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Live on e-flux: Hito Steyerl “4 Nights at the Museum” episode four

Por e-flux, em 24/11/2020.
Live on e-flux: Hito Steyerl “4 Nights at the Museum” episode four

Courtesy of Hito Steyerl.

Hito Steyerl: “4 Nights at the Museum”

Episode 4: November 26, 2020, 8pm CET / 2pm EST, live broadcast

www.e-flux.com

Join us this Thursday, November 26 at 8pm CET / 2pm EST on e-flux Video & Film for the fourth and final episode of Hito Steyerl’s livestream project “4 Nights at the Museum” co-presented by K21 and e-flux.

Titled “Museum, the Island,” this final episode (ca. 50 minutes) features the Berlin-based artist Nora al Badri and actor Mark Waschke.

The furloughed TV cop returns to investigate recent attacks on Museum Island in Berlin, where conspiracy followers are suspected to have damaged ancient artifacts by sprinkling them with an oily substance. Also in this episode, Nora al Badri talks about museums from the perspective of “The Other Nefertiti,” aka the Nefertiti Hack whereby she and Jan Nicolai Nelles surreptitiously scanned the famous Nefertiti bust and opensourced the data. What is the databody of the museum? Al Badri discusses the ambivalent question of security, and the urgency of decolonizing digital space.

“4 Nights at the Museum”
What happens to the art at the museum at night?
A weird-ass visual podcast

During the corona-related shutdown in November 2020, Hito Steyerl’s exhibition I Will Survive at K21 (September 26, 2020–January 10, 2021) transforms into a livestream format. The project “4 Nights at the Museum,” developed by the artist, filmmaker, and author Hito Steyerl, provides some background and conversations about the works in the exhibition.

In four episodes (each lasting 45–100 minutes), selected works and themes in I Will Survive will be discussed in more detail. Participants in the works, such as the New York-based graphic designer Ayham Ghraowi or the Hamburg-based actress Heja Netîrk, will talk about their perspectives. In addition, Steyerl will present alternative versions of exhibited works and previously unedited archival material. Short guided tours by the curators will accompany visitors into the exhibition spaces, which are abandoned at night. They will take a look at some of the works and prove that there is nothing going on inside the museum during the shutdown. No satanic rituals are taking place here at taxpayers’ expense, nor is adrenochrome being tapped, as conspiracy myths have claimed in the context of corona denial and vandalism at Museuminsel Berlin. In the closed-down rooms of K21, the only exception is Steyerl’s latest work SocialSim, in which police officers driven by live simulations dance and jump over the walls like herds running wild in the pandemic.

In the livestream mini-series Museum: The Island, Mark Waschke, the TV police inspector from SocialSim—now on short-time work—also reappears. In a two-part solo special, he prefixes the investigations in the museum with a lecture on “The Benefits of Automation for the Actor/Actress” and ultimately ends up at Museuminsel Berlin, where there is much to investigate after the attacks on artworks by dubious characters. In conjunction with the livestream, a new interactive version of the simulation in SocialSim will also be put online at the end of the month, so that, despite the museum’s temporary closure, the current general socio-political climate continues to be monitored.

Episodes will be broadcast on November 151921, and 26 respectively at 8pm CET 2pm EST on e-flux Video & Film. Episode 4 will remain online through November 29, and a re-run of all four episodes will be made available for 24 hours on November 30.

For more information, contact program@e-flux.com.