2015.11.02 Mon, by
I SEE International Video Art Festival I Opening Event I Nov 4-5, 2015 I Momentum Berlin

ULU BRAUN

WOJTEK DOROSZUK

THOMAS ELLER

AMIR FATTAL

NIKLAS GOLDBACH

JAMES P. GRAHAM

CONSTANTIN HARTENSTEIN

MARK KARASICK

YUAN KERU

MAP OFFICE

BJØRN MELHUS

TRACEY MOFFAT & GARY HILLBERG

NEOZOON

ERKKA NISSINEN

LI RAN

FRANZ REIMER

JULIA CHARLOTTE RICHTER

RIZKI RESA UTAMA

CLEMENS WILHELM

LU YANG

LI ZHENHUA

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE VISIT:

www.iseevideofestival.com

LAUNCH AND OPENING EVENT

MOMENTUM
Kunstquartier Bethanien
Mariannenplatz 2
10997 Berlin

NOV 04 – 05 / 2015
8 PM
Free Entry

FOLLOWING SCREENINGS

Institute for Provocation Beijing
NOV 09 – 10 / 2015
7 PM

Times Museum Guangzhou
NOV 13 – 14 / 2015
7 PM

OCT Art and Design Gallery Shenzhen
NOV 15 / 2015
7 PM

“The more that I see, the less that I know for sure.”
— John Lennon

The I SEE International Video Art Festival is an initiative of the artists Constantin Hartenstein and Clemens Wilhelm, launched in 2013. In 2015, the second edition of the I SEE International Video Art Festival will once again reveal the latest developments in contemporary video art. The festival will be launched in Berlin (Germany) and then travel to Beijing, Guangzhou and Shenzhen (China) to connect these four vibrant video art scenes.

Focusing on four main curatorial themes, the presented videos will give a fascinating insight into how artists deal with the current challenges and opportunities of the digitalized world we live in. The festival sets out to present ground-breaking video art works by emerging and well-known international artists who examine the impact of technological and aesthetic inventions.

Three screening programs—”THE END OF THE IMAGE AS WE KNOW IT”, “POST EVERYTHING”, “THE ANIMAL WITHIN”—present unique artistic approaches to animalistic instincts, the omnipresent influence of technology on society and concepts of post-futures.

In addition, the program “AUTO ANALYSIS“ will present a selection of seven works from the MOMENTUM Collection that explore the relationship between a subject and its self-perception towards transformative environments.