Sofia Duchovny / Muyeong Kim / Xtina Vargas / Julia Znoj
The Ides of Summer
01.08.2025 - 29.08.2025
The Ides of Summer
There are days that smell like burnt sugar and something else I can’t name. The Ides of Summer aren’t on any calendar. They are a pause. A hesitation in the middle of thought. A breath held too long. Impending doom. It’s not the day itself but the feeling that rises with it, something like dread disguised as warmth. An omen, yes, but not the dramatic kind. More like a ripple in the stillness, a quiet rearranging of the air. You only notice it later, after something has happened. After something is no longer there.
They say summer is the season of joy. And it is. That’s why it’s so disarming. The sun makes you sleepy, slow. It conspires in a secret language. The body becomes heavy with ease, and in that slackness—something takes you. And in that heat — god, that swollen, sticky heat — something took them. One by one.
Death didn’t come like a storm. It came like a hammock’s sway, like falling asleep under a tree with half a peach in your mouth, drunk from light and belly-full silence. It happened in the days after lunch, when the sky whitens with weight,and the flesh wants to forget it is flesh. The hour of the satyr —when the gods walk sideways in the corners of your sleep,pressing leaves to your eyelids, making you dream of something
you won't remember except in fragments, except in sweat.
We used to laugh in that heat. But now I remember them most when the sun is strongest — as if memory becomes visible only when blinded.
That summer, they began to disappear. Not dramatically. No screams, no catastrophes. Quiet. One stopped returning calls. Ones’s sandals were left by the door. Ones’s laugh, the loudest among us, was replaced by a silence that somehow made the air colder, even in the heat.
It wasn’t illness. It wasn’t an event. That thick, narcotic heat that turns bones into syrup and thoughts into fog. You sit beneath a tree after lunch, and you begin to forget you’re real. The hour of satyrs, when the mind loosens its grip on reason. You fall asleep and wonder, later, whether something passed through you while you slept. Whether that wasn’t sleep at all.
We used to gather in that heat and think we were eternal. We’d lie down in the grass, letting the sun blind us. I remember them most vividly in that specific kind of light—the white-yellow of early afternoon, when time becomes soft around the edges. As if the sun were an old film reel spinning out.
And then they were gone. And I was left with images. Photographs. Not many. Just enough to remind me that remembering is not the same as having. A photo is a lie that pretends to hold time. It doesn’t. It holds the absence of time. The evidence that something once was.
Glass. Steel. Light. A photograph is a strange machine of grief. Glass lets the image pass through. Steel holds the frame. Light, the traitor, illuminates and vanishes in the same gesture. They come together to trap something fleeting, and then they do. Never have I taken a pictures of the future.
Steel is the only one that doesn’t betray us. It doesn't soften with heat or weep with light. It holds the apparatus while we dissolve in emotion, in memory, in sunstroke. Steel is the stillness we cannot be. Glass and Picture, they need transferring and why is steel the material that can be there for them to get that job done. Stiff but there.And the summer—still here. Still humming. Still bright and cruel. It covers everything like a white sheet over furniture In this heat, something is always about to happen. Or has already happened.






















2. Julia Znoj, Dissipation Loop, 2025, Steel, copper wire, found objects




2. Julia Znoj, Night bird struck again, 2025, Steel, found objects, rust converter







Karolin Braegger
Liste Art Fair 2025
16th - 22nd of June 2025
email exchange Antonia Lia Orsi to Karolin Braegger some time in march of the same year
hey youu
soo i was thinking about this thing.. some years ago i was at a random beach in italy and as one does over the days one starts to get to know the people that you frequently sweat the beach and you start greeting them in quite a polite way and day after day you become more and more family. like from nod, to weather, to big kisses. when the panino is exchanged you know you are made right.
so one of these new found uncles of mine asked me what i did for work and i told him that i run a gallery and he didnt quite understand what that is or means but he understood that art was the field i was in. so he kinda jumped up and screamed ahh okkey then if you are in art answer me this: what is the best shape?!!?? i said WHATTTT and he continued so fast, without me even being able to think of what kind of a question this is, he said IT`S OBVIOUSLY THE SPHERE!!! ! !!!! ! obviously
can u imagine
i think he was making a joke about ass, but the bruv was so convinced, for him the discussion was over and the topic and all that comes with it solved. usually a big friend of one - liners that close down all conversation, like so much so that i often feel like a drag queen in a ladies body. whatever tho but you get it
so i was thinking about these sculptures right and about the beach and about spheres and how a planet is a sphere and a home and how a house / home has to be hollow inside but a sphere has to be solid to become a home to life basically.. so i remember kind of laughing about this story with nik still and then we saw some hermit crabs and then i thought ah wow the have an emptied out round shape they live in like sphere like but hollow inside and how they are alone in this sphere and how we have houses that are square tho and we live in them but somehow don't adapt our bodies to the square.
AAANYWAAY so i was thinking that these boxes / homes or you know just also bodies of your sculptures should be seen as hermit crab adapted shells for humans or something like that. like shells that don't quite fit but do the good old trick of architecture toward human bodies, give them a pre designed home, that is then the place that they with little tweaks of personal touches then make their own, so basically put style on predesigned form, like someone putting up a poster in their room? ya dig? dunno if im completely tripping but i was thinking i could see this so well with these connor works. also because they are tilted so its like a home on a sphere / planet rotating in space and this guy is just chilling on his sofa spinning in space on a sphere which is OBVIOUSLY the best shape. so then the connor works would be like inside of the boxed / homes like an extension of your figures doubled up inside their corbusier boxes, thinking individualism spinning at high speed on the sphere. each to their liking in different colors and personalities. i think it goes great with the boxes that become buildings with for example the legs.. like a dude waking out of his house after hermit crabbing inside on his couch, entering the world with the vague idea of a home somewhere but ye you can also move and find a new one right, so an other box to your better liking, leaving traces on the old box
what you think of this i think it would be really good somehow, have a feeling whatcha think lemme know, or tell me im completely off and i rethink
looooove yaa
Helena Huneke
Have A Nice Day ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
17.05. - 29.06.2025



Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (der sich labende), washbowl, styrofoam, wood, fabric, socks, 120 x 70 x 60 cm, year unknown (presumably 2001)




Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (Ich bin die Frau von Stefan), oil on canvas, 50 x 60 cm, year unknown (presumably between 1996-1997)

Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (Wirbel), plastic bag, coat hanger, string, 97 x 40 cm, 1998

Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (Aligator Becken), plastic bag, coat hanger, string 134 x 40 cm, 1998

Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (Graue Haut), plastic bag, coat hanger, string, 128 x 40 cm, 1998


Helena Huneke, Title Unknown, ballpoint pen on paper, framed 21 x 29 cm, 1998

Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (Langeweile), fine liner, ballpoint pen, pencil and ink on paper, framed 21 x 29 cm, 1998

Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (LA Kybernetik), prints, glue, plaster on paper, framed, 68 x 65 cm, year unknown, presumably 1998


Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (Verwandschaftsversuche), fine liner and photo print on paper, framed, 38 x 29 cm, year unknown

Helena Huneke and Stefan Thater original photo print (series of 12 photos) 40 x 30 cm, 1995
1. Voyeuse
2. Rittsitz
3. Steuersitz
4. Schottischer Flugstuhl
5. Wasserwaagschalen-sitz

Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (handsome), fine liner on paper,
38 x 29 cm, year unknown (between 2004-2008)

Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (dead cat), fine liner, pencil, ball point pen, watercolor on paper 38 x 29 cm, year unknown (between 2004-2008)


Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (Jetzt wirds anstrengend), fine liner,ink, glue, toilet paper and watercolor on paper, framed, 21 x 29 cm, (year unknown)


Verena D., Antonia, Plastik, Acrylharz, Foto, Visitenkarten, Papier, Haare, farbiger Sand, Gold, customized artists‘ Holzrahmen, lackiert, Lackspray, Keramik, Emailfarbe, SMP,Montagekleber, 35 x 32,2 x 4 cm, 2025



Helena Huneke, Untitled (Fuck), ball point pen and paint and plaster on paper, 48 x 40 cm, year unknown perhaps 1998 (LA years)



Helena Huneke, Title Unknown (Fahrender Händler), clothing, fabric, plexi glass plate, wood, rollerskates 80 x 120 cm, year unknown


André Butzer, Untitled, feltpen on paper 29,7 x 42 cm

Helena Huneke, Title unknown (Rippenbustier), plastic bag, coat hanger, string, leaves 124 x 40 cm 1998

Helena Huneke, Title unknown (Becken und Beine), plastic bag, coat hanger, string, leaves 209 x 40 cm 1998

Helena Huneke, The Artist, found objects, 166 x 192 cm, 1999-2000
Xenia Bond
We Don´t Have Any Children
28.03. - 09.05.2025

Nothing More Sculptural Than Walking On Water.
-

Xenia Bond, Same Again Please, table, cotton, worked catering glasses, 3D printed PLA, 92 x 373 x 217cm, 2025





Xenia Bond, We Don ́t Have Any Children, concrete, 50 x 70 x 100cm, 2025







Xenia Bond, Kitty and Xenia, acrylic on wall, 225 x 226 x 200cm, 2025






Xenia Bond, Nicolette, white concrete, silver foil, adhesive stickers, 99 x 58cm, 2025


Fabienne Audéoud / Zoë Field / Laurids M. Oder
Art Düsseldorf 2025
10.04. - 14.04.2025







