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  • Richard E. Ocejo

    Sixty Miles Upriver. Gentrification and Race in a Small…

  • Jacobin

    Jacobin #17. Künstliche Intelligenz

  • Tom Holert (Hg.)

    Pierre Bourdieu. Fragen zur Kunst für und mit Studierenden…

  • Dahr Jamail, Stan Rushworth

    Wir stehen in der Mitte der Unendlichkeit. Indigene Stimmen…

  • Lauren Wager, Sophia Naureen Ahmad

    Fashion Palettes. Color Inspiration, Meaning & Mood

  • Stavros Stavrides

    The Politics of Urban Potentiality. Spatial Patterns of…

  • Ilya Zdanevich

    Ilya Zdanevich - Iliazd. Berlin Khaltura 1922

  • Larisa Reisner

    The Decembrists

  • Dominique Gauzin-Müller, Anna Heringer

    Anna Heringer. Form Follows Love. Intuitiv bauen - von…

  • Dennis Brzek, Junia Thiede

    In Medias Res #1: Histories Read Across

  • Dennis Brzek, Junia Thiede, Julian…

    In Medias Res #2: Architecture in Motion

  • Dennis Brzek, Junia Thiede

    In Medias Res #3: Postproductions

  • Angela McRobbie (Ed.)

    Ulrike Ottinger. Film, Art and the Ethnographic Imagination

  • Ulysses Voelker, Michael Schmitz

    Was Kommunikationsdesign kann. Prinzipien, Inspirationen,…

  • Ultra Studio

    Landscape Goes Domestic. Ultra Studio

  • e-flux

    e-flux Index #2

  • Matteo Pasquinelli

    Das Auge des Meisters. Eine Sozialgeschichte Künstlicher…

  • Kate Crawford

    Atlas der KI. Die materielle Wahrheit hinter den neuen…

  • Kathryn Yusoff

    Geologic Life. Inhuman Intimacies and the Geophysics of Race

  • Nuraini Juliastuti

    Commons Museums. Pedagogies for Taking Ownership of What is…

  • Adam Greenfield

    Lifehouse. Taking Care of Ourselves in a World on Fire

  • Moises Puente (Ed.)

    Classroom, a teenage view

  • Ulrich Bröckling, Susanne Krasmann und…

    Glossar der Gegenwart 2.0

  • Jean-Baptiste Fressoz

    Happy Apocalypse. A History of Technological Risk

  • Tim Anstey

    Things That Move. A Hinterland in Architectural History

  • Christophe Van Gerrewey

    Something Completely Different. Architecture in Belgium

  • Alma d'Aigle

    Ein Garten

  • Jens Balzer

    After Woke

  • Gustav Magnusson

    Keynote Conversations. 100 Interviews for Reinventing the…

  • DEMOGO studio di architettura

    DEMOGO. Architecture and projects in complex contexts.

  • Susan Buck-Morss, Kevin McCaughey, Adam…

    Seeing <—> Making. Room for Thought

  • Maurice Nio

    The Suspense of Architecture. The Necessity to Shine

  • Peter Friedrich Stephan

    Designing Concerns. Bruno Latour und das Transformation…

  • Labor für die alltägliche Stadt,…

    TOUCH.01 Tactics of Urban Change.01 | Kollaboratives Wohnen

  • Reinhold Martin, Claire Zimmerman (eds…

    Architecture against Democracy. Histories of the…

  • Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, Jennifer Deger…

    Field Guide to the Patchy Anthropocene. The New Nature

  • Marouane Ben Belfort, WIP Office

    Nuykuln. Berlin's quarter and its Arab and Turkish…

  • Clara Herrmann, Elise Misao Hunchuck,…

    The AI Anarchies Book

  • Laurenz Berger, Barbara Weber

    Zukunft Bestand. Ökosoziale Transformation von…

  • Nitin Bathla (Ed.)

    Researching Otherwise. Pluriversal Methodologies for…

  • Carolin Genz, Olaf Schnur, Jürgen Aring…

    WohnWissen. 100 Begriffe des Wohnens

  • Richard Evans

    Listening to the Music the Machines Make. Inventing…

  • Anna Beckers, Gunther Teubner

    Digitale Aktanten, Hybride, Schwärme. Drei Haftungsregime…

  • Justine Blau

    Justine Blau. Veil of Nature

  • Eduarda Neves

    Minor Bestiary. Time and Labyrinth in Contemporary Art

  • Kirsten Angermann, Hans-Rudolf Meier,…

    Denkmal Postmoderne. Bestände einer (un)geliebten Epoche

  • dérive

    dérive N° 96, Antimodern, antidemokratisch, revisionistisch…

  • Arch+ Zeitschrift für Architektur und…

    Arch+ 256. Umbau. Ansätze der Transformation

  • Martino Gamper

    100 Chairs in 100 Days and its 100 Ways

  • Paul O'Neill (Ed.)

    Not Going It Alone. Collective Curatorial Curating

  • Olivia Broome

    Brutalist Plants

  • Lucy Lippard

    I See / You Mean. A Novel

  • Ruth Catlow, Penny Rafferty (eds.)

    Radical Friends. Decentralised Autonomous Organisations and…

  • Loretta Napoleoni

    Technocapitalism. The Rise of the New Robber Barons and the…

  • Ben Murphy

    Ears to the Ground. Adventures in Field Recording &…

  • Justin Patrick Moore

    The Radio Phonics Laboratory. Telecommunications, Speech…

  • Alexander Kühne

    Der Jugendclub Extrem. Lugau 1984 - 1994

  • Ruth Buchanan, Fiona McGovern

    Scores for Transformation (A conversation). Ruth Buchanan,…

  • Carey Jewitt, Sara Price

    Digital Touch

  • Mark Coeckelbergh

    Why AI Undermines Democracy and What To Do About It

  • Peter Godfrey-Smith

    Metazoa. Die Geburt des Geistes aus dem Leben der Tiere

  • OFFICE and Tom Muratore

    The Politics of Public Space: Volume Five

  • Fanny Chiarello

    Basta Now. Women, Trans & Non-binary in Experimental…

  • &beyond collective for Theatrum…

    Sonic Urbanism: Listening to Non-Human Life

  • Croatian Architects' Association

    Designing in Coexistence - Reflections on Systemic Change

  • Anastasia Khodyreva, Elina Suoyrjö

    Aquatic Encounters. A Glossary of Hydrofeminisms

  • Yancey Strickler, The Dark Forest…

    The Dark Forest Anthology of the Internet

  • Patrick McGraw, Heavy Traffic

    Heavy Traffic Issue IV

  • Alexander Kluge

    Der Konjunktiv der Bilder. Meine Virtuelle Kamera (K.I.)

  • Sara Zeller, Evelyn Steiner (Hg.)

    Design für Alle? Inklusive Gestaltung heute

  • Arturo Escobar, Michal Osterweil, Kriti…

    Relationality. An Emergent Politics of Life Beyond the Human

  • Kim Dovey et. al.

    Atlas of Informal Settlement. Understanding Self-Organized…

  • Claire Bishop

    Disordered Attention. How We Look at Art and Performance…

  • Philip Widmann

    Film Undone – Elements of a Latent Cinema

  • McKenzie Wark

    Raven

  • Aruna D’Souza

    Imperfect Solidarities

  • Sandra Hofmeister

    Architektur und Klimawandel. 20 Interviews zur Zukunft des…

  • Gerry Leonidas (Ed.)

    Designing type revivals. Handbook for a historical approach…

  • Jochen Becker, Anna Schäffler, Simon…

    Glossar Urbane Praxis. Auf dem Weg zu einem Mannifest /…

  • Cyril Béghin (Ed.)

    Chantal Akerman. Oeuvre écrite et parlée

  • Hansjörg Gadient

    Spielraum. Kindergerechte Freiräume planen und bauen

  • Diamond Schmitt Architects

    Set Pieces. Architecture for the Performing Arts in Fifteen…

  • Roberto Gargiani, ed.

    Simple Architecture: Villa Baizeau in Carthage by Le…

  • Leonhard Laupichler, Sophia Brinkgerd (…

    New Aesthetic 1. A Collection of Experimental and…

  • Martin Mosch

    Die typografische Komposition

  • Vera Egbers, Christa Kamleithner, Özge…

    Architectures of Colonialism

  • Anna-Maria Meister, Teresa Fankhänel,…

    Are You a Model? On an Architectural Medium of Spatial…

  • Gilbert Simondon, Emmanuel Alloa (Hg.)

    Imagination und Invention

  • Philipp Schönthaler

    Wie rationale Maschinen romantisch wurden

  • Artemy Magun

    The Temptation of Non-Being: Negativity in Aesthetics

  • Nicolas Uphaus

    Frei. Selbstständig arbeiten als Designer (2. überarb.…

  • Anne Querrien, Brigitta Kuster (Hg.)

    Maschinen | Gefüge | Karten

  • Sabine Nuss

    Wessen Freiheit, welche Gleichheit? Das Versprechen einer…

  • Legacy Russell

    Black Meme. A History of The Images That Make Us

  • Benjamin H. D. Buchloh, Hal Foster

    Exit Interview. Benjamin Buchloh in conversation with Hal…

  • Gabriel Catren

    Pleromatica, or Elsinore's Trance

  • You Can Sit With Us

    You Can Sit With Us - 24/7

  • Rainald Goetz

    wrong

Berlin Issue

Most people know close to nothing about Berlin’s economy. The one thing everyone can agree on is the fact that the average wage of Berlin is significantly lower than any other cities in Germany, and that Berlin city government has suffered from deficit spending year after year. Truth be told, it was none other than reasonable living costs and rents that pushed Berlin to become the powerhouse of creativity. However, at this point, things are not as they used to be. Some argue that the surge of rent prices over the past few years will fundamentally change the city’s nature of cultural ecology.
Nevertheless, Berlin is still considered as one of the most desirable cities to move in for young creators. Berlin is more like a natural organic body; various forms of cultural events co-exist, and each of its districts reflects the daily life of immigrants from different parts of the world. An ever-increasing energy comes out of exhibition openings held by over 300 independent cultural organizations on a daily basis—this is not even counting events hosted by city-run museums and large art galleries. Street walls covered in posters—a process and a result of both cultural and economic activity—also reveal the lively side of Berlin.
Here are some questions that arise. How does this diagnosis reflect the reality of Berlin? Or is it just a prejudice or a superficial bias? Is there any opportunity left in Berlin? What does it mean to be Berlin? Is it still valid?
Over the past few months, we got together with different studios and their members to talk about the situation that gives rise to such questions: from those located in Kreuzberg, where most design studios are set up, to those in Charlottenburg, the richest region of the old West Berlin; and from Berlin’s iconic studios to lesser-known practices. They all shared with us rich stories about Berlin as viewed from their standpoints. It is about what has changed and what hasn’t changed, and, at the same time, expectations and worries. It’s also about preconceptions and realities.
We deeply appreciate the 14 studios’ sharing of their frank views on Berlin and their design practices. We would also like to show our gratitude to Node’s Serge Rompza and writer Madeleine Morley, who developed an interesting conversation about Berlin’s graphic design history, and Martin Conrads, who wrote an insightful text on Berlin’s poster culture. Our thanks also go out to all those who participated as contributors.
We hope this issue will help those who are curious about Berlin’s graphic design culture. In addition to detailing design practices of studios that work in the field, we also touched on other relevant issues including rent rise and gentrification. That’s why this issue’s subtitle “studio rental guide” is actually something more than mere rhetoric. Willkommen in Berlin!
CONTRIBUTORS
Büro Bum Bum
David Benski
Dinamo
Eps51
Fehras Publishing Practices
FM Aussenwerbung
Ham Minjoo
Kim Jungyun
Kulturplakatierung
Madeleine Morley
Martin Conrads
preggnant
Rimini Berlin
Ruohan Wang
Schick Toikka
Serge Rompza (NODE)
Stahl R
Studio Pandan
Studio Santiago da Silva
Studio Yukiko
Planned, Edit & designed by
Bernd Grether, Kim Young Sam, Lee Aram, Shin Dokho


Graphic #44
Berlin Issue
Graphic, 2019