PLAYGROUND
SurvivaBall Home Suits
Summary
During August 21 until Septemer 5, 2021 three artists Yuka Oyama, Marten Schech and Stephanie Lüning worked together on a work-in-progress, site-specific artwork, next to the Eisenbahnbrücke in the city of Meißen (Sachsony), Germany.
Supported by
Federal Ministery of Food and Agriculture. Neulandgewinner (New Land Winner).
Robert Bosch Foundation.
Federal Institute for Agriculture and Food.
Description of project
During August 21 until Septemer 5, 2021 three German artists Yuka Oyama, Marten Schech and Stephanie Lüning worked together on a site-specific and work-in-progress public installation next to the Eisenbahnbrücke in the city of Meißen (Sachsony), Germany. The sequence of this artwork was developed together with Maren Marzilger and Nina Fischäss
(curators) at Kunstverein Meissen.
In the public space next to the Eisenbahnbrücke Oyama painted a board game graphic that resembled a floor plan of her artwork “SurivaBall Home Suits”(fig.1).
As the first public intervention, Oyama conducted a performance that invited random audience members (passersby) to engage with a performative game, where they publicly announced their personal stories about their home space, both emotional and material qualities.
Martin Schech (fig.2), an architect/artist built a tiny house, “Rag House” on the ground plan painted by Oyama,
based on the Sachsony’s traditional home-building craft knowledge and skills.
Stephanie Lünning (fig.3) at the end washed Martin Schech’s “Rag House” with colourful soap bubbles and created her large-scaled three-dimensional home painting.
Type of work
1) Concerts, performances or workshops: Performance and installation 5) Physical artifacts: an exhibition catalog. Oyama, Yuka, Marten Schech, et al. 2021. PLAYGROUND. Meissen: KUNSTVEREIN MEISSEN.
Published in
KUNSTVEREIN MEISSEN, Germany
Link to web site
https://landgestalten.online/termine/2021/08/20/playgro und-hybrides-hausgewaechs/
http://kunstverein-meissen.de/programm.html
Date
2021Creator
Oyama, Yuka
Keywords
Home
Nomadism
Self
Belonging
In transition
Publication type
artistic work
Language
ger