound
The Concept, 2015
HD video, 1′13″, color, sound
Klara Lidén
Claim, 2010
slide projection
Untitled (Under Mattan), 2006–2010
slide projection
Handicap (Konst Fack), 2007
slide projection
Untitled (Trashcan), 2011
video, 2′56″, color, sound
Self Portrait with the Keys to the City, 2005
digital print, 60 × 42 cm
Untitled (Down), 2011
C-print, 40 × 30 cm
Seine, 2010
slide projection
550, 2004
video, 2′56″, color, sound
Kasta Macka, 2009
video, 3′45″, color, sound
Untitled (Column Monkey), 2010
slide projection
Grounding, 2018
HD video, 5′53″, color, sound
Small jug lamp, 2019
Plastic canister, lightbulb, spray paint, 20 × 35 × 40 cm
Paralyzed, 2003
video, 3′, color, sound
Kurt Lightner
Untitled, 2004
acrylic ink on mylar, 141,5 × 193 cm
Useless Fruit, 2006
acrylic ink on mylar, collage on paper on wood, 213,4 × 274,4 cm
Roman Lipski
Chip Lord
Kristin Lucas
Sarah Lucas
Mary Lucier
Rachel Maclean
Let It Go – Part 4, 2015
HD video, 3′03″, color, sound
Let It Go – Part 1, 2015
HD video, 3′03″, color, sound
Let It Go – Part 5, 2015
HD video, 3′03″, color, sound
Let It Go – Part 2, 2015
HD video, 3′03″, color, sound
Let It Go – Part 6, 2015
HD video, 3′03″, color, sound
Let It Go – Part 3, 2015
HD video, 3′03″, color, sound
Conny Maier
Mark Manders
Christian Marclay
Helen Marten
Dust and Piranhas, 2011
HD video, 25′25″, color, sound
Evian Disease, 2012
HD video, 28′45″, color, sound
Gordon Matta-Clark
Program Three, 1971–1975
16mm and Super 8mm film transferred to video, 45′45″, color, sound & no sound
Consisting of:
, 1971
, 1972
, 1975
Fire Child, 1971
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 9’47’’, color, no sound
Part of:
Fresh Kill, 1972
16mm film transferred to video, 12’56’’, color, sound
Part of:
Day’s End, 1975
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 23’10’’, color, no sound
Part of:
Program Seven, 1974–2005
16mm and Super 8mm film, transferred to video, 44″, b/w & color, sound & no sound
Consisting of:
, 1977–2005
, 1975
Sous-Sols de Paris (Paris Underground), 1977–2005
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 25’20’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Conical Intersect, 1975
16mm film transferred to video, 18’40’’, color, no sound
Part of:
Program One: Chinatown Voyeur, 1971
video, 60′, b/w, sound
Program Six, 1974–1976
16mm and Super 8mm film transferred to video, 50′30″, b/w & color, sound & no sound
Consisting of:
, 1976
, 1974
, 1974
Substrait (Underground Dailies), 1976
16mm film transferred to video, 30’, b/w & color, sound
Part of:
Bingo/Ninths, 1974
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 9’40’’, color, no sound
Part of:
Splitting, 1974
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 10’50’’, b/w, no sound
Part of:
Program Five, 1972–1976
16mm and Super 8mm film transferred to video, 60′50″, b/w & color, sound
Consisting of:
, 1971
, 1973
, 1976
Automation House, 1971
16mm film transferred to video, 32’, b/w, sound & no sound
Part of:
Clockshower, 1973
16mm film transferred to video, 13’50’’, color, no sound
Part of:
City Slivers, 1976
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 15’, color, no sound
Part of:
Anthony McCall
Paul McCarthy
Black and White Tapes, 1970-1975
video, 32′50′, b/w, sound
Consisting of:
, 1971
, 1972
, 1974
, 1970–71
, 1975
, 1974
, 1974
, 1975
, 1975
, 1975
, 1975
, 1974
, 1975
Ma Bell, 1971
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Painting Face Down – White Line, 1972
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Spit – Not Looking at the Camera, 1974
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Spinning, Short segment of 20-minute Tape, 1970–71
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Whipping the Wall with Paint, 1975
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Up Down Penis Show, 1974
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Zippedy Doo Dance, 1974
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Icicle Slobber, 1975
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Pipe Shadow, 1975
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Upside Down Spitting – Bat, 1975
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Drawing – Semen Drawing, 1975
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Spitting on the Camera Lens, 1974
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Upside Down Pipe, 1975
video, b/w, sound
Part of:
Paul McCarthy & Mike Kelley
Adam McEwen
Alex McQuilkin
Get Your Gun Up, 2002
video, 2′30″, color, sound
Teenage Daydream: It’s only Rock & Roll, 2002
video, 2′30″, color, sound
Fucked, 1999
video, 3′, color, sound
Teenage Daydream: In Vain, 2002-2003
video, 2′, color, sound
Indefinite Line Towards Becoming the Perfect SoHo Girl, 2000
video, 3′30″, color, sound
Jessica Mein
Florian Meisenberg
the_tacit_one, 2015
HD video, 3′13″, color, sound
hihihihihihihihihihihih, 2015
HD video, 3′18″, color, sound
somewhere_sideways, 2015
HD video, 2′22″, color, sound
the_anciety_of_influence, 2015
HD video, 4′21″, color, sound
rghwori, 2015
HD video, 2′56″, color, sound
towards_a_new_architecture, 2015
HD video, 3′22″, color, sound
Bjørn Melhus
Ana Mendieta
Asier Mendizabal
Figures and Prefigurations (Divers, V. Palladini, 1926), 2009
unique cut-out from offset print, 96,5 × 72 cm
Delimitar #1, 2009
engraving on gravoply mounted on birch plywood, 30 × 30 cm
Delimitar #2, 2009
engraving on gravoply mounted on birch plywood, 30 × 30 cm
The Staff That Matters (SI), 2009
unique cut-out from offset print, 96,5 × 72 cm
N,S,O,T,C, 2008
sculpture; steel, 5 parts, each 180 × 45 × 40 cm
Delimitar #3, 2009
engraving on gravoply mounted on birch plywood, 30 × 30 cm
Überbau (Superstructure), 2005
Mixed-media installation; iron framework, wood panels, offset-printed posters, dimensions variable
Hard Edge 4, 2010
sculpture; MDF, varnish, 366 × 40 × 40 cm
Delimitar #4, 2009
engraving on gravoply mounted on birch plywood, 30 × 30 cm
The Staff That Matters (30,000), 2009
cut-out from offset print, 96,5 × 72 cm
Figures and Prefigurations (Divers, A. Rodchenko, 1930, Political Football), 2009
unique cut-out from offset print, 96,5 × 72 cm
Delimitar #5, 2009
engraving on gravoply mounted on birch plywood, 30 × 30 cm
Doug Michels
Nandipha Mntambo
Sondzela, 2008
sculpture; cowhide, resin, polyester mesh, waxed cord, glass beads, 170 × 165 × 100 cm
Intsandvokati, 2008
sculpture; cowhide, resin, polyester mesh, 140 × 160 × 120 cm
Lutz Mommartz
Soziale Plastik, 1969
16mm film transferred to video, 11′41″, b/w, no sound
Selbstschüsse, 1967
16mm film transferred to video, 6′16″, b/w, sound
Weg zum Nachbarn, 1968
16mm film transferred to video, 10′26″, b/w, sound
Die Treppe, 1967
16mm film transferred to video, 6′38″, b/w, sound
Als wär’s von Beckett, 1975
16mm film transferred to video, 23′, b/w, sound
Sean Monahan
Colin Montgomery
Emergency Doors (Smithsonian American History Museum), 2006
archival pigment print, 113 × 143,5 cm
View, 101 Constitution Avenue (U.S. Capitol), 2006
archival pigment print, 113 × 126 cm
Arlington National Cemetery (JFK funeral model), 2005
archival pigment print, 72,5 × 89 cm
Alex Morrison
Otto Mueller
Alex Müller
Takeshi Murata
Laurel Nakadate
Bruce Nauman
Playing A Note on the Violin While I Walk Around the Studio, 1967–1968
16mm film transferred to video, 10′, b/w, sound
Bouncing in the Corner No. 1, 1968
video, 60′, b/w, sound
Walking in an Exaggerated Manner Around the Perimeter of a Square, 1967–1968
16mm film transferred to video, 10′, b/w, sound
Violin Film #1 (Playing The Violin As Fast As I Can), 1967–1968
16mm film transferred to video, 10′54″, b/w, sound
Gauze, 1969
video, 8′, b/w, sound
Lip Sync, 1969
video, 57′, b/w, sound
Pulling Mouth, 1969
16mm film transferred to video, 8′, b/w, no sound
Bouncing in the Corner, No. 2: Upside Down, 1969
video, 60′, b/w, sound
Art Make-Up, 1967–1968
16mm film transferred to video, 40′, color, sound
Consisting of:
, 1967
, 1967
, 1967–1968
, 1967–1968
Art Make-Up, No. 1, White, 1967
16mm film transferred to video, 10’, color, sound
Part of:
Art Make-Up, No. 2, Pink, 1967
16mm film transferred to video, 10’, color, sound
Part of:
Art Make-Up, No. 3, Green, 1967–1968
16mm film transferred to video, 10’, color, sound
Part of:
Art Make-Up, No. 4, Black, 1967–1968
16mm film transferred to video, 10’, color, sound
Part of:
Bouncing Balls, 1969
16mm film transferred to video, 9′, b/w, no sound
Black Balls, 1969
16mm film transferred to video, 8′, b/w, sound
Dance or Exercise on the Perimeter of a Square (Square Dance), 1967–1968
16mm film transferred to video, 8′24″, b/w, sound
Stamping in the Studio, 1968
video, 1′02″, b/w, sound
Bouncing Two Balls Between the Floor and Ceiling with Changing Rhythms, 1967–1968
16mm film transferred to video, 10′, b/w, sound
Carsten Nicolai
Precious Okoyomon
Catherine Opie
Dennis Oppenheim
Program Six, 1971/72
video, 27′18″, b/w & color, no sound
Consisting of:
, 1971
, 1971
, 1971
, 1972
, 1971
, 1971
, 1971
, 1971
Forming Sounds, 1971
video, 7′14″, b/w, no sound
Part of:
2 Stage Transfer Drawing (Advancing to Future State), 1971
video, 2′48″, color, no sound
Part of:
2 Stage Transfer Drawing (Retreating to a Past State), 1971
video, 2′57″, color, no sound
Part of:
A Feedback Situation, 1972
video, 3′02″, color, no sound
Part of:
3 Stage Transfer Drawing, 1971
video, 3′07″, color, no sound
Part of:
Two Stage Transfer Drawing (Returning to a Past State), 1971
video, 3′, color, no sound
Part of:
Objectified Counterforces, 1971
video, 2′06″, color, no sound
Part of:
Shadow Project, 1971
video, 3′04″, color, no sound
Part of:
Program One: Aspen Projects, 1970
16mm film, 8mm film, and video tape transferred to video, 30′, b/w & color, no sound
Consisting of:
, 1970
, 1970
, 1970
, 1970
, 1970
, 1970
, 1970
, 1970
, 1970
Material Interchange, 1970
video, 2′44″, b/w, no sound
Part of:
Identity Transfer, 1970
video, 1′, b/w, no sound
Part of:
Rocked Hand, 1970
8mm film transferred to video, 3′34″, color, no sound
Part of:
COMPRESSION – FERN #1, 1970
16mm film transferred to video, 5′46″, color, no sound
Part of:
Pressure Piece #1, 1970
video, 1′40″, color, no sound
Part of:
Glassed Hand, 1970
video, 2′56″, color, no sound
Part of:
Compression – Poison Oak, 1970
16mm film transferred to video, 2′46″, color, no sound
Part of:
COMPRESSION – FERN #2, 1970
16mm film transferred to video, 5′22″, color, no sound
Part of:
Leafed Hand, 1970
video, 3′44″, color, no sound
Part of:
Rafael Ortega
Tony Oursler
Son of Oil, 1982
video, 16′08″, color, sound
EVOL, 1984
video, 28′58″, color, sound
Station Block (time shift edit), 1994-2007
mixed-media video installation, 21′18″, color, sound
Phone Block (time shift edit), 1994-2007
mixed-media video installation, 20′37″, color, sound
Tunic (Song for Karen), 1990
video, 6′17″, color, sound
Sixth (Dusseldorf Variation), 2005-2007
wall video projection, 21′59″, color, no sound
The Weak Bullet, 1980
video, 12′41″, color, sound
Movie Block (time shift edit), 1994-2007
mixed-media video installation, 21′24″, color, sound
Adrian Paci
Nam June Paik
Global Groove, 1973
video, 34′50″, color, sound
EMPIRE STATE BUILDING, 1995
video sculpture; tube television, laserdisc, laserdisc player, neon tubes, acrylic paint, circuit boards and Empire State Building replica on aluminum square profile and perforated plate, 239 × 74 × 57,5 cm
Video-Film Concert, 1966-1972/1992
16mm film transferred to video, 30′, b/w & color, sound
Born Again, 1991
video object; patinated bronze of a “Cuba” TV with 3 small television monitors, antenna, plug, 46 × 58,3 × 13,8 cm
Roxy Paine
Paper Rad
Oliver Payne
Oliver Payne & Nick Relph
Manfred Pernice
Hannah Perry
keep the peace, 2015
sound file, 1′21″
Useless, 2015
video, 2′09″, color, sound
smoke, 2015
sound file, 2′38″
too loud and too wavy, 2015
sound file, 2′41″
Waiting here, 2015
video, 3′44″, color, sound
sick off smoke, 2015
sound file, 2′35″
To say you feel something, 2015
video, 1′15″, color, sound
Princess & princesses, 2015
sound file, 1′38″
The worse you feel the better I look, 2015
video, 1′18″, color, sound
let go beat, 2015
sound file, 2′26″
aahhhhhh, 2015
HD video, 1′18″, color, sound
What are you thinking about, 2015
video, 1′34″, color, sound
Sondra Perry
DOUBLE QUADRUPLE ETCETERA ETCETERA I & II, 2013
Two-channel video Installation , 9′, Color, No Sound
IT’S IN THE GAME ‘17, 2017
HD video, 16′32″, color, sound
Paul Pfeiffer
Empire, 2004
single-channel video installation, 2400′, color, no sound
Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (16), 2004
C-print, 142,5 × 173 cm
Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (15), 2004
C-print, 142,5 × 173 cm
Richard Phillips
Mathias Poledna
Elizabeth Price
At the House of Mr. X, 2007
HD video, 20′, color, sound
The Woolworths Choir of 1979, 2012
HD video, 18′44″, color, sound
Sunlight, 2013
two-channel video installation, 10′, color, sound
Seth Price
Jody Proctor
Laure Prouvost
They Parlaient Idéale, 2019
HD video, 28′30″, color, sound
Swallow, 2013
video, 12′06″, color, sound
The Artist, 2010
video, 10′10″, color, sound
Rob Pruitt
Global Warming, 2006
acrylic, oil, glitter on foil panel, 253 × 253 cm
Roller Rink Coffee Table III (Falken), 2017
Chromed tire, tempered mirror, chromed wood, roller skates, 57 × 67 × 67 cm
Esprit de Corps: Guitar Jam, 2006
sculpture; denim, concrete, 38,1 × 73,7 × 58,4 cm
Adam Putnam
Daren Rabinovitch
Jon Rafman
Dream Journal 2016 – 2019, 2019
video, 94′, color, sound
Oh the humanity, 2015
HD video, 3′02″, color, sound
Betamale Trilogy (Glass Cabin), 2015
mixed-media installation; HD video projector, steel panels, tempered glass, 3 HD videos, 20′42″, color, sound
Consisting of:
, 2013
, 2014
, 2015
Still Life (Betamale), 2013
HD video, 4′54″, color, sound
Part of:
Mainsqueeze, 2014
HD video, 7′23″, color, sound
Part of:
Erysichthon, 2015
HD video, 8′03″, color, sound
Part of:
Transdimensional Serpent, 2016
Oculus rift virtual reality installation, bench, 4′38″, color, sound
Poor Magic, 2017
HD video, 8′30″, color, sound
Lucy Raven
Man Ray
Palais de quatre heures, 1992
Silver gelatine print, framed, 30,5 x 24 cm
Erotique voilèe, 1991
Silver gelatine print, framed, 30,5 x 24 cm
Rayograph, 1978
Silver gelatine print, framed, 27,9 x 22,1 cm
Juliet aux jalousies, 1991
Silver gelatine print, framed, 30,5 x 24 cm
David Reed
Tobias Rehberger
Steve Reinke
Nick Relph
Reynold Reynolds
Reynold Reynolds & Patrick Jolley
Burn, 2002
16mm film transferred to HD video, 10′, color, sound
The Drowning Room, 2000
8mm film transferred to HD video, 10′, b/w, sound
Robin Rhode
James Richards
James Richards & Leslie Thornton
James Richards & Steve Reinke
Charles Richardson
Friend, 2015
HD video, 3′11″, color, sound
27th March, 2015
HD video, 3′08″, color, sound
Carramesh, 2015
HD video, 3′08″, color, sound
Needles, 2015
HD video, 3′08″, color, sound
Vanish, 2015
HD video, 3′08″, color, sound
Extra, 2015
HD video, 3′11″, color, sound
Pipilotti Rist
Blutclip, 1993
video, 2′40″, color, sound
Pickelporno, 1992
video, 12′02″, color, sound
Als der Bruder meiner Mutter geboren wurde, duftete es nach wilden Birnenblüten vor dem braungebrannten Sims, 1992
video, 3′55″, color, sound
(Entlastungen) Pipilottis Fehler, 1988
video, 11′10″, color, sound
You Called Me Jacky, 1990
video, 4′06″, color, sound
Sexy Sad I, 1987
video, 4′36″, color, sound
I’m a Victim of This Song, 1995
video, 5′06″, color, sound
I’m not the Girl who misses much, 1986
video, 7′46″, color, sound
Thiago Rocha Pitta
Rio de Janeiro X Sao Paulo, air trip with highway time or addressless love letter, 2005
video, 240′, color, sound
Sublimation, condensation, zenith and precipitation, 2005
video, 17′, color, sound
Homage to JMW Turner, 2002
video, 18′, color, sound
Inverted zenith, 2005
video, 11′, color, sound
Double fountain or cooked landscape, 2005
video, 14′, color, sound
Adele Röder
Bunny Rogers
Poetry reading in Columbine Library with Joan of Arc / Poetry reading with Gazlene Membrane in Columbine Cafeteria, 2014
HD video installation, bench, 20′, color, sound
Mandy’s Piano Solo in Columbine Cafeteria, 2016
HD video installation, piano bench, 13′, color, sound
Rachel Rose
Palisades, 2015
mixed-media video installation; 2 videos, audio work, custom made speakers, carpet
Consisting of:
, 2014
, 2015
, 2014
Palisades in Palisades, 2014
single-channel HD video installation, 9’31’’, color, sound
Part of:
Palisades (audio piece), 2015
audio file, 20’
Part of:
A Minute Ago, 2014
single-channel HD video installation, 8’43’’, color, sound
Part of:
Aura Rosenberg
Mike Kelley/Carmen, 1996
archival inkjet print on aluminium, 104,2 × 78,8 cm
Harmony Korine/Carmen, 1998
archival inkjet print on aluminium, 104,2 × 78,8 cm
Mathilde Rosier
Martha Rosler
Mika Rottenberg
Mary’s Cherries, 2004
mixed-media video installation; plywood, carpet, video, 10′, color, sound, dimensions variable
Chasing Waterfalls. The Rise and Fall of the Amazing Seven Sutherland Sisters, 2006
video, 9′, color, sound
e20, 2005
drawing; pencil, and coloured marker on paper, 76,2 × 101,6 cm
Cheese, 2008
mixed-media video installation; wooden structure, 6 videos, color, sound, dimensions variable
Consisting of:
, 2008
, 2008
, 2008
, 2008
, 2008
, 2008
House, 2008
video, 7’05’’, color, sound
Part of:
Cheese, 2008
video, 4’28’’, color, sound
Part of:
Hairwash, 2008
video, 1’53’’, color, sound
Part of:
Milk, 2008
video, 2’04’’, color, sound
Part of:
Concert, 2008
video, 2’01’’, color, sound
Part of:
Chicken Soup, 2008
video, 1’07’’, color, sound
Part of:
Dough, 2006
mixed-media video installation; plywood, fan, floor tiles, ceiling panels, video, 7′, color, sound, dimensions variable
e24, 2005
drawing; pencil, and coloured marker on paper, 76,2 × 101,7 cm
Tropical Breeze, 2004
mixed-media video installation; plywood, cardboard, tissues, video, 10′, color, sound, dimensions variable
Torbjørn Rødland
Thomas Ruff
Porträt 2009 (J. Stoschek), 2009
C-print, diasec, 210 × 165 cm
Sterne, 11h 43m / -30º, 1992
Chromogenic print with Diasec, 260 x 186,5 cm
Ed Ruscha
Natascha Sadr Haghighian
Artificial Life, 1995
slide projector installation
Empire of the Senseless Part II, 2006
two-channel video installation, 102′10″, color, no sound
Cemile Sahin
12, 2021
UV print on car wrapping foil mounted on fluorescent acrylic glass, displayed on clear acrylic shelf, 80 x 60 cm
9, 2021
UV print on car wrapping foil mounted on fluorescent acrylic glass, displayed on clear acrylic shelf, 80 x 60 cm
car, road, mountain, 2020
installation; video, 12′26″, color, sound, banner, 9 inkjet prints, 60 x 80 cm, 2 inflatable airplane slides
Jacolby Satterwhite
Shrines, 2020
HD video and 3D animation; HD virtual reality , 13′38″; 10′23″, color, sound
1–8. En Plein Air Abstraction (full length feature), 2018
HD video, 8′18″, color, sound
Moments of Silence, 2019
two-channel HD video and 3D animation, 5′23″, color, sound
Birds in Paradise, 2019
two-channel HD video and 3D animation, 17′42″, color, sound
Avenue B, 2018–2019
two-channel HD video and 3D animation, 20′38″, color, sound
Isaiah Saxon
Julia Scher
Please Feel Free (The Ecology of Visibility), 2020
aluminium sign, four washers and screws, 40 × 60 cm
Security By Julia (Dispenser), 2020
disinfectant dispenser, sign, 29,5 x 16,5 x 10,5 cm
Christoph Schlingensief
Affenbilder, 2005
6 photo prints on canvas, dimensions variable
18 Bilder pro Sekunde (Dokumentation der Ausstellung im Haus der Kunst, München), 2007
12 looped 16mm films, 13 Apostle figures
Diana Altar, 2006
mixed-media video installation; portable altar, former component of the performance Diana II – What happened to Allan Kaprow?, London, October 10–12, 2006, wood, xerox copies, 3 monitors, 3 videos (screen 1: 4’16”, colour, sound; screen 2: 2’51”, screen 3: 2’41”), color, sound, 3 mp4 players, car battery, 143 × 250 × 45 cm
Message in a Bottle, 2008
object; wooden frame, Plexiglas, Super 8mm film inverse positive in envelope, addressed, franked and stamped
I want to destroy, 2005
video, 1′39″, color, sound
Affenführer, 2005
video, 3′47″, b/w, sound
Carolee Schneemann
Fuses, 1964–1967
16mm film transferred to HD video, 29′37″, color, no sound
Up to and including her Limits, 1976
video, 29′, color, sound
Maya Schweizer
Emily Segal
Jeremy Shaw
Quickeners, 2014
16mm film transferred to video, 36′24″, color, sound
I CAN SEE FOREVER, 2018
two-channel HD video installation; VHS video and HD video transferred to video, 44′05″, color, sound
Liminals, 2017
16mm film and HD video transferred to video, 31′16″, color, sound
Best Minds Part One, 2007
two-channel video installation, 48′31″, color, sound
Chris Sherron
Julius Shulman
Timur Si-Qin
Visit Mirrorscape 2016: Now, 2016
backlit tension fabric display, aluminium frame, LED light system, 110 × 220 × 16 cm
Visit Mirrorscape 2016: Here, 2016
backlit tension fabric display, aluminium frame, LED light system, 110 × 220 × 16 cm
In Memoriam 9, 2015
backlit tension fabric display, aluminium frame, LED light system, 208 × 284,5 × 12 cm
Visit Mirrorscape 2016: Arrive, 2016
backlit tension fabric display, aluminium frame, LED light system, 110 × 220 × 16 cm
Selection Display: Ancestral Prayer, 2011, 2011
4 display banners, Tibetan prayer flags, each 150 × 50 cm / total 150 × 200 cm
Display (Peace), 2015
UV coating on microperforated mesh, anodized steel tube, plexiglass, LED, 105 × 150 × 10,5 cm
Katharina Sieverding
26/III/196/1973/97/A/B (Die Sonne um Mitternacht schauen), 1973
2 c-prints, acrylic, steel, each 190 × 125 cm
24/III/196/1973/97/A/B (Die Sonne um Mitternacht schauen), 1973
2 c-prints, acrylic, steel, each 190 × 125 cm
o.T., 1990
C-print, acrylic, steel, 275 × 375 cm
11/III/196/1973/97/A/B (Die Sonne um Mitternacht schauen), 1973
2 c-prints, acrylic, steel, each 190 × 125 cm
Taryn Simon
CALVIN WASHINGTON, C&E Motel, Room No. 24, Waco, Texas. Where an informant claimed to have heard Washington confess. Served 13 years of a life sentence for capital murder, 2002
C-print on aluminum, 121,9 × 157,5 cm
RONALD JONES Scene of arrest, South Side, Chicago, Illinois. Served 8 years of a death sentence for Rape and Murder, 2002
C-print on aluminum, 121,9 × 157,5 cm
LARRY MAYES Scene of arrest, The Royal Inn, Gary, Indiana. Police found Mayes hiding beneath a mattress in this room. Served 18.5 years of an 80-year sentence for rape, robbery and unlawful deviate conduct, 2002
C-print on aluminum, 121,9 × 157,5 cm
Jack Smith
Flaming Creatures, 1962/63
16mm film, 43′, b/w, sound
Scotch Tape, 1959–1962
16mm film, 3′, color, sound
Jungle Island, 1967
16mm film, 20′, color, sound
Respectable Creatures, 1950–1966
16mm film, 24′, color, sound
Normal Love, 1963–1965
16mm film, 120′, color, sound
Song for Rent, 1969
16mm film, 4′, color, sound
No President, 1967–1970
16mm film, 45′, b/w, sound
Hot Air Specialists, 1980er-Jahre
16mm film, 7′, color, sound
Overstimulated, 1959–1963
16mm film, 5′, b/w, no sound
Cauleen Smith
Robert Smithson
Michael Snow
Simon Speiser
P. Staff
Frances Stark
Detumescence and/or its Opposite (from a Torment of Follies), 2012
wall installation; 3 components of vinyl and paint, dimensions variable
My Best Thing, 2011
video, 99′17″, color, sound
Osservate, leggete con me, 2012
three-channel video installation, 29′34″, b/w, sound
Untitled, 2012
mixed-media collage, 53 × 67,9 cm
The Inchoate Incarnate: After a Drawing, Toward an Opera, but Before a Libretto Even Exists, 2009
aearable fabric costume, astrachan cloth, 147,3 × 177,8 × 81,3 cm
Nothing is enough, 2012
HD video, 14′, b/w, sound
Jesse Stecklow
A.L. Steiner
Christoph Steinmeyer
Sturtevant
Finite/Infinite, 2010
four-channel video installation, 9′42″, color, sound, dimensions variable
Dillinger Running Series, 2000
single-channel video installation on rotating platform, 26′55″, b/w, sound
Pacman, 2012
HD video, 1′15″, color, sound
Elastic Tango, 2010
nine-channel video installation, 9 Monitore, monitor mount in inverted pyramid shape, 12′, color, sound
Young-Jun Tak
Wish You a Lovely Sunday, 2021
video, 18′45″, color, sound
Of All Seasons, 2023
patinated bronze, rusty metal, oil, 22,5 × 11,5 × 10cm
Britta Thie
„MALL-E“, 2016
HD film, 2′48″, color, sound
„If something turns into hype that once saved you, it feels like you are back on the Titanic again. But Jack Dawson has already left you“, 2016
inkjet print on PVC, dimensions variable
„HD“, 2016
inkjet print on fine polyester mesh, dimensions variable
„It’s all good in Italics“, 2016
inkjet print on fine polyester mesh, dimensions variable
„Interfaces become our weather“, 2016
inkjet print on PVC, dimensions variable
„I googled my mom and was relieved that she is still safe“, 2016
inkjet print on polyester satin, dimensions variable
„Three Infomercials“, 2016
three-channel HD video installation, 1′49″, color, sound
Gwenn Thomas
Leslie Thornton
Wolfgang Tillmans
LA still life, 2001
unframed inkjet print on paper , 138 × 208 cm
Heartbeat/Armpit, 2003
video, 2′27″, color, no sound
Lutz, Alex, Susanne & Christoph on beach (orange), 1993
C-print, framed, 40,6 x 30,5 cm (framed: 44 x 34 x 2,4 cm)
Omen, 1991
C-print on aluminum in artist frame, 66,8 x 83,6 cm (framed 72,2 x 89 x 3,3 cm)
Kate McQueen, 1996
C-print on paper, 32.2 x 21.5 cm (framed 40.5 x 30.3 cm)
Freischwimmer 21, 2004
C-print on aluminum in artist frame, 250 x 190 x 6 cm
nackt, 2003
unframed inkjet print, 207 × 138 cm
Resolute Rave, 2015
C-print on aluminum in artist frame, 90.8 x 72.6 cm (framed 96.2 x 79 x 3.3 cm)
Peas, 2003
video, 2′42″, color, sound
Philip Topolovac
Ryan Trecartin
Early Baggage, 2001-2003
Box set with 4 digital color videos (Valentine's Day Girl, Yo! A Romantic Comedy, Waynes World, What's he Love Making Babies For), backpack, various bags, 48′43″, color, sound
Consisting of:
, 2001
, 2002
, 2003
, 2003
Valentine’s Day Girl, 2001
Single-channel video , 6’51’’, color, sound
Part of:
Yo! A Romantic Comedy, 2002
Video, 11’55’’, color, sound
Part of:
Waynes World, 2003
video, 8’05’’, color, sound
Part of:
What’s The Love Making Babies For, 2003
video, 21’52’’, color, sound
Part of:
Trill-ogy Comp, 2009
mixed-media HD video installation, 3 videos, color, sound
Consisting of:
, 2009
, 2009
, 2009
P.opular S.ky (section ish), 2009
HD video, picnic tables with integrated benches, 43’51”, color, sound
Part of:
K-CoreaINC.K (section a), 2009
HD video, conference table, office chairs, 33’05”, color, sound
Part of:
Sibling Topics (section a), 2009
HD video, airplane seats, 50’, color, sound
Part of:
Rosemarie Trockel
Ei-Dorado, 1992/1998
video, 1′57″, b/w & color, sound
Interview, 1994
video, 2′30″, b/w, sound
Egg-trying to get warm (Versuch nach Mach), 1994
video, 4′15″, b/w, sound
Kon Trubkovich
Wu Tsang
Ulay
Ulay & Marina Abramović
A Performance Anthology. Abramović/Ulay. Four performances by Abramović (1975–1976), 1975–1976.
Consisting of:
, 1975
, 1976
, 1976
, 1976
Art must be beautiful, Artist must be beautiful, 1975
video, 14’09’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Freeing the Voice, 1976
video, 14’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Freeing the Memory, 1976
video, 15’20’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Freeing the Body, 1976
video, 9’08’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
A Performance Anthology. Abramović/Ulay. Action in 14 predetermined sequences, 1976.
Consisting of:
, 1976
There is a Criminal Touch to Art, 1976
video, 25’48’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
A Performance Anthology. Abramović/Ulay. 14 performances Relation Work (1976–1980), 1976–1980.
Consisting of:
, 1976
, 1976
, 1977
, 1977
, 1977
, 1977
, 1977
, 1977
, 1977
, 1978
, 1978
, 1978
, 1978
, 1978
Relation in Space, 1976
video, 14’38’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Talking about Similarity, 1976
video, 10’09’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Breathing in, Breathing out, 1977
video, 11’33’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Imponderabilia, 1977
video, 9’55’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Expansion in Space, 1977
video, 14’21’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Relation in Movement, 1977
video, 13’21’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Relation in Time, 1977
video, 12’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Light/Dark, 1977
video, 6’40’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Balance Proof, 1977
video, 8’46’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
AAA-AAA, 1978
video, 10′20″, b/w, sound
Part of:
Incision, 1978
video, 10’29’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Kaiserschnitt, 1978
video, 7’03’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Charged Space, 1978
video, 8’27’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Three, 1978
video, 10’10’’, b/w, sound
Part of:
Continental Videoseries. Abramović/Ulay (1983–1986), 1983–1986.
Consisting of:
, 1983
, 1984
, 1986
, 1988
City of Angels, 1983
video, 20’07’’, color, sound
Part of:
Terra Degla Dea Madre, 1984
video, 15’15’’, color, sound
Part of:
Terminal Garden, 1986
video, 19’18’’, color, sound
Part of:
China Ring, unedited video notebook, 1988
video, 99’06’’, b/w & color, sound
Part of:
Modus Vivendi. Abramović/Ulay (1979–1986), 1979–1986.
Consisting of:
, 1979
, 1980
, 1983
, 1983
, 1985
, 1983
, 1984
Communist Body/Fascist Body, 1979
video, 41’45’’, color, sound
Part of:
That Self, 1980
video, 45’59’’, color, sound
Part of:
Anima Mundi, 1983
video, 6’51’’, color, sound
Part of:
Positive Zero, 1983
video, 15’08’’, color, sound
Part of:
Modus Vivendi, 1985
video, 11’26’’, color, sound
Part of:
Night See Crossing Conjunction, 1983
video, 2’08’’, color, sound
Part of:
The Observer with Remy Zaugg, 1984
video, 6’05’’, color, sound
Part of:
Amalia Ulman
White Flag Emoji 6, 2015
HD video, 07″, color, sound
White Flag Emoji 3, 2015
HD video, 07″, color, sound
White Flag Emoji 4, 2015
HD video, 05″, color, sound
White Flag Emoji 5, 2015
HD video, 05″, color, sound
White Flag Emoji 2, 2015
HD video, 08″, color, sound
White Flag Emoji 1, 2015
HD video, 07″, color, sound
Nadim Vardag
Steina Vasulka
Bill Viola
Hatsu-Yume (First Dream), 1981
video, 57′33″, color, sound
The Reflecting Pool – Collected Work 1977–80, 1977–80
video, 62′, color, sound
Consisting of:
, 1977–79
, 1977–79
, 1979
, 1979–81
, 1978–80
The Reflecting Pool, 1977–79
Video, 7’, color, sound
Part of:
Moonblood, 1977–79
video, 12’48’’, color, sound
Part of:
Silent Life, 1979
video, 13’14’’, color, sound
Part of:
Ancient of Days, 1979–81
video, 12’21’’, color, sound
Part of:
Vegetable Memory, 1978–80
video, 15’13’’, color, sound
Part of:
Stephen Vitiello
The Waves, 2015
sound file, 3′01″
The Bone Clocks, 2015
sound file, 2′56″
Stars In My Pockets Like Grains Of Sand, 2015
sound file, 3′02″
Ratner’s Star, 2015
sound file, 3′02″
The Wrath of Angels, 2015
sound file, 3′
In The Woods, 2015
sound file, 3′01″
Robin De Vooght
Olivia Walsh
Antek Walzcak
WangShui
Weak Pearl, 2019
mixed-media video installation; flexible LED mesh, mica flakes, three-channel video, 5', color, surround sound
From Its Mouth Came a River of High-End Residential Appliances, 2018
video, 13′, loop, color, surround sound
Clemens von Wedemeyer
Big Business + The Making of Big Business, 2002
two-channel video installation, 27′29″, color, sound
Consisting of:
, 2002
, 2002
Big Business, 2002
video, 25’, color, sound
Part of:
The Making of Big Business, 2002
video, 27’, color, sound
Part of:
Silberhöhe + Die Siedlung, 2003/04
two-channel video installation, 20′, color, sound
Consisting of:
, 2003
, 2004
Silberhöhe, 2003
35mm film transferred to video, 10’, color, sound
Part of:
Die Siedlung, 2004
video, 20’, color, sound
Part of:
Das Bildermuseum brennt, 2004/05
three-channel video installation on 3 screens, 27′, color, sound
Clemens von Wedemeyer & Maya Schweizer
William Wegman
Moritz Wegwerth
Peter Weibel
Wind & fast forward, Realitätsspaltung, 1990
from the series PANISCHE OBJEKTE (In der Warteschleife), sculpture, various materials
Als Fuji noch ein Berg war, 1990
from the series PANISCHE OBJEKTE (In der Warteschleife), sculpture, various materials
Lawrence Weiner
David Weiss
Paloma Varga Weisz
Andro Wekua
Should be titled, 2010/2011
sculpture; wax figure, polyurethane foam, steel, cotton, artificial hair, pigments, paint, cast aluminum, plastic, 65 × 185 × 60 cm
Never Sleep with a Strawberry in Your Mouth, 2010
HD video, 14′, color, sound
Franz West
Künstlerstuhl K131, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
Künstlerstuhl K117, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
Künstlerstuhl K108, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
ohne Titel (L31), 2006
light object; fibreglass, epoxy resin, metal, 265 × 113 × 113 cm
Künstlerstuhl K121, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
Künstlerstuhl K107, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
Künstlerstuhl K104, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
Künstlerstuhl K126, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
ohne Titel (L28), 2006
light object; fibreglass, epoxy resin, metal, 299 × 110 × 110 cm
Künstlerstuhl K118, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
Künstlerstuhl K095, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
Künstlerstuhl K130, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
Künstlerstuhl K122, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
Künstlerstuhl K116, 2011
artist chair; nirosta, epoxy raisin, acrylic lacquer, 85 × 45 × 55 cm
Christoph Westermeier
Blaker, 2011
installation; C-print, wood, glass, lacquer, 250 × 160 × 10 cm
Nancy, Pamela, Thomas, Diana, Unity, Jessica, Deborah, 2011
fine art print, 52 × 39 cm
Lüster, 2011
installation; C-print, wood, glass, lacquer, 250 × 160 × 10 cm
Barbarian + Classics, 2012
8 b/w photo prints, 2 portrait formats, 6 landscape formats, each 21 × 30 cm / 30 × 21 cm
Hannah Wilke
Gestures, 1974
video, 35′30″, b/w, sound
Hannah Wilke Through the Large Glass, 1976
16mm film transferred to video, 10′, color, no sound
Intercourse with …, 1977
video, 27′, b/w, sound
Philly, 1977
video, 32′, b/w, sound
Hello Boys, 1975
video, 12′, b/w, sound
Kandis Williams
cruz: or, as Spillers puts it, „the captive body becomes the source of an irresistible, destructive sensuality“, 2020
Sculpture; mixed media, 117 x 72 x 18 cm
Eurydice, 2018
two-channel video installation, 20′01″, color, sound
Chloe Wise
we’ve been drinking since noon, 2015
HD video, 2′09″, color, sound
the hotel gave us wine, 2015
HD video, 57″, color, sound
we had a traumatic threeway, 2015
HD video, 1′03″, color, sound
she’s so talented, 2015
HD video, 1′06″, color, sound
do you really think he fingered her, 2015
HD video, 1′03″, color, sound
should I add an emoji, 2015
HD video, 1′03″, color, sound
David Wojnarowicz
Jordan Wolfson
Dena Yago
Lu Yang
Amir Yatziv
The National Park, 2015
HD video, 5′39″, color, sound
Hausbaumaschine, 2013
mixed-media video installation; 3D print model made of nylon, book Bauordnungslehre (BOL) (Ernst Neufert, ed. by Albert Speer, 1943, first edition), HD video, 7′39″, color, sound, 29,7 × 18,4 × 25,5 cm (model)
Anicka Yi
The Flavor Genome, 2016
3D video installation, 22′, color, sound
Escape From the Shade 5, 2016
sculpture; epoxy resin, stainless steel, light bulbs, digital clock interface, wire, 105 × 62 × 59 cm
Bruce Yonemoto
Norman Yonemoto
Bruce & Norman Yonemoto
Aaron Young
Freedom Fries, 2005
video, 4′, color, sound
High Performance, 2000
video, 3′, color, sound
Freeformdome, 2003
C-print, diasec, 122 × 153 cm
I.P.O (25 Offerings), 2006
C-print on aluminium, 152 × 122 cm
Tender Buttons with Mirrors, 2004
sculpture; painted steel, aviator sunglasses, 244 × 35,5 × 35,5 cm
Good Boy, 2001
video, 2′05″, color, sound
White Cons, 2003
video, 3′, color, sound
The Foundation
Established in 2017, the JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION is a non-profit arts and culture organization dedicated to the public presentation, advancement, conservation, and scholarship of time-based art. Across two publicly accessible exhibition spaces in Berlin and Düsseldorf, the JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION presents pioneering media and performance art in large-scale exhibitions and discursive events. The foundation also manages the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION (est. 2002), one of the world’s most comprehensive private collections of time-based art.
With over 900 artworks by 300 artists from the 1960s to today, the collection spans video, film, single- and multi-channel moving image installation, multimedia environments, performance, sound, and virtual reality. Photography, sculpture, and painting supplement its time-based emphasis.
Accessibility and mediation are central to the Julia Stoschek Foundations mission. Artworks from the collection have been presented in solo and group exhibitions in Düsseldorf, Germany, since 2007. In 2016, a second exhibition space opened in Berlin-Mitte. Both spaces feature a wide-ranging outreach program, including guided tours, performances, screenings, lectures, artists’ talks, and workshops. Since 2019, unrestricted access to 200 works from the collection has been made available online (Video Lounge). In addition, the Research Center located in Düsseldorf offers visitors and scholars the opportunity of viewing the entire collection and researching more than 4,000 publications in a reference library focusing on time-based art.
The JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION welcomes requests to lend artworks and contributes to exhibitions around the world. The foundation also invites artists and curators to develop projects and commissions. External collaborations with institutions in Germany and abroad also play a vital role. Past collaborations include Berliner Festspiele, Berlin; Deichtorhallen, Hamburg; Kunstsammlung NRW, Düsseldorf; Moderna Museet Malmö, Sweden; MoMA PS1, New York; Performa Biennial, New York; Serpentine Galleries, London; Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Israel; and ZKM | Center for Art and Media, Karlsruhe.
The conservation and care of time-based media is central to the foundation. Together with artists and galleries, the in-house conservation department has developed and implemented a state-of-the-art long-term archival strategy. To ensure long-term conservation and to prevent generation loss—the increasing deterioration in quality—the artworks are regularly examined and updated, and if necessary, migrated. This applies to both the data carriers and the data itself, the hardware and software, as well as monitoring data formats for obsolescence.
In 2019, the Curatorial & Research Residency Program (CRRP) was initiated by the JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION. The residency is aimed at students from Curatorial Studies programs around the world and is by invitation only. Past collaborations include the Center for Curatorial Studies (Bard College, New York), and the Curatorial Studies Program at the Goethe University and the Städelschule (Frankfurt/Main).
In 2023, the JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION established a long-term partnership with the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. Students have access to the foundation’s infrastructure at both locations for presentation, research, and educational purposes. Since 2024, the foundation has been cooperating with The Konrad Wolf Film University of Babelsberg
Mission
Since its foundation in 2017, the JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION is devoted to collecting, conserving, presenting, and mediating time-based art. It fosters intellectual independence and strives to reflect and envision the dynamic world we live in.
It is therefore both a privilege and a responsibility to produce exhibitions, public programs, and publications that present a multitude of perspectives and voices, reflecting the diversity and dynamism of the social, cultural, and technological changes of our time. Furthermore, the JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION is committed to sustaining the special character and values of this institution, saving them for future generations.
Advisory Board
CHRISSIE ILES (b. 1967 in Beirut, Lebanon) is the Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz Curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. Her curatorial focus is moving-image art from the 1960s to the present, and she oversees the Whitney’s collection of film and video.
ARTHUR JAFA (b. 1960 in Tupelo, Mississippi) is an artist, filmmaker, and cinematographer. In 2019, he received the Golden Lion at the 58th Venice Biennale, May You Live in Interesting Times.
UDO KITTELMANN (b. 1958 in Düsseldorf, Germany) is a curator and museum director based in Berlin. After directorial positions at Kölnischer Kunstverein and MMK Frankfurt, Kittelmann was the director of the Nationalgalerie in Berlin from 2008 to 2020. In 2021 he took on the position of the artistic director of the Museum Frieder Burda in Baden-Baden.
ANDREA LISSONI (b. 1970 in Milan, Italy) has been artistic director of the Haus der Kunst, Munich, since April 2020. Formerly Senior Curator, International Art (Film) at Tate Modern, London, and previously curator at Pirelli HangarBicocca in Milan (2009–13), co-founder of the independent artistic network Xing, and codirector of the international festival Netmage in Bologna.
By creating a platform for the exchange of knowledge and ideas, and by promoting institutional collaboration, the Advisory Board strategically supports the JULIA STOSCHEK FOUNDATION, which is dedicated to the presentation, mediation, conservation, and scholarship of media and performance practices.
Founder Julia Stoschek

Julia Stoschek (b. 1975 in Coburg, Germany), art collector and shareholder of Brose Gruppe, founded her collection of time-based art in 2003 after seeing Douglas Gordon’s video Play Dead: Real Time (2003) at Gagosian Gallery in New York. Inspired by the immediacy of this experience—a large-scale video installation in which an elephant “plays dead,” imitating its own death—Stoschek decided to focus specifically on time-based art and has since assembled one of the most extensive collections of these genres from the 1960s to today. “My approach to collecting,” says Stoschek, “is to create an image of the cultural and social condition of my generation. The moving image reflects the ephemeral, which is a defining feature of our time. This is one of the reasons why the main focus is on time-based art and also on performance as a time-based art.”
For Stoschek, art resonates on a personal level, while simultaneously documenting, commenting on, and reflecting the fast-pasted, entangled world we live in. Accordingly, long-term conservation is of utmost importance to the Julia Stoschek Collection. Believing that the artworks in her collection should also be made accessible to a larger public, in 2007 Stoschek opened the JULIA STOSCHEK COLLECTION in Düsseldorf. In 2016, a second exhibition space opened in Berlin, making it the first collection in Germany to be presented in two locations.
Alongside her own enterprise, Stoschek is deeply involved with other institutions. She is on the Board of Trustees at MOCA, Los Angeles and Vice Chairwoman of KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin. Stoschek is also a member of various committees and councils, including the Performance Committee at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; and Kunstsammlung NRW, Düsseldorf. She has funded smaller initiatives and projects, like the Just artist residency program in Düsseldorf (2003–06); the project space Venus & Apoll, Düsseldorf (2012); Acud Macht Neu, Berlin (2016); and the studio residency program LKART in Düsseldorf (2018–19). Stoschek substantially supported various exhibitions in Germany and abroad, including presentations by Katharina Sieverding, Mika Rottenberg and Aaron Young at KW, Berlin, in 2005/2006; Wu Tsang and Ian Cheng at Kunsthalle Düsseldorf in 2015; Anicka Yi at Fridericianum, Kassel and Doug Aitken at MOCA, Los Angeles in 2016; and the commissioning project KW Production Series at KW, Berlin (ongoing). Stoschek has also supported the German Pavilion at the 54th, 56th, and 57th Venice Biennales, featuring Christoph Schlingensief (2011), Hito Steyerl (2015), and Anne Imhof (2017).
Stoschek has also made substantial gifts from the collection: three major works have been donated the Museum of Modern Art, New York. These include Doug Aitken’s three-channel installation Interiors (2002), Janet Cardiff & George Bures-Miller’s mixed-media installation The Killing Machine (2007), and Allora & Calzadilla’s performance Stop, Repair, Prepare: Variations on Ode to Joy for a Prepared Piano, No.1 (2008).
Through ongoing communication, studio visits, and personal meetings, Stoschek has established close friendships with artists, many of whom have become mentors along the way. “Artists are the reason I collect art,” says Stoschek. “Collaborating with an artist over a long period of time—that’s what makes collecting interesting. I am always honored when artists invite me into their world.”
Whether through her own collection or by supporting other projects and institutions, Stoschek aspires to continually contribute to the establishment of a diverse cultural field. “I see myself as a philanthropic producer and I do hope to create a long-term cultural value.”
THE BROSE GROUP (EST. 1908) DURING THE NAZI ERA
Max Brose, founder of the Brose company and great-grandfather of Julia Stoschek, joined the Nazi Party and National Socialist Motor Corps (NSKK) in 1933. That same year, he was elected president of the Coburg Chamber of Industry and Commerce (IHK). Like all other Bavarian IHK presidents, he was appointed a Wehrwirtschaftsführer (Leader in the German War Economy) in 1938 by the the Wehrwirtschafts- und Rüstungsamt (War Economy and Armaments Office). From 1939 on, Max Brose & Co. metalworks produced armaments for use in World War II. Between 1939 and 1945, up to 260 forced laborers were sent by the regime to work at the Max Brose & Co. metalworks. During postwar denazification proceedings, the Coburg City District Court revised Max Brose’s status from the category of “Offenders” to that of “Lesser Offenders” on 22 March, 1948. In the final appeal ruling, the Nuremberg Denazification Board subsequently determined he was a “fellow traveler” or Mitläufer and closed the case.
The company commissioned historian Professor Gregor Schöllgen to investigate the history of the family business as well as the political opinions of the company founder Max Brose during the Third Reich, and the results were published in German, English, Spanish, Czech, and Chinese in 2008. In 2000, the company made a substantial financial contribution to the Foundation “Remembrance, Responsibility and Future,” established by the German government that same year to compensate former forced laborers under the Nazis on behalf of German industry and to promote international reconciliation projects.
By the time of Max Brose’s death in 1968, the company had around 1,000 employees and a yearly revenue of DM 35 million. In 2020, the total turnover was 5.1 billion euros. The Brose Group employs approximately 25,000 people at 65 locations in 24 countries. Julia Stoschek has been a shareholder of the Brose Group since 1993.
For further questions considering the history of the company, please contact the company archives.











































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































