main content start,
Photography by Ghislaine Leung
© Courtesy Ghislaine Leung / Maxwell Graham, New York / Cabinet, London

“Don’t go for install. You’ll be braver if you don’t. Trust the work, work the trust,” artist Ghislaine Leung noted in 2021, making explicit what applies to art exhibitions in general: they presuppose trust, which at the same time must be continuously established. Following the philosopher Martin Hartmann, the collective work around exhibitions which involved artists, curators, and critics can be understood as a practice of trust that is supported by a common goal and its value. According to Hartmann, only a consensus on the practical framework enables mutual trust. However, the current economic and political pressures on the exhibition sector are causing relied upon conventions to falter. From working conditions to political self-conceptions, hard-won achievements are once again being called into question. Trust Issues takes this as a starting point and discusses the reasons for the increasing loss of trust in the institutional structures that support exhibitions. At the same time, the theme of trust encourages us to take another core aspect of Leung’s practice seriously: to understand that “dependence is perhaps less the incarcerator than the liberator.” If we once again understand our interdependence in the process of exhibition making as a potential, we can negotiate how a common framework of practice can be built as a basis for trust despite different or even contradictory interests.

The panel discussion takes place in the exhibition Ghislaine Leung and extends on the themes discussed in TEXTE ZUR KUNST issue on “Exhibition Politics,” which looks at current constellations of the numerous politics that collide in the exhibition sector.

 

Program

7 pm
Trust Issues. Exhibiting as a Practice of Trust
Discussion with Layla Burger-Lichtenstein (curator, n.b.k.), David Joselit (professor of art, film, and visual studies, Harvard University, Cambridge) and Abbas Zahedi (artist, London), moderated by Antonia Kölbl (editor-in-chief, TEXTE ZUR KUNST)

In English

 

8:30 pm
DJ set by DJ Bootlicker


A project by Neuer Berliner Kunstverein (n.b.k.) and TEXTE ZUR KUNST.

 

Free admission

Languages: English

Location,

n.b.k. / Neuer Berliner Kunstverein
Chausseestraße 128-129, 10115 Berlin

Third-party OpenStreetMap cookies
By loading the map, you accept OpenStreetMaps' privacy policy of OpenStreetMap.

Telephone,

+49 (30) 280 70 20

Website,

www.nbk.org/en/diskurs/t…

Prices,

Free entrance

Digital

Related Exhibition

Tickets

Free entrance

Services

Organizer

Links

More Events

Photography by Ghislaine Leung
© Courtesy Ghislaine Leung / Maxwell Graham, New York / Cabinet, London

n.b.k. / Neuer Berliner Kunstverein

Ghislaine Leung, Holdings (2015–2025)

Book Launch

Miscellaneous

Western money at last
©DDR Museum
The monetary union of July 1, 1990

Lecture, talk, Miscellaneous

DDR Museum

Western money at last

The monetary union of July 1, 1990

Lazarus Wihl: Painting of the female writer Fanny Lewald (1851)
privat

Lecture, talk

Mendelssohn-Remise

Readings for the salon

Melanie Jame Wolf, "The Creep", 2023, Video still
© Melanie Jame Wolf / Ashton Green

Lecture, talk

KINDL – Centre for Contemporary Art

virgil b/g taylor, Nguyễn + Transitory and Neda Saeedi in conversation with Sadaf Vasaei

This form can be used to report content on Museumsportal Berlin that violates the EU Digital Services Act (DSA).

Report content

Cookie-Policy

We use cookies to provide the best website experience for you. By clicking on "Accept tracking" you agree to this. You can change the settings or reject the processing under "Manage Cookies setup". You can access the cookie settings again at any time in the footer.
Privacy | Imprint

Cookie-Policy

We use cookies to provide the best website experience for you. By clicking on "Accept tracking" you agree to this. You can change the settings or reject the processing under "Manage Cookies setup". You can access the cookie settings again at any time in the footer.
Privacy | Imprint