Free Projects
—

Erik Freydank
Breitscheidplatz

Frederic Brodbeck
0..1

En Kitani
*WAAW

Ying Chen
Absconding

Lorenz Raab
Analoge Brücke

Akitoshi Honda
Artificial Appetizer

Elisa Storelli
Assemblaggio N1

Julius Fuehrer
A Thousand Seeds or the Right to Becoming

Merani Schilcher
autoantibody.3 – Destruction of Self

Frederic Gmeiner
Bericht über R.

Alexander Hahn
Bioinformatics: Nature’s superiority over binary computing

Susa Schmid
Blickskulpturen / Gaze Sculptures

Bruno Gola
Bruto

Ying Chen
Bubbles

Tim Horntrich
Clock Choc

Hsiao Li-Chi
Coffee And Kitty

David Reitenbach
convincing ideas

Jens Wunderling
default to public

Constantin Engelmann
Der Kopist

Valerian Blos
Design as Restriction / Restriction as Design

Özcan Ertek
Devil's Rope: On a Journey of No Return

Sven Gutjahr
Diaries of Alvin Fredriksøn

Tim Horntrich
DropingNews

Robin Woern
Ephememorion

Orlando Helfer Rabaça
Footprint²¹³

Julian Netzer
GOTCHA

Erik Anton Reinhardt
Graphic Design

Stephan Sunder-Plassmann
Hacking Memorials

Martin Kim Luge
Hear the grass growing

Christopher Hoehn
How It Was(n't)

Tim Horntrich
ICSY TK 5000

Julius von Bismarck
Image Fulgurator

Willy Sengewald
Jammer Horn

Florentin Aisslinger
Living with Matter

Monika Hoinkis
Living with Things

Sebastian Wolf
lovesmenot

Andreas Schmelas
Machines At Work

Merani Schilcher
Make Me A Weapon – Destruction of Context

Julia Rosenstock
Meadow of carnivore plants

Frederic Gmeiner
Memory Shapes

Merani Schilcher
Mephista – Destruction of Other

Ying Chen
My queer body, my ownership

Piet Schmidt
möve

Fang Tsai
Nahweh: the Unreachable

Nicenboim Iohanna
Objects of Research

Bill Hartenstein
Palio

Vinzenz Aubry
pendel 1

Hye Joo Jun
Phantom Limb

Markus Kison
Pulse

Kilian Kottmeier
Resource forecast

Felix Worseck
Subordination/Unterordnung

Frederic Brodbeck
Synthetic Flurry

Stephan Sunder-Plassmann
Tagebilder

Stephan Sunder-Plassmann
The Beauty of Oppositions

Andreas Schmelas
The Space Beyond Me

Julius von Bismarck
The Space Beyond Me

Andreas Schmelas
The Visible Invisible

Paul Kolling
thing <ser. no.>

Elisa Storelli
This machine will not switch herself off

David Löhr
Titan

Niklas Söder
Unstable Trajectories

Tilman Richter
Wall of Distribution

Tilman Richter
Wall of Support

Tilman Richter
Wall of Tendencies
Andi Rueckel
木
Andi Rueckel
木 木
Andi Rueckel
木 木 木
En Kitani — *WAAW
Free Projects
The installation is activated only when a visitor wears the mask, and only that individual can hear the monologues of the characters in the video. By integrating video with physical objects, the work establishes a clear boundary, prompting a reconsideration of visual and bodily awareness. By incorporating tangible elements beyond the frame of the video, it challenges the fluidity between subjectivity and objectivity, as well as the relationship between “seeing” and “being seen.”
At the heart of this work are the monologues of two individuals with unconventional and extraordinary pasts, quietly navigating their very ordinary daily lives in a foreign city—Berlin. Their narratives are deeply intertwined with my own experiences and emotions. They are also shaped by the engagement with the pop culture of my homeland—particularly the TV series スーパー戦隊 (Super Sentai.) Beneath its spectacular action sequences, this genre carries a distinct national ideology and spirit that idealizes the “warrior” not as someone who acts for themselves or even for others, but for the greater good of society. Through this lens, the work explores unavoidable and universal social issues such as cultural norms, societal oppression, gender inequality, immigrant identity and the objectification of human existence.
What may initially seem like deeply personal narratives are, in fact, shaped by the immense forces of society—forces that impact us all, whether we are aware of them or not. Through this installation, I aim to illuminate these shared experiences and emotions, offering the audience an opportunity to momentarily pause and reflect on the often-overlooked personal narratives embedded in everyday life.
*WAAW stands for We Are Always Warriors
Documentation by Jens Tiemann.





