Instagram Takeover 2020

#takingoverkunsthallehh

If you've ever wondered how artists prepare for an exhibition, whether artists also work in a home office, what it's actually like in a studio, or which artists serve as inspiration, then click through. Since April 2020, we have been giving artists the floor and let them use our Instagram account. Take a look at new works, directly into the studio or be in the middle of the exhibition setup.

Past posts on Instagram

Lisa Klosterkötter, Instagram Takeover 2020, Hamburger Kunsthalle, Foto: Jacob Engel

Lisa Klosterkötter

Lisa Klosterkötter (*1990 in Cologne) is a freelance curator and initiator of various international exhibition projects. She studied fine arts at the HFBK Hamburg. Her curatorial approach is characterized by a processual collaboration and intensive engagement with individual positions and their respective artistic cosmos, as well as a content-related elaboration and contextualization of socially relevant themes. With her exhibitions she plays institutions and project spaces as well as the public and private space.

Photo: Jakob Engel

Dana Greiner

Dana Greiner studied at the Akademie der Bildenden Künste Munich with Jerry Zeniuk , Myriam Holme, Thomas Scheibitz and Pia Fries. Material, form, color and light are essential components of her work. Her objects, paintings and installations have an unmistakable aesthetic of radiant colours and abstract forms. The viewers are invited to enter into a dynamic relationship with the works.

Jan Albers

Jan Albers studied at the Düsseldorf Art Academy. Painting is actually no longer acute for him. And yet, he continues engaging in painting, and resorts to creating spatial works with the aid of metal, wood, polystyrene or ceramic pieces before overpainting these. Overall, his oeuvre is a »permanent construction site alternating between destruction and repair« (Stephan Berg). His space-consuming, abstract reliefs are sometimes reminiscent of photographs of distant planets or mountain massifs, and at other times of urban architectures or the formal reduction of American Minimal art.

Claudia Wieser

Claudia Wieser (*1973) studied painting after an apprenticeship as a blacksmith at the Akademie der Bildenden Künste München in the class of Axel Kasseböhmer and Markus Oehlen. Her practice spans a range of media, including drawing, sculpture, wall installations and ceramics, touching on art, architecture, and design, as well as film and theatre. Her work is often based on the principles of geometric abstraction, and combines both art and craftsmanship, with objects such as painted ceramics and gilded wooden vases exploring the relationship between aesthetics and function, and the limits of shape, form and colour. Wieser is also interested in the development of art history and media: a utility object’s transition into a work of art, for example, or the white cube’s transformation into a stage.