Direkt zum Inhalt

Warenkorb

  • Walter Grasskamp

    Das Kunstmuseum. Eine erfolgreiche Fehlkonstruktion

  • Kathrin Peters, Andrea Seier (Hg.)

    Gender & Medien-Reader

  • Nadir Z. Lahiji

    Can Architecture Be An Emancipatory Project? Dialogues on…

  • Siegfried Ebeling

    Der Raum als Membran

  • Patrick Joseph

    Poet Fool

  • M. Böttger, S. Carsten, L. Engel (Hg)

    Spekulationen Transformationen. Überlegungen zur Zukunft…

  • Charlotte Klonk (Ed.)

    New Laboratories. Historical and Critical Perspectives on…

  • Gwen Allen

    The Magazine (Documents of Contemporary Art)

  • Steven Shaviro

    Discognition

  • Helen Armstrong

    Digital Design Theory

  • Gerald Raunig

    Dividuum. Machinic Capitalism and Molecular Revolution

  • Mario Gooden

    Dark Space. Architecture, Representation, Black Identity

  • Mike Watson

    Towards a Conceptual Militancy

  • Guttmann, Kaiser, Mazanek, diachron (…

    Jan Turnovsky: The Weltanschauung as an Ersatz Gestalt.…

  • Rebecca Roke

    Nanotecture: Tiny Built Things

  • M. del Junco, M. Toledo (Eds.)

    Max Bill

  • Peter Pál Pelbart

    Cartography of Exhaustion. Nihilism Inside Out

  • Salomon Frausto

    Scenes from the Good Life. Nine investigations into the…

  • Annette Gilbert (Ed.)

    Publishing as Artistic Practice

  • Daniel M. Abramson

    Obsolescence. An Architectural History

  • Isabelle Graw, Ewa Lajer-Burcharth (Eds…

    Painting beyond Itself. The Medium in the Post-medium…

  • Liam Gillick

    Industry and Intelligence

  • Robert Stalla (Hg.)

    Bauen mit Künstlern: Architekt Peter Ottmann

  • Georg Diez/Christopher Roth

    80*81: What Happened?

  • Keith Evan Green

    Architectural Robotics. Ecosystems of Bits, Bytes, and…

  • S. De Bondt, F. Muggeridge

    The Form of the Book Book

  • K. Busch, B. Meltzer, T. von Oppeln (Hg)

    Ausstellen: Zur Kritik der Wirksamkeit in den Künsten

  • Fiona McGovern

    Die Kunst zu zeigen: Künstlerische Ausstellungsdisplays bei…

  • Hu Fang

    Sou Fujimoto. Towards a Non-Intentional Space. About Sou…

  • Nicholas Felton, Sven Ehmann, Robert…

    Photoviz. Visuailzing Information Through Photography

  • Rudolf Fischer, Wolf Tegethoff (Hg.)

    Modern wohnen. Möbeldesign und Wohnkultur der Moderne

  • W. Cobbing, R. Cooper (Eds.)

    Boooook: The Life and Work of Bob Cobbing

  • Robert Klanten, Sofia Borges (Eds.)

    The Tale Of Tomorrow. Utopian Architecture in the Modernist…

  • Ray Lucas

    Research Methods for Architecture

  • Giorgio Agamben

    The Use of Bodies

  • Mathilde Villeneuve, Virginie Bobin (…

    Republications

  • Andreas Seltzer

    Der Sendermann / The Transmitter Man

  • Lada Umstätter (Hg)

    Le Corbusier und die Macht der Fotografie

  • Tilman Baumgärtel (Hg)

    Pirate Essays. A Reader on International Media Piracy

  • Paul B. Preciado

    TESTO JUNKIE: Sex, Drogen und Biopolitik in der Ära der…

  • Guendalina Salimei

    Luigi Moretti. Terme Bonifacio VIII Fiuggi 1963 - 1969

  • Henri Lefebvre

    Das Recht auf Stadt

  • Gijs Wallis de Vries

    Archescape. On the tracks of Piranesi

  • Christopher Beanland

    Concrete Concept. Brutalist Buildings Around the World

  • Stephen Willats

    Vision and Reality

  • Anja Schwanhäußer (ed)

    Sensing the City. A Companion to Urban Anthropology

  • Jeannette Kuo, Frank Barkow (Eds.)

    Space of Production. Projects and Essays on Rationality,…

  • Claudia Molitor

    Sonorama: Listening to the view from the train

  • David Keenan

    England's Hidden Reverse. Coil, Current 93, Nurse with…

  • Nils Aschenbeck

    Reformarchitektur. Die Konstituierung der Ästhetik der…

  • Christian Schittich (Hg.)

    Best of Detail: Beton / Concrete

  • August Sarnitz, Inge Scholz-Strasser (…

    Private Utopia: Cultural Setting of the Interior in the…

  • René Zechlin (Hg.)

    Wie leben? Zukunftsbilder von Malewitch bis Fujimoto

  • Loretta Lees, Hyun Bang Shin, Ernesto…

    Planetary Gentrification

  • Srećko Horvat

    The Radicality of Love

  • Busch, Klanten, Hellige (Hg.)

    The Age of Collage Vol. 2: Contemporary Collage in Modern…

  • André Tavares

    The Anatomy of the Architectural Book

  • Susanne Leeb

    Die Kunst der Anderen. "Weltkunst" und die…

  • Heike Jenss (Ed.)

    Fashion Studies. Research Methods, Sites and Practices

  • Maud Meyzaud (Hg.)

    Arme Gemeinschaft. Die Moderne Rousseaus

  • Félix Guattari

    Schriften zur Kunst

  • Jesko Fezer & Studio…

    Öffentliche Gestaltungsberatung. Public Design Support 2011…

  • Gerald Raunig, Ulf Wuggenig

    Kritik der Kreativität

  • Walter Scheiffele

    Das leichte Haus. Utopie und Realität der Membranarchitektur

  • Nora Amin

    Migrating the Feminine

  • An Architektur

    An Architektur 11-13: Theorie und Praxis der Kartografie

  • An Architektur

    An Architektur 10

  • An Architektur

    An Architektur 01-03

  • An Architektur

    An Architektur 04-09: Krieg und die Produktion von Raum

  • Shinkenchiku 2014:11

    Japan Architects 1945 - 2010. Extra Edition

  • Stuart Walton

    In The Realm of the Senses. A Materialist Theory of Seeing…

  • Felicity D. Scott (Autor), Nikolaus…

    Disorientation: Bernard Rudofsky in the Empire of Signs.…

  • Markus Krajewski, Christian Werner

    Bauformen des Gewissens. Über Fassaden deutscher…

  • Stefano Harney, Fred Moten

    Die Undercommons. Flüchtige Planung und schwarzes Studium

  • Cord Riechelmann, Brigitte Oetker (Eds.)

    Toward an Aesthetics of Living Beings / Zu einer Ästhetik…

  • Badura, Dubach, Haarmann, Mersch et al.

    Künstlerische Forschung. Ein Handbuch

  • Marc Kushner

    Die Zukunft der Architektur in 100 Bauwerken

  • Siegfried Zielinski (Hg.)

    Flusseriana: An Intellectual Toolbox

  • Owen Hatherley

    The Ministry of Nostalgia. Consuming Austerity

  • A. Baur, M. Weber (Hg.)

    Better than de Kooning

  • Jörg Heiser

    Doppelleben. Kunst und Popmusik

  • John Roberts

    Die Notwendigkeit von Irrtümern

  • C. Thun-Hohenstein (Ed.)

    Josef Frank. Against Design

  • Friedrich Kittler (Autor), Tania Hron,…

    Baggersee. Frühe Schriften aus dem Nachlass

  • Liz Farrelly, Joanna Weddell

    Design Objects and the Museum

  • Leigh Phillips

    Austerity Ecology & the Collapse-porn Addicts. A…

  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 373. Post Independent Magazine

  • Armen Avanessian, Suhail Malik

    Genealogies of Speculation. Materialism and Subjectivity…

  • Duncan McLaren, Julian Agyeman

    Sharing Cities. A Case for Truly Smart and Sustainable…

  • Danny Aldred, Emmanuelle Waeckerle (Eds…

    Code-X. Paper, Ink, Pixel and Screen

  • Alexandra Manske

    Kapitalistische Geister in der Kultur- und…

  • Wolfgang, Zerwas, Ansheim (Hg.)

    Transformation Design. Perspectives on a New Design Attitude

  • Karl Riha, Jörgen Schäfer (Hg.)

    DADA total. Manifeste, Aktionen, Texte, Bilder

  • Luca Molinari (Ed.)

    Architecture. Movements and Trends from the 19th Century to…

  • Franco "Bifo" Berardi

    And. Phenomenology of the End

  • Lauren Cornell, Ed Halter (Eds.)

    Mass Effect. Art and the Internet in the Twenty-First…

  • Helmut Schmid, Seibundo Shinkosha

    Typography Today. Revised Edition

  • Hartmut Geerken, Chris Trent

    Omniverse – Sun Ra

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