MUSIC
TAYFUN and Friends
Multi instrumentalist, composer, producer and educator Tayfun Guttstadt brings 2 different nights of music to FRAMED Berlin. Each night will feature some of Tayfun’s closest collaborators:
Guest musicians on March 1st
Hakan Tuğrul – Santur
Farhang Moshtagh – Kamancha
Guest musicians on March 2nd
Dilek Türkan – vocal
Dilek Türkan – vocal
Turan Vurgun – kanun
ART EXHIBITION
The Wedding Of The Butterflies – by Carlo Leopold Broschewitz
Carlo Leopold Broschewitz –
Letting go and allowing
by Julia Globig, art historian
Sculptor and painter Carlo Leopold Broschewitz lives and works in Kambs in Mecklenburg and in Leipzig. His works are like a large playground where animals and humans meet – where conventions are disregarded – where beauty and bizarreness go hand in hand – where every thing, every figure and every form has its justification and goes its own way without being asked. Carlo’s signature is an unmistakable liveliness with which his dreamy pictorial worlds come into contact with us.
During his training as a stone sculptor, the artist dealt intensively with the fundamentals of the human image. Since studying sculpture at Burg Giebichenstein in Halle an der Saale, the Rostock-born artist has sought his own path – and continues to find it. Carlo Leopold Broschewitz’s dream worlds are now shared by life-size wooden sculptures, whose form is created by working with a chainsaw, and figurative paintings, bronze and ceramic objects. Carlo’s works tell stories of freedom, interpersonal encounters and longings. They do not allow themselves to be confined within the boundaries of genre definitions, but downright rebel against all localization. They merely follow their own urge for self-determination and processuality. Carlo constantly gives in to this demand in his works. The change of material means a further development that benefits this demand. Sculptural work is conditioned by painting and vice versa. By combining materials in sometimes unusual ways, they constantly unfold new possibilities for formulating themselves. Carlo’s graphic strokes can thus be found on canvas, wood, ceramics or textiles and navigate the viewer through narrative visual worlds. Carlo leaves the structure of form and narrative to his intuition. The fact that his work thrives on this is the result of a learning process and a longing for unpredictability and (personal) freedom. Since then, completion has taken a back seat to his artistic concerns. How long a work takes to create and in which direction it will develop are variables that are deliberately beyond Carlo’s control. Rather, he is getting rid of mental boundaries, trying to leave conventions behind and shake off the feeling of discomfort associated with them. The aim of his work is by no means to work through a style or content, but rather to let go, to react to coincidences and to surrender completely to the excitement of the event itself.
…. read more and see images on Carlo’s exhibition page