24/04/2015
Comments Off on Announcing Buildingscape as new partner of MOMENTUM_InsideOut!

Announcing Buildingscape as new partner of MOMENTUM_InsideOut!

MOMENTUM is proud to announce BuildingScape as our new partner for MOMENTUM_InsideOut – MOMENTUM’s initiative for Video Art in Public Space – turning the museum and gallery insideout to bring video art onto the streets for all too see. Together we transform public spaces into dynamic urban encounters with contemporary art and build new audiences for video art.

MOMENTUM is proud to launch this partnership with a screening of
Amir Fattal‘s newest video work “Atara”

Atara_Still1

Premiering on Berlin Gallery Weekend!
1st & 2nd of May
9:00pm – midnight

Projected on the facade at Französische Straße 56-60, Berlin
(the future Palais Varnhagen)

Click HERE for more information and full program of events >>


BuildingScape Logo_Website

BuildingScape is a Berlin-based company that develops artistic, architectonic and urban media interventions and concepts to accompany and promote the construction process of pivotal European building projects. The primary aim is to transform what is often perceived to be a social inconvenience in the form of major construction sites into living urban interventions that creatively address the process of urban transformation and development. With this frame of thinking, BuildingScape addresses the building of future architectural and cultural icons within their immediate and broader social context. To achieve these objectives, BuildingScape designs innovative artistic interventions within and upon the structures of construction sites, including large-scale video projections in public space, and the commissioning of site-specific works through artist residencies. By bringing contemporary art into direct contact with urban development in public space, BuildingScape transforms the process of construction into cultural and social experience that is as innovative and inspiring as it is entertaining and educational. BuildingScape was founded in 2014 by Can Togay (former Director of the Collegium Hungaricum Berlin), David Szauder (artist and curator), and Thomas Hölzel (collector and developer).