The booklet is published in connection with Jenny Brockmann’s exhibition project Dialogues on Future Communication and includes material and texts gathered during the realization of the project.
Stay tuned as the book will be available in our online bookstore soon.
Graphic Design by Andrea Nicolò
Printing by Spree Druck, Berlin, Germany
Print Edition 500
Please join us on below dates to learn more about the project as a whole.
Talks, tours and program for the ongoing exhibition project:
On Tuesday, September 17, Berlin-based sculptor Jenny Brockmann will debut her latest multidisciplinary and discursive exhibition Dialogues on a Future Communication to New York at 1014, a new cross-disciplinary forum in Manhattan. The product of several years of collaborative exchange and research in topics as varied as resilience, critical race theory, social evolution biology, urban planning, Dialogues on A Future Communication is interested in diverse knowledge bases, histories and how seemingly unrelated knowledge may be critically interwoven.
Curated by Niama Safia Sandy, the exhibition revolves around the activation of Brockmann’s sculptures through the cultivation of experiences and conversations to share knowledge, create change and true integration of varied perspectives shaped in dialogue and partnership with New York’s brightest artists, theoreticians, and cultural workers.
The opening reception will be held on Tuesday, September 17 from 6.30 p.m., guests may reserve a place here (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/opening-reception-jenny-brockmann-dialogues-on-a-future-communication-tickets-68071025269). The exhibition will conclude on Friday, October 4, 2019. 1014 is open by appointment only, and is located at 1014 Fifth Avenue (between 82nd and 83rd street).
Formally, Brockmann’s architectural sculptures are a reflection of the Bauhaus principle that all parts of the material world can be integrated through the art and design. The sculptures debuting in Dialogues on a Future Communication are reflective of an articulation of the artist’s ongoing deep interdisciplinary studies. Brockmann’s designs seek to be capacious enough to hold space for all of the epistemological and ideological shifts she had traversed in her time working on the project and to leave space for viewers to share their knowledge. Brockmann has developed four entanglements, or procedural programs, created in partnership with invited speakers and performers from differing backgrounds and analytical processes. These entanglements will activate the sculptures to act as departure points for philosophical discourses that question human behavioral patterns and socio-political structures.
Entanglement collaborators include the Vera List Center, architect Mario Gooden, anthropologist Elizabeth Povinelli, art historian and biologist Luciana Solano, and other partners who represent the cultural and intellectual lifeblood of the New York community.
Entanglement #1: Care, focuses on the physical and energetic/metaphysical care of the embodied self, and the possibility that direct action in support of them is not the singular cognitive province of the human species.
Invited participants include resistance musicians Ann Marie Black, Nilusha Dassenaike, Charlotte Holst Douglas, Sun Singleton. and biologists Daniel Kronauer and Leonora Olivos-Cisneros, September 24, 7-9 p.m., register here (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/jenny-brockmann-dialogues-on-a-future-communication-entanglement1-care-tickets-68036068713).
Entanglement #2: Resilience, developed in partnership with the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at the New School, entanglement number two is a convening to create community through sharing knowledge bases. Speakers include artist Stephanie Dinkins, economist Sheen Levine, anthropologist Elizabeth Povinelli, sociologist Dina Shvetsov and artist Jes Fan, September 26, 7-9 p.m., register here (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/dialogues-on-a-future-communication-entanglement2-resilience-tickets-68036399703)
Entanglement #3: Violence, seeks to operationalize the epistemologies of the location in which we have gathered by sifting through its place in the ecological, architectural, and cultural milieu of New York City, the United States and beyond. with architect Mario Gooden, art historian Danielle Wu, biologist Luciana Solano, historian Alexander Manewitz and writer and curator Niama Sandy, October 1, 7-9 p.m., register here (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/dialogues-on-a-future-communication-entanglement3-violence-tickets-68647178559)
Tour 1: “Delimiting the Armor,” with Luciana Solano, September 25, 3:30 p.m., register here (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/dialogues-on-a-future-communication-tour-1-delimiting-the-armor-tickets-68478913273)
Tour 2: “Ornate Bodies,” with Danielle Wu, September 25, 3:30 p.m., register here (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/dialogues-on-a-future-communication-tour-2-ornate-bodies-tickets-68479336539)
Tour 3: “Invisible Sites,” with Alexander Manewitz, September 25, 4:30 p.m., register here (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/dialogues-on-a-future-communication-tour-3-unvisible-sites-tickets-68479815973)
Tour 4: Niama Safia Sandy, September 25, 6:30 p.m., (not open to the public)
Entanglement #4: Refusal And Emancipation is an exploration of the legacy of George Grosz. As Naziism took hold in 1930s Germany, Grosz stood against fascism with his drawings and paintings. Discussants with art historian Birgit Möckel, artist Beldan Sezen and more, October 3, 7-9 p.m., register here (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/dialogues-on-a-future-communication-entanglement4refusal-and-emancipation-tickets-68039037593)
Jenny Brockmann: ‘Dialogues of a Future Communication’ is commissioned by 1014 and funded by Berlin Senate Department for Culture and Europe and by Willms Neuhaus Foundation, Berlin. ‘Entanglement#2’ has been developed as a collaboration with the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School.
Jenny Brockmann is an artist and sculptor based in Berlin. She studied Fine Arts at the Berlin University of the Arts, earned her master’s degree with Rebecca Horn and received a diploma in architecture from the Technical University of Berlin.
For many years, Brockmann has been concentrating on the subject of nature and its inherent processes. Inspired by light, water, air, and kinetic energies, she creates new forms, structures and works. These newly formed entities have a unique dainty ease and liveliness, creating unexpected interactions with the observer, and playfully widening preconceptions.
Brockmann’s sculptures and installations span from the organic to the philosophical, and have been exhibited in a variety of international venues including the Manege Central Exhibition Hall, St. Petersburg; Museo de Arte de El Salvador, San Salvador; Nordart, Rendsburg; Kasko, Basel; St. Pancras Station, London; Gallery Gerken, Berlin; Museo para la Identidad Nacional, Tegucigalpa; Haus am Lützowplatz, Berlin; German Consulate General, New York; The Genia Schreiber University Gallery, Tel Aviv; Hudson River Center for Contemporary Art, Peekskil, USA; Kaohsiunh Museum of Fine Arts, Taiwan; Viborg Kunsthal Denmark; Vögele Kulturzentrum, Switzerland; RU and Carriage Trade New York; Kunsthalle Rostock, Germany and BOZAR Brussels, Belgium.
Jenny Brockmann is alumni of International Studio and Curatorial Program and Residency Unlimited in New York
Niama Safia Sandy is a New York-based cultural anthropologist, curator, and essayist. Niama believes that we personify the wildest dreams and joys of our ancestors. Simply put, this is the core mandate her work. She sees her role, as an anthropologist, curator and writer, as that of an agitator - one who endeavors to simultaneously call into question and make sense of the seemingly arbitrary nature of modern life and to celebrate our shared humanity in the process, while developing critical and creative modalities grounded in the true and nuanced histories of our global society.
About 1014
1014 Inc. is a non-profit organization promoting exchange and cooperation. At its location, 1014 Fifth Ave, a new space emerges that carries the transatlantic relations into the 21st century by addressing global issues of mutual concern. Building upon the values of an open interconnected world, 1014 invites a curious-minded audience into the historical townhouse in the heart of New York City to explore ideas with impact across the world of culture, science, business, politics, and society. Multi-facetted events, exhibitions, and, ultimately, a residency program and café will bring people together for insightful experiences.