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Raum für drastische Maßnahmen: SPECK (THE COMEBACK)
Zwischen Scham, Stärke und Selbstakzeptanz tanzen (dicke) Körper in „SPECK (THE COMEBACK)“ – eine radikale, zärtliche Performance von Frida Zack & Team.
Performance & Installation
Frida Zack and friends21. November 2025 ab 19 Uhr, Performance: 20 Uhr
Von und mit Frida Zack, Mette Gabler, Amelie Herm, Ozlo Kraft, Edgar Mauser, Luna Powierski, Sabrina Rücker, Coco Luna Watts
Bühne: Tabea JorckeZwischen bittersüßen Landschaften aus Fleisch, atemloser Erschöpfung vom Kämpfen und der zerschmetternden Kraft von Oberschenkeln eröffnet die Performance SPECK eine Welt, in der (dicke) Körper durch Erinnerungen von Scham, zerbrechliche Momente der Verletzlichkeit und die Kraft von Selbstakzeptanz tanzen. Eine Performance von Frida Zack und Freund*innen.
SPECK (THE COMEBACK)

Performance & installation
Frida Zack and friendsNovember 21th 2025 doors open 7 p.m., performance starts 8 p.m.
From and with Frida Zack, Mette Gabler, Amelie Herm, Ozlo Kraft, Edgar Mauser, Luna Powierski, Sabrina Rücker, Coco Luna Watts
Bühne: Tabea JorckeBetween bittersweet landscapes of flesh, breathless exhaustion from fighting and the power of thunder thighs, the performance SPECK opens up a world in which (fat) bodies dance through memories of shame, fragile moments of vulnerability and the power of self-acceptance. A performance by and with Frida Zack and friends.
Taged as/in; Amelie Herm, Bühne, Coco Luna Watts, Edgar Mauser, Empowerment, Frida Zack, Körper, Kunst, Luna Powierski, Mette Gabler, Ozlo Kraft, performance, Sabrina Rücker, Selbstakzeptanz, SPECK, Tanz, Theater, Vielfalt, Zeitgenössisch -

Creola – Ascension EP via With Bells Records
Creola’s Ascension EP fuses raw house energy with analog warmth. Gritty, soulful, and alive—electronic craft meets human touch.
This is a house-tempo melting pot that refuses to be boxed in. It’s rough-edged, boundary-pushing, and rejects over-polished production in favour of authentic, sonic texture.
Centred around the title track—an initial MPC sketch that found its soul with Charla Green’s compelling vocal hooks—this EP digs deep into a dusty, analogue aesthetic.
The music blends classic electronic production techniques, utilizing samplers, sequencers and drum machines, with the organic warmth of live guitar instrumentation.

- Artist: Creola
- Release: Ascension EP
- Label: With Bells Records
- Release Date: October 31, 2025
- Listen & Order: on website or via bandcamp
Tracks:
1. Ascension
2. Full Force
3. Knight Rider
4. Teletext
5. BluetechAbout Creola
Creola is a Sheffield-based electronic artist and live performer whose sound merges raw house energy with the warmth of analog instrumentation. Rooted in the UK’s vibrant underground, Creola crafts music that thrives on imperfection—gritty, soulful, and deeply human. Drawing inspiration from early MPC sketches, dusty drum machines, and live guitar textures, their work blurs the line between studio precision and spontaneous performance.
Following a series of independent releases and live hardware sets across the North of England, Creola joins With Bells Records for the Ascension EP (October 31, 2025). The title track features Charla Green’s compelling vocals. The record explores the tension between structure and freedom. It balances texture and clarity. Each track channels a tactile, analog aesthetic that favours emotion over polish.
A self-taught producer and multi-instrumentalist, Creola approaches electronic music as a living, breathing form—built through experimentation, instinct, and groove. Whether behind an MPC or performing with sequencers and bass guitar, they invite listeners into a sonic space where dancefloor pulse meets introspective warmth.
With Ascension, Creola solidifies their reputation as one of Sheffield’s most intriguing new voices in forward-thinking house music—a sound both grounded in tradition and restlessly innovative.
Taged as/in; analog, Ascension, Bandcamp, beats, Charla Green, Creola, Electronic, EP, House, MPC, Music, release, vinyl, With Bells Records -

Modern Friend – Someone’s Gotta Save Us (Andy Toth Remix)
Modern Friend return with “Someone’s Gotta Save Us” — a post-punk electronica anthem remixed by Andy Toth into pure electro club energy.
Modern Friend are a Montreal, Canada-based duo consisting of Voytek Korab (formerly of My Favorite Robot) and Kosta Megalos (formerly of Flowers and Sea Creatures). The new project explores their early influences. These include post-punk and synthwave sounds. Such musical movements heavily influenced their formative years.

They have been greatly involved in the underground electronic music scene for many years. This is their first foray into the type of music that they always wanted to write. “Someone’s Gotta Save Us” is a post-punk electronica number, all-encompassing of the times we are in.

Andy Toth, co-founder and former member of the Detroit Grand Pubahs remixes the track and flips it into an electro stomper. Korab’s smooth vocals get turned into a robotic twitchy funk, the guitars become replaced with acid-tinged synths, and an overall thump is added to the drums to make it ready for the clubs. Pure, aural filth with this remix in the absolute best of ways.
The Andy Toth remix of Modern Friend’s “Someone’s Gotta Save Us” is released October 31st, 2025 on Permaculture.

- Release Date: October 31st, 2025
- Label: Permaculture
- Electro, Post Punk, Synthwave
- Catalog Number PC008
Taged as/in; Andy Toth, Canada, Electro, Kosta Megalos, Modern Friend, Montreal, Music, new release, Permaculture, Post Punk, Remix, Synthwave, Voytek Korab -

TransMutations – the Alchemy of the Self von Nadine Dinter
Die Ausstellung „TransMutations“ zeigt die Verschmelzung von Körpern und Skulpturen in einer sakralen Inszenierung der Fotografin Nadine Dinter.
Eröffnung: Freitag, 31. Oktober 2025, 18.00 Uhr.
Die Fotografin ist anwesendLaufzeit: 1. November – 20. Dezember 2025
Ort: Atelier Yves Sucksdorff, Meinekestraße 6, 10719 Berlin
Exit, Berlin 2008/2024 (links) | Bound, Berlin 2023/2024 (mittig) | Touch, Berlin 2010/2024 (rechts)Am 31. Oktober 2025 eröffnet die Fotografin Nadine Dinter ihre neueste Ausstellung im Berliner Atelier Yves Sucksdorff. „TransMutations“ ist eine Hommage an die Skulpturen, die sie seit Ende der 1990er Jahre weltweit fotografiert. Die Ausstellung erkundet die visuelle und spirituelle Verschmelzung vergänglicher Körper mit unsterblichen Statuen.
Langzeitprojekt und Inszenierung
Sechs Werke werden in einer sakralen Installation präsentiert, die zwischen Reflektion und Meditation vermittelt. Die Besucher erhalten einen ersten Einblick in Dinters Langzeitprojekt, das sich über Jahre entwickelt hat.
Philosophie und Ästhetik
Dinter geht es nicht um bloße Dokumentation, sondern um die Stimmung und die fast menschliche Ausstrahlung der Skulpturen. Durch Licht, Perspektiven und jahreszeitliche Stimmungen wird das Objekt zum Subjekt. Grenzen zwischen Schönheit und Verfall, Gegenwart und Vergangenheit verschwimmen – im Sinne der „Transmutation“, verstanden als alchemistische Veränderung.
TransMutations: Skulptur trifft Körperfotografie
Inspiriert von der Philosophie der Transmutation kombiniert die Serie Skulpturbilder mit Aktaufnahmen. Frauenkörper scheinen den Statuen zu entweichen und treten in den Raum, wodurch eine neue Verbindung zwischen Gegenwart und Werden entsteht.
Ausstellungen & Repräsentanz
Dinters erste Ausstellung fand 1998 statt. Weitere bedeutende Präsentationen folgten in Berlin und New York: Project Angel + Project Angel Reloaded (2001, NYC), In the Eye of the Beholder (2004, Berlin) und Janus-Faced (2013, Berlin). Ihre TORSO RELOADED-Aufnahmen wurden mehrfach in Berlin, Hamburg und Arles gezeigt. Seit 2000 wird sie durch akg-images vertreten.

Über Nadine Dinter
Seit 1991 widmet sich Nadine Dinter der Fotografie. Ihre Arbeit begann mit Porträts und entwickelte sich schnell in Richtung Skulptur- und Friedhofsfotografie.
Sie dokumentiert Orte von Berlin über den Pariser Père Lachaise bis hin zu Grabstätten in New York, New Orleans und Mauritius.
Besuche das Nadine Dinter’ s Instagram Profil
Zur Website
Taged as/in; Akt, ausstellung, berlin, Body, contemporary art, fine art, Installation, Kunst, meditation, Nadine Dinter, Photography, Skulptur, Spirituell, Transmutation, Werke -

Tronik Youth – Kommune EP via el nino diablo music
El Nino Diablo Music welcomes Tronik Youth with his Kommune EP — dark disco, electro & acid collide for peak-time intensity. Out Oct 24!
El Nino Diablo Music is excited to welcome Tronik Youth to the label with his new Kommune EP, released on October 24th. The EP includes two new original productions. These are „Laughed My Head Off“ and „OMG“. Both tracks explore darker aspects of indie disco, electro, acid, and psychedelia. They are directed straight at peak-time dancefloor moments.

Berlin based producer and DJ, Michael Lane shifts the key of „Laughed My Head off“ with emotive chord progressions and and anthemic piano riffs, transforming the original into a HI-NRG queer banger already destroying dancefloors accross Berlin.
Psycho Weazel
… are a genre-defying DJ and production duo known for their gritty, high-energy fusion of electro, EBM, and dark disco. They hail from Switzerland. They’ve carved out a distinct identity in the underground scene with their raw sound.
Their unpredictable sets and punk-inspired attitude keep dancefloors on edge. The remix of „OMG“ is a more minimal, atmospheric, big room affair maintaining the psychedelic elements of the original and bringing a sense of space on a more housey rhythm.
Tronik Youth
… is the alias of UK-based producer and DJ Neil Parnell, known for his signature blend of dark disco, electro, and post-punk influences. A pioneer of the modern underground electronic scene, Tronik Youth rose to prominence through acclaimed releases on labels like NEIN Records.
He co-founded the label and has become a staple in the global club circuit. With a reputation for raw, analog-driven production and genre-blurring DJ sets, his work has earned support from tastemakers across the electronic spectrum. Tronik Youth continues to push boundaries, fusing retro aesthetics with forward-thinking sound design.

- Artist: Tronik Youth
- Release: Kommune EP
- Label: El nino diablo music
- Release Date: October 24, 2025
Tracks:
- 1. Laughed My Head Off
- 2. OMG
- 3. Laughed My Head Off (Michael Lane Remix)
- 4. OMG (Psycho Weazel Remix)
Links:
- https://elninodiablo.bandcamp.com
- https://soundcloud.com/tronik-youth
- https://soundcloud.com/michaellane87
- https://soundcloud.com/psycho-weazel
© FATdrop 2025
Taged as/in; Acid, Berlin Music, Club Release, Dark Disco, DJ, El Nino Diablo Music, Electro, electronic music, Indie Dance, Kommune EP, Michael Lane, new music, Producer, Psycho Weazel, Tronik Youth, UK Artist, underground -

Exhibition: Planting Futures, Sharing the Harvest
An Exhibition with workshops and screenings by the Weltacker Youth Council at Art Laboratory Berlin. From 5 – 9 November 2025.
Duration of Exhibition: 5 – 9 November 2025
Food is political.
What we eat and grow, who works for it, and who profits from it – all of this shows how closely our food is intertwined with issues of justice, climate, and community. With Planting Futures, Sharing the Harvest, we, the Weltacker Youth Council, present new perspectives on food justice – and how joint action can create new forms of sharing. From November 5 to 9, we will be exhibiting artistic works on sustainable food and global food systems.

From cyanotypes and prints to an interactive tablecloth and communal cooking, everything revolves around the questions: How can we achieve a socially just, inclusive, and sustainable food transition? What would a world look like in which food and seeds are distributed fairly and it is community that counts, not ownership? How will we feed ourselves in the future – and what are your demands for a different, more environmentally friendly food system?
A fertile ground for change
Weltacker Berlin e.V. cultivates crops that grow in fields around the world on 2,000 m² of farmland in Pankow – in the same proportions as the global average. This highlights how unevenly resources are distributed. This idea gave rise to the Youth Council in 2022: a group of young people who take a critical look at the current food value chain and bring people together through art and cooking activities. In this exhibition, you can get to know us and our work.
Planting Futures, Sharing the Harvest explores how art, cooking, and collective action can become fertile ground for change. We want to make art edible, inspire reflection, and raise awareness. The exhibition is accompanied by a supporting program of talks, communal cooking, and free workshops, which will take place opposite the Art Laboratory at PA58. Feel free to drop by.

Opening: Wednesday, 5 November 2025, 5 pm, with Küfa (Küche für alle/ Kitchen for all) – serving free vegan Chili, fresh bread and snacks
Duration of Exhibition: 5 – 9 November 2025Art Laboratory Berlin
Prinzenallee 23, 13359 BerlinOpening hours:
Thu, 6 November, 3:30 – 7:30 pm
Friday, 7 November, 2 – 4 pm (4 – 6 pm workshop at PA58)
Saturday, 8 November, 2 – 7:30 pm
Sunday, 9 November, 12 – 2 pm, 4 – 7 pm (12 – 4 pm: workshops at PA58), 5 pm film screening at Art Laboratory BerlinWORKSHOPS in PA58
Prinzenallee 58 (diagonally opposite Art Laboratory Berlin)
Friday, 7 November, 5–7 p.m. & Sunday, 9 November, 12–2 p.m. and 2–4 p.m
Free admission
If you are interested, please send us an email or drop by!For the potato workshop, please register in advance: jugendrat@weltacker-berlin.de
All workshops are open to all age groups.
Colonial History of the Potato(es)
Workshop by Daniela Zambrano Almidón in cooperation with BUNDjugend
Friday, 7 November, 5–7 p.m. (In English)Colonial History of the Potato(es) is an interdisciplinary artwork by Daniela Zambrano Almidón combining food, a lecture performance, and images to explore the profound transformations in food production and consumption that emerged with the “discovery of the Americas.” The main piece is a Dish and a Historical testimony, which together delve into the intersections of history, culture, and food.
The potato, now ubiquitous in Europe, was originally cultivated in the Andes and arrived via colonial trade routes. Today, it travels in the opposite direction, becoming a symbol of a (post)colonial and extractivist food system. Through the story of the potato, the artwork highlights the complex relationship between colonization and food, inviting us to question our own consumption habits: do we truly know where the potatoes we eat come from?
The work pays homage to the 2018 national agrarian strike in Peru, underscoring the resilience and demands of farmers against an exploitative system.
Where Freedom Grows
Workshop by Celine Hoffmann
Printing Techniques between Poetry, Utopia, and Politics
Sunday, 9 November, 12–2 p.m. (In German and English)What might a world look like where freedom and justice can grow—on our fields, in our food, and within ourselves? In this two-hour workshop with Celine Hoffmann, artistic printing techniques intertwine with questions of nourishment, responsibility, and the future. Participants will create poetic-political prints—small real utopias made of color, paper, and imagination.
Mosaic of Plant Worlds
Workshop by Khaoula Zakaria
Sunday, 9 November, 2–4 p.m.(In German and English)Join our Mosaic Workshop and explore the colorful world of mosaic art inspired by plants and food! While creating your own mosaic piece, we’ll reflect on what nourishes us — plants, soil, care, and community — and share thoughts on how our daily food connects us to the Earth. No experience is needed — everyone is welcome! At the end of the session, you can take your mosaic artwork home.
Team:
Lena Fließbach, Louisa Kalkbrenner, Ella Krone, Pia Mühlisch, Parima Parsi-Pour, Jamaine Schulz, Clara Wahrheit, Sophie Weinhold
Cooperation partners:
Weltacker Berlin e.V.
BUNDjugend
Ernährungsrat BerlinWith the generous support of:
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Spoiler Invitation: VOGELSCHLAG Opening Friday, 31st, 19h
SPOILER stays longer at Birkenstraße 1! Join us for VOGELSCHLAG — a pieces-only exhibition this weekend. Let’s talk art, space & fractured imagery!
First things first: SPOILER can stay longer at the new space! We do have a one-month notice period, so could basically get kicked out every next month. Still, for now (however long that may be) our time at Birkenstraße 1 is open-ended for the time being. This is great, so let’s go!
We kindly invite you to VOGELSCHLAG this weekend!
(Opening Friday 19h • Sat & Sun 15-19h)After an acts-only-show for Berlin Art Week back in September we turn t-h-i-n-g-s around with a pieces-only-exhibiton. Time to stand next to a sculpture, to look at pieces and prints. Time to walk through the exhibition and to talk about “modified materials, fractured imagery and redefined spaces” (VOGELSCHLAG).
Looking forward to this weekend.
Must know about: Bird Strike (Wikipedia)
o(^▽^) •ᴗ• ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) ≽^•⩊•^≼ (˶ᵔ ᵕ ᵔ˶) ₍ᐢ. .ᐢ₎ ⊂(◉‿◉)つbtw: we are open for applications for the third edition of XMIXMAX MARXET (more info at the bottom)

POSTER-QUIZ: How many planes can you see?
ACTS
Friday 31.10.
19h
Clara-Lilian Berger
Šimon Chovan
Jane Garbert ↗
Ester Gašparová
Esther Heltschl
Tereza Nováková ↗
Léonie von Saldern ↗
Saturday 1.11
15-19h
Sunday 2.11
15-19h
Here at SPOILER one is always concerned to offer the best possible experience to our beloved’n’valued visitors. Therefore we are constantly striving to develop more and more features, on and on. For you, as our loyal Letter-Guest, we present:
The Preview Section. A sneak peek to what is actually on display at the exhibiton. Prejoy!
ALSO UPCOMING

Looking for goods!
If you (or know someone who does) produce unique objects, editions, collections, prints, art books, zines, comics, designy stuff, fancy cuts, quirky fashion, … let them know abourt our upcoming XMIXMARXET. Application form via link:
this is it, thank uuu, cu xoxoxo

SPOILER
Birkenstraße 1
10559 Berlin
U9-Birkenstraße / Tram M10 (Kriminalgericht Moabit)
Respond to:
infoinfoinfo@spoiler.zoneTaged as/in; Art Exhibition, Art Scene, Berlin Art, Berlin Gallery, Birkenstraße 1, contemporary art, Prints, sculpture, SPOILER Berlin, VOGELSCHLAG -

Q & A Marie Louise Elshout: Hybrids Between Human and Nature
From printmaking to hybrid creatures, my art blends drawing and painting, exploring human nature, folklore, and the awe of our natural world.
Marie Louise Elshout’s works will be on view from November 7, 2025, as part of the exhibition Dreams of the Seen and Unseen at janinebeangallery, Berlin.
The viewers are invited into a world where the boundaries between human and animal, reality and imagination, dissolve. In this Q&A, Elshout discusses her artistic journey, the evolution of her practice, and the themes that permeate her work.Can you tell us about your path into art? How did drawing and painting become the core of your practice?
I studied at the Willem de Kooning Academy in Rotterdam as a printmaker. After my graduation I started with photography and film as an experiment, as I wanted to explore all aspects of the art world. I did performances with great musicians where I would sing and project my movie in the background.
I also worked as an actress many times. But after a while I got bored waiting for the moment and rather wanted to make movies myself. After another film and performance project which cost a lot of money. I ran out of funding and I started to miss my autonomous art, the manual craft of it.

You work in both drawing and painting, blending the two seamlessly. How did this authentic connection between the mediums develop for you?
Originally, I am a printmaker, it’s more linear, which I am good at. I am not a painter but I always wanted to be one – at the academy it frustrated me. I had a photography exhibition in Amsterdam in 2001, titled „Stillleben Tote Hand, könnte ich nur Malen“, talking about Romanticism…
In 2005 I finally took the plunge and just started to work on canvas with drawing, it felt liberating. While others took me for a fool since my photography projects were very successful at the time and painting ‘was old fashioned’ and ‘not done anymore’ in the art world.

On closer inspection my images are built up from hundreds of pencil lines and charcoal shades. I loose myself in this process, drawn from my subconsciousness. When I feel I can no longer continue this process I start the transparent oil layering for more depth and add colour, which is much more a technical phase and since it’s on canvas people call them paintings but they are actual drawings.
Your works explore the ambivalent relationship between humans and animals. What drew you to these dynamics?
It’s a concept that has developed during the years. I get a lot of inspiration from movies, (David Lynch, Cronenberg, etc.), music (PJ Harvey, 16 Horsepower, etc.) as well as literature (Steinbeck, Ian McEwan, etc.).
It’s typical how humans behave, we always feel so superior to all other living beings around us, but essentially we are a mere glimpse in history on this planet, we are stardust – just what Joni sang…
Why do you often situate your hybrid creatures in 19th-century historical settings inspired by daguerreotypes?
In my last year at the Willem de Kooning Academy I got the opportunity to do my semester in Baltimore at the Maryland Institute College of Art.

I didn’t attend much classes since I was much more fascinated by the people and the surrounding itself, it is such a beautiful country but holds such a dark history.
I feel the 19th century is such an inspirational era: all these industrial developments but also the last strings to the old world.
Starting point for my paintings are these daguerreotypes, found on an online library based on pioneers, all nationalities who came to America, the promised land.
The landscape in your work is not just background, but often a protagonist. What role does landscape play in your narratives?
Nature is what makes us, it tolerates us human beings, I am in great awe of our beautiful planet earth and all it’s splendor and I want to show that as often as I can.
Your creatures are not anthropomorphic in the usual sense. Instead, you draw on folklore, superstition, fairy tales, and traditions. What fascinates you about these sources?

I am fascinated by the way human beings act, so learning about folklore is part of that, all tribes and populations have their own rituals, traditions and believes.
Fairytales are a different subject, they deal with the subconscious and secret desires.
Do you see your hybrid beings as mirrors for human society? Or more as independent entities with their own symbolic life?
I guess both. I want to draw attention with them but they also have their own presence and beauty. They are about transformation, you never know if you’re watching a human being dressed up with a mask or a primate wearing a dress. It’s the ambivalence that makes it interesting.
They also portray a journey through the subconscious, which I think is essential these days. People are connected with the outside world 24/7 which often leads to disconnection and emptiness.
Your works invite viewers to reflect on their relationship to nature. Do you see art as a tool to awaken ecological or social awareness?
Artists are the mirror to society. I believe it’s an artist’s obligation to create awareness. Too bad nowadays with all the renewed prudery a lot is censored these days.
I am very disappointed that our present world is still ruled by narcissistic world leaders and genocide is happening all over again. Don’t get me wrong I am a very positive, optimistic person but we humans never seem to learn. But behind every cloud there is a neon lining.
What can visitors in Berlin expect to discover in your works in the exhibition at janinebeangallery?
The gallery has had a great foreseeing in showing the paintings of James Johnston and mine in a duo show, I admire him as a musician and an artist.
I think our paintings resonate, they take you by the hand and guide you through a mythical world. I hope visitors will take their time to really explore our works and enjoy the journey.
Taged as/in; art, berlin, contemporary, creativity, drawing, exhibition, folklore, hybrid, imagination, inspiration, Janine Bean Gallery, landscape, Marie Louise Elshout, myth, Nature, painting, storytelling, subconscious, transformation




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