Past Residents

Residents Map

Sylvia Eckermann and Gerald Nestler

Sylvia Eckermann and Gerald Nestler’s collaborative work is defined by a discursive engagement with form and media. Their work culminates in artistic reflections on our entanglement as individuals in contemporary socioeconomic circumstances. They combine theory and post-disciplinary conversation with digital and physical environments, installations, videos, performances, objects, texts and sound, to explore the derivative condition of contemporary social relations and its financial/economic models, narratives, and processes.

Sylvia Eckermann and Gerald Nestler have been collaborating since the mid-2000s. The have had exhibitions and projects at MAK – Austrian Museum of Applied Arts / Contemporary Art, 2016; International Symposium on Electronic Art, Hong Kong, 2016; University Museum and Art Gallery, Hong Kong, 2015; Kunstraum Niederoesterreich, Vienna, 2015; Kunstraum Innsbruck, Austria, 2013; Kunstraum BERNSTEINER, Vienna, 2012; Austrian Pavilion, EXPO 2010, Shanghai;
4zero Space, Hangzhou, 2010; MKL/Kunsthaus Graz, 2009; Babu Gallery, Shenzhen, 2009; Anni Gallery, Beijing, 2009; Museum Stein, Krems, 2008; Museum Arbeitswelt Steyr, Austria, 2007; Center for Architecture, Innsbruck, 2006; Medi@terra Festival, Athens, 2006; The University of Applied Arts Vienna, 2005; Beijing Cubic Art Center, 2005. They are currently working on the project The Future of Demonstration. Art in the Post-Digital Era, planned for 2017-2018 in Vienna with Maximilian Thoman.

Past Resident
2016: Danish Arts Foundation

Mikkel Carl

Mikkel Carl’s artistic practice thematically focuses on the relationship between language and perceptual experience, concept and materiality. His cross-media approach departs from the twentieth century avant-garde and neo-avant-garde movements, as well as postmodernism’s strategies of appropriation. By working methodically with repetition, re-contextualization and the radicalization of the material properties of the art object, Carl retroactively traces history.

Mikkel Carl works concurrently as an artist, writer and freelance curator. He has a BA in the History of Ideas and an MFA from The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, Copenhagen. Carl has had solo shows at ANNAELLEGALLERY, Stockholm; Kunsthal NORD, Aalborg, Denmark; and Caves Art Center, Taipei, among others. Carl has exhibited in several group shows at international art spaces including at Soy Capitán, Berlin; Retrospective, Hudson, New York; David Dale Gallery & Studios, Glasgow; CO2, Turin; New Scenario, Berlin; and Aujourd’hui, Lisbon.

Berenice Güttler

Berenice Güttler‘s artworks are studies of identity developed through her activity with textile material. Her drawings function as documentation for this identity. As Seth Siegelaub said, “There is an intimate relationship between textile and society.” This marks it as a medium of particular fascination and endurance. Her work deals with the breadth of influence that textiles have had on art and daily life. Her artworks tell us, unagitatedly, about the emblematic topics of weaving, patterns, and structures in our contemporary world. She treats the agile state of contingency between craft and art easily elegant; dealing with the political history, gender politics and social factors, that are inherent in the material fabric that is both self-referential and universal.

Berenice Güttler (born 1984, Germany) lives and works in Berlin and Hannover. She completed a residency in Galata, Istanbul sponsored by the The Braunschweig University of Art in 2010, contributed to several exhibitions in Europe and is now honored with an artist-in-residency in New York, by the Niedersächsische Sparkassenstiftung, Saxony.