

From October 6, the second edition of the Art Posters will be celebrated across five districts of Berlin, showcasing works by Edgar Arceneaux & Zora Arceneaux, Janine Eggert, Erik Göngrich, Lukas Glinkowski, and Wiebke Loeper.
To celebrate the 30th anniversary of Villa Aurora in Los Angeles, the artist residency has invited former fellows to design large-scale posters as individual artistic contributions to Berlin’s urban landscape. Displayed across diverse public locations in the city, the works forge a connection between art, urban society, and international perspectives.
Art in the City reflects the rich diversity of both Berlin and Los Angeles. The artworks draw on the unique character of specific neighborhoods, building symbolic and aesthetic bridges between urban life in Berlin and the Californian metropolis, while also engaging with pressing social and political issues.
The project seeks to make art more accessible to a wider audience and to strengthen the visibility of the cultural scene. Art in the City offers an inviting and unpretentious glimpse into the vibrancy and international relevance of Berlin’s arts landscape: Art for everyone – art in the city.
From October 6 to 19, the artworks of six artists will be on display in Berlin.
About the artworks
Edgar Arceneaux & Zora Arceneaux invite passers-by on Kottbusser Damm to actively participate in designing the poster for Colors of My Home. Based on the question: What colors remind you of home? a colorful image emerges that visualizes the diverse perspectives on the concept of “home” in the neighborhood.・Kottbusser Damm 1
Googie Horizon by artist Janine Eggert combines eight examples of Googie architecture that she photographed in Los Angeles and assembled into a silhouette. As an imaginary skyline, the artwork becomes both archive and fiction—a cityscape that never existed, yet embodies the promise of a futuristic everyday world.・Potsdamer Straße/Kurfürstenstraße
With ART HEALS, Erik Göngrich presents art as a cycle. His poster features images of cars and forest fires alongside the words “ART HEALS.” In contrast to the clouds of smoke and destruction, the question arises as to whether art itself can be understood as a healing process.・Entrance RAW/Simon-Dach-Straße
For the Kottbusser Tor, Lukas Glinkowski has created Connect the Dots, an interactive connect-the-dots image with over 10,000 dots. The work was inspired by the artist's personal experiences during his stay at Villa Aurora in 2019. At that time, he witnessed forest fires in Pacific Palisades at close range. The work is dedicated to the efforts of the firefighters.・Skalitzer Straße/Kottbusser Tor
Growing up in East Berlin, Wiebke Loeper photographed the rapidly changing city in the mid-1990s. At that time, there was discussion about demolishing the television tower and the Kino International cinema. With Fotografien, Berlin 1996/97, Loeper builds a bridge to a bygone era and draws attention to the multi-layered aspects of urban life.・Alexanderplatz
silent green Special
Together with silent green Kulturquartier, we are displaying the Sunset Egonomy poster in Wedding, which was already on display in urban spaces during the first edition of Art in the City. Ulu Braun presents a digital mural —a spiritual overload that blends West Coast myth, Silicon Valley twilight, and pop media symbolism.・silent green/Gerichtstraße 35
To the Artworks exhibited in May
Here you can find the May issue featuring works by Werner Amann, Ulu Braun, Anna Haifisch, Paul Hutchinson, Karin Apollonia Müller & Siska.