PHOTO: © Inga Kerber, aus der Serie / from the series: (Cliché of a Landscape, Jungle) Vietnam, 2018

Gespräch mit der Künstlerin: Inga Kerber

In the organizer's words:

What can a sustainable artistic practice look like?

Inga Kerber, Leipzig artist and Slow Flower activist, presents her practice in conversation with Julia Eckert, collection curator and sustainability officer at the GfZK. Among other things, the discussion will focus on the question of how strategies of sustainability can be made artistically productive. Inga Kerber works across different media with photography, painting and installation. Her photographic project (Cliché of a Landscape. Jungle) Vietnam, for which a publication of the same name was published by Spector Books in 2017, can be seen in the current collection exhibition Things That Were Are Things Again. In it, she examines the natural forest in Vietnam, which has been shaped by profound human influences throughout its history and to this day and serves as a projection surface for various ideas of nature.

In the GfZK Altbau, in the Auditorium

EN

Inga Kerber, Leipzig-based artist and Slow Flower activist, discusses her practice in conversation with Julia Eckert, collection curator and sustainability manager at the GfZK. At the current collection exhibition "Things That Were Are Things Again," her photographic project "(Cliché of a Landscape. Jungle) Vietnam" is on display. A publication of the same name was published by Spector Books in 2017. In this project, she explores the natural forests of Vietnam, which have continually been shaped by profound human influences. These forests serve as a projection surface for various concepts of nature.

In the GfZK old building, in the auditorium

This content has been machine translated.

Location

Galerie für Zeitgenössische Kunst Leipzig Karl-Tauchnitz-Str. 9-11 04107 Leipzig

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