With her documentary photographs in the illustrated book “Moskva” Sandra Ratkovic directs her gaze to the ordinary everyday life of the people in Moscow and captures with her camera strange, absurd and bizarre moments…
-
-
Introducing Pasha ‘Interpaul’ Linke. The co-founder of the renowned Berlin club Hangar 49 and now leader of MIRMIX Orkeztan as well as him being a radio editor and moderator. Pasha arrived in Germany in…
-
The photographer Heinrich Völkel and the poet Hendrick Jackson embark on a literary journey through the vastly unknown Russian province. This journey is premised on the thesis that essentially all places outside of Moscow…
-
Gala, first named Elena Diakonova, was born in the Russian Empire and moved to Switzerland at an early age then later to Paris, where she married the young poet Paul Éluard. She was a…
-
WHAT: The picture book project for adults Through personal objects and stories, searching for thoughts, words and images about your own „I“ : — which parts do I consist of — what is my…
-
Young Russian cinema from Berlin – a film screening in the presence of directors and actors. Young Russian-speaking filmmakers based in Berlin will present their recent works exclusively at Panda-Theater. The screening includes seven different short…
-
Kazimir Malevich is the main representative of the Russian avant-garde and the founder of the radically new art movement, Suprematism. It is in fact a countermovement to conventional art, which for Malevich is nothing…
-
Berlinograd 1920s
Introducing “Berlinograd 1920s” – Column and Art Project by Ani Menua and Ekaterina Koroleva
We would like to introduce our monthly new column which will transport you on fictional journeys into the world of Berlinograd. The column itself is an art project by author Ani Menua together with…
-
Mitja Vachedin was born in 1982 in today’s St Petersburg. He spent the first twenty years of his life in communist, and then the following capitalist Russia, until he moved to Germany where he…
-
The author Ani Menua, the illustrator Ekaterina Koroleva and the Russian-Jewish painter Marc Chagall met for a (fictitious) conversation at Galerie Van Diemen in Berlin, where Marc Chagall and other Russian contemporary artists held…