The Berlin photographer and homeopath Wolf von Lindenfels has captured his own personal impressions of Calabria in pictures with the series "Italia". The fleeting images characterized by movement form a visual bridge between painting and photography and convey a feeling for the country and its peculiarities. While the approach for the former commercial photographer is an exemption from the commercial studio environment with complex structures, the motifs convey a lightness that is also the source of his own new way of working and living. They are created at the moment and remain original, without subsequent manipulation, trimming or retouching. So his large-format pictures are a colorful expression of joy, with a pinch of "Italia" and an invitation on a very own journey.   Homepage: www.lindenfels.com email: mail@lindenfels.com  ...

Trixolina - a brief bio: Piano and organ lessons from the age of four, in addition to painting. Study of musicology and theory of drama, film philology, commercial and organisational psychology at the LMU in Munich, MA 1992. 73 different occupations, including: Dissection assistant at a pathological institute, forklift driver for Siemens, betting office worker at a racecourse, assistant director at the Südbayerischen Städtetheater Landshut (Municipal Theatre in Landshut, South Bavaria), assistant director and screenwriter for various promotional film productions in Augsburg, Munich, Frankfurt, Neu-Brandenburg, Zurich, Dallas and New York. Head secretary at a private clinic specialising in internal medicine, exhibition curator at the Münchner Kulturreferat (Munich Department of Culture), conceptual work for cultural and advertising agencies, assistance with synchronous screenplays, assistant to conductor George Byrd (rehearsal of musical scores), market trader at Munich’s Viktualienmarkt (fruit and vegetables). e-mail: trixolina@me.com  ...

Charly-Ann Cobdak A hotchpotch of technical finds, picture puzzles, old horns and gramophone parts by Charly-Ann Cobdak “… the work of Charly-Ann Cobdak is dominated by playful lightness, clever irony and a passion for machine components and their construction to form a moving whole. She assembles her “LowTech Instruments” from a hotchpotch of technical finds, picture puzzles, old horns, gramophone parts and little gems. In some ways, Cobdak’s moving objects are reminiscent of dancers, elephant horns and, with their dark wooden hues, chambers of marvels or cabinets of curiosities from centuries gone by...

3 & 4 February 2018 // Emanuele Soavi incompany & Meritxell Aumedes 3 February at 6.00/7.00/9.00 p.m. 4 February at 3.00/5.00/6.00 p.m. Limited to 10 spectators per hour   ...