
“1,5l PET water bottle transformed to a 0,5l bottle and filled with local tap water from Berlin”, “Ikea DIY”,

“Coca Cola Condensation Cube” (refers to Hans Haacke) and “Closed Biosphere” by Tue Greenfort.

“1,5l PET water bottle transformed to a 0,5l bottle and filled with local tap water from Berlin”, “Ikea DIY”,

“Coca Cola Condensation Cube” (refers to Hans Haacke) and “Closed Biosphere” by Tue Greenfort.

“VW Passat C” and

“Mini Salon” – a whole room called »Mini Salon« was took of with spray colour onto a canvas. The canvas was measured to fit onto a wheel structure which is exactly the size of the space minisaloon. By Emanuel Fanslau.




“Berg”, “Meteor”, “Infinity” and “Selections from my wardrobe” by Anna Sew Hoy.

“Cleaned Object: The Truck”, tape on truck and “The Burakumaru’s Odyssey – Sonia” by Olivier Blanckart.

»Made In England – A Temple Design For India« is an inflatable temple which the viewer can enter and walk inside. By Tallur L. N..

»Haul« (2005) by Katrin Sigurdardottir is made up of 11 small transport crates, that when installed together, display a continuous imaginary landscape. They are individual pieces as well as parts of a larger sculpture. As they find homes in dispersed locations, their exteriors document their travel with transit labels and other imprints.

»Power Tools/Herramientas de Alto Poder« (Cusomized leafblower machine with goldplated engine, velvet and metalflake candy paintjob, 1999),

»Mothership with Daytons« (1998) and

»La X en la Frente/Malcolm Mex Cap« (Ironed lettering on baseball cap, 1992) by Rubén Ortiz-Torres.





“M.J.C.(module de jeux compact)”, “Ping-pong pipe”, “J.O.” and “Console”
from the ping-pong table series;


“Aire”,

“Le plus long ballon du monde” and “Un point c’est tout” by Laurent Perbos.



“Ein Tag im Kindergarten”, “Biology after math” and “No happiness outside the group” by Andrea Dojmi.

Danius Kesminas exhibition »Vodka Sans Frontieres« derives from the 2004 discoveries of illegal underground pipelines pumping vodka into Lithuania. The centerpiece of the exhibition is a vodka pipeline organ. Made from plastic sewerage pipes, the organ resembles the Lithuanian folk instrument skudučiai, but it’s end product is not vodka, but music. Air is pumped into the pipes by a revolving barrel, which regulates the valves of the organ to play a traditional Lithuanian drinking song, Gerkit Gerkit, Broliukai (Drink Brothers, Drink).