Exhibition: Liminal Bridges

After the winter break with sacrifices, this spring and it’s rites is a reason to celebrate again! Two new exhibitions to see for the March, enjoy!

To mark the first issue of the magazine Synchron, eight artists were invited to present their works at Trauma Bar und Kino as an extension of their published contributions to the magazine. Both media—the magazine and the exhibition—mutually complement one another. Mysticism, magic, individual interpretation, and spirituality are the binding links between all contributors. That is why the first issue of the magazine and the exhibition share the same title: Liminal Bridges.

The works on display fluctuate between different media, connected by the element of liminality, which each artist has interpreted for themselves. To provide some direction, Synchron’s request to the artists included the following terms: mysticism, occultism, rituals with or without religious contexts, otherworldly scenarios, and magic.


Alicia Gladston transforms an entire room into a metallic arrangement inspired by the Rosicrucian gardens of the king and queen of Bohemia, while other rooms host installations by Ben Sang, Kay Yoon, and Adam Varab. Johannes Farsing juxtaposes lacquered wooden reliefs with references to the traditional cult of Carnival from the valleys of southern Switzerland while Sal Salandra embroidery explores BDSM practices blended with cultural symbolism, inviting the audience to indulge in another world.

Claire Barrow’s painting explore the subconscious by depicting fantastical realms. Chiu Laozhi’s sculpture, crafted using ancient Chinese techniques, illuminates the transcendence of the dragon symbol and related Daoist thoughts for the viewer.

The term liminality was first coined in the early twentieth century by the French ethnologist Arnold van Gennep and later picked up as a subject of deeper research by the anthropologist Victor Turner:

“In anthropology, liminality (from the Latin word līmen, meaning ‘a threshold’) is the quality of ambiguity or disorientation that occurs in the middle stage of a rite of passage, when participants no longer hold their pre-ritual status but have not yet begun the transition to the status they will hold when the rite is complete. During a rite’s liminal stage, participants ‘stand at the threshold’ between their previous way of structuring their identity, time, or community, and a new way, which completing the rite establishes.”

Turner, Victor (1974)


Another potential layer of interpretation is added to the title by the fact that Liminal Bridges is based on an actual book that can be read by players of Bethesda Studio’s milestone video game Skyrim. The book details a certain magical procedure to open the gate to Oblivion and a rite to create a magical stone that stores arcane power. According to the curator liminality refers to a state of transformation that the artists enter during the process of creating their work. The event at Trauma Bar und Kino functions as a bridge to their metaphysical worlds beyond.

February 19 – March 19, ’22
Trauma Bar und Kino
Heidestraße 50, 10557 Berlin

Claire Barrow, Johannes Farfsing, Alicia Gladston, Chiu Laozhi, Sal Salandra, Ben Sang, Adam Varab,
Kay Yoon

Text by Lea Kloepel
The exhibition is curated by Synchron magazine

#dialogue


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  1. […] In einem Universum, das immer komplexere Strukturen hervorbringt, von Atomen und Molekülen bis hin zu Planeten und Lebewesen, unterstreicht und zelebriert die Ausstellung von Kévin Bray den Drang, uns zu verändern und zu transformieren, um uns an unsere innere und äußere Umgebung anzupassen. Neben dieser Installation wird ein ortsspezifisches Mapping gezeigt, das den Betrachter durch helle, sich verändernde Landschaften führt, sowie sein Video Morpher, das als Rückgrat und lebendiges Archiv seiner künstlerischen Praxis dient – alle mit demsel…. […]

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