
15/08/2025
In our newest article, we explore four science and art shows from the annual Gallery Weekend in Berlin.
Kathrin Linkersdorff at Haus Am Kleistpark, including her latest series ‘Microverse’ (2023 onwards). As artist in residence at the Institute for Biology/Microbiology, Humboldt University, she collaborated with microbiologist Prof Regine Hengge to examine the behaviour of streptomycetes in biochemical processes of decay.
Numero Cromatico at AOA;87. The art and research collective merges visual arts, design, architecture, and literature with scientific knowledge. Their AOA;87 exhibition included neon works highlighting phrases, and tapestries with poems, both emerge from custom-built AIs.
Jimmie Durham at Barbara Wien. Durham’s ‘The Aharonov-Bohm Effect’ (1989) presents a less widely-known quantum phenomenon whereby charged particles are influenced by an electromagnetic field, even though they move exclusively through a region free of magnetic fields.
Alfredo Jaar: ‘The End Of The World’ for the Kesselhaus at KINDL. Following research supported by geologist Adam Bobbette, Jaar focuses our attention on a diminutive cube of layered raw materials. Extraction of these materials is fraught with human rights violations and environmental destruction: the exhibition booklet sets out details metal by metal in ten essays by Bobbette.
Words
📸 1) Kathrin Linkersdorff: ‘Microverse III / 2’ (detail) 2025. 2) Numero Cromatico: ‘I am not here, as you see’, 2025 Photo Numero Cromatico, AOA87, Berlin. 3) Jimmie Durham: ‘The Aharonov-Bohm Effect’, 1989. Courtesy the artist, kurimanzutto, Mexico City/New York and Barbara Wien, Berlin. Photo Enza Monetti © Jimmie Durham Estate. 4) Alfredo Jaar: ‘The End of the World’ – installation view at KINDL. Photo Jens Ziehe, 2024 © Alfredo Jaar/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2025.
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