PHOTO: © Dominik Lejman, Delight, 2014-2020, Acryl auf Leinwand, 155 x 90 cm, Videoprojektion

Schleier – Performance von Maria Colusi im Rahmen der Ausstellung "Phantome" von Dominik Lejman

In the organizer's words:

"Veil" is a performance that explores the fragile boundary between visible and invisible forces - the liminal space in which matter becomes spirit, sound becomes silence and the body dissolves into atmosphere. It is an encounter with the conditions of ghosting: how light, breath and vibration harbor the potential for presence even in absence. The veil here is not a curtain that separates worlds, but a living membrane - porous, trembling and sentient - through which perception itself breathes.

Maria Colusi is an Argentinian dancer, choreographer and teacher who lives in Berlin. A longtime member of Sasha Waltz & Guests, she creates choreographic works that combine dance, music and visual arts. Her creations have been presented internationally at renowned venues and festivals. Colusi also teaches composition and improvisation worldwide.

About the exhibition "Phantoms" by Dominik Lejman:

Polish artist Dominik Lejman has been chasing ghosts for three decades. His works combine video images with abstract painting and are populated by revenants, phantoms that blur time and the present. Lejman's art oscillates between revelation and repulsion, fall and elevation, Elysium and dungeon. During the Epiphany season, the apparition time of the liturgical year, she reflects on human existence with humor, doubt and despair and poses questions about presence, responsibility and the experience of the absurd.

For three decades, Polish artist Dominik Lejman has been on a ghost hunt. His works fuse video imagery with abstract painting and are briefly inhabited by revenants and phantoms that blur time and presence. Lejman's art oscillates between revelation and repulsion, fall and ascent, Elysium and dungeon. During Epiphanytide-the season of manifestation in the liturgical year-it reflects the human condition with humor, doubt, and despair, posing questions about presence, responsibility, and the experience of the absurd.

This content has been machine translated.

Location

St. Matthäus-Kirche Matthäikirchplatz 10785 Berlin

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