Kunst für die Stadt - Visual

Anna Haifisch

THE ARTIST, ODE AN DIE FEDER

Art in the City © Lukas Zitzer

“There’s always plenty for an artist to do on a vague day in May-maybe buying a pasta claw, visiting an exhibition, drawing a snake, or getting a new haircut. Or, of course, doing none of it at all-just letting a shy eye wander through the world from the comfort of the sofa.”

(Artist Statement by Anna Haifisch)

Anna Haifisch is a comic artist and illustrator. For the past decade, she has been creating The Artist, a book series that explores the life of an artist. In this special poster edition, she presents her personal impressions of major cities like Los Angeles and Berlin. With subtle humor and a distinctive perspective, Haifisch captures moments from everyday urban life.

From October to December 2022, Anna Haifisch was an artist-in-residence at Villa Aurora in Los Angeles.

About the Project

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 May 12 to 25, works by six artists will be on view throughout Berlin. A second edition is planned for October.

Edition in May

Art in the City © Lukas Zitzer

With I am Your Temple, Werner Amann brought his Los Angeles–based portrait series to Weserstraße in Neukölln. In contrast to the youth- and trend-driven beauty industries of Berlin and L.A., Amann captures older bodies in quiet, intimate moments of everyday life.・Weserstraße/Fuldastraße

Ulu Braun’s Sunset Egonomy appeared as a digital mural on Kottbusser Damm—a spiritual overload of West Coast myth, Silicon Valley twilight, and pop-media iconography. Martin Scorsese makes a cameo with ice cream; a piggy bank from a savings bank rests beneath a vision of automotive prophecy. Sunset Egonomy is both dreamscape and dissociation, promise and void.・Kottbusser Damm 1

Art in the City © Lukas Zitzer
Art in the City © Lukas Zitzer

For an artist, there's always something to do on an ordinary May day—buy a pasta claw, visit an exhibition, draw a snake, or get a haircut. In her poster The Artist, Ode to the Pen, Anna Haifisch offered a playful and personal perspective on life in metropolises like Berlin and L.A.・Skalitzer Straße/Kottbusser Tor

Paul Hutchinson’s collage Schöneberg 30 brought together texts and images from 2016 to 2025. Much of the material originates from the very neighborhood where the collage is on display—the northern section of Berlin’s Schöneberg district, once known by its postal code: Schöneberg 30.・Potsdamer Straße/Kurfürstenstraße

Art in the City © Lukas Zitzer
Art in the City © Clara Becker

Karin Apollonia Müller’s Dreamfactory explored the relationship between sky, nature, and human presence. It evokes a moment of timeless stillness and contemplation, while the expansive openness of the scene stands in stark contrast to the density of urban space. The work challenges the seductive imagery and promises of the fashion world.・Prenzlauer Allee 238

Freedoom of Speech, a photo series by Siska created during the artist’s 2022 residency at Villa Aurora, takes a critical look at the shrinking space for free expression in both Germany and the U.S. Inspired by the Old English typeface often seen on L.A. streetwear, the visual language in the work becomes a pointed intervention—highlighting the fragility of liberal democracies.・Yorckstraße 49

Art in the City © Lukas Zitzer

Edition in October

Art in the City © Lukas Zitzer

Edgar Arceneaux & Zora Arceneaux invited 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 combined 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

Art in the City © Lukas Zitzer
Art in the City © Lukas Zitzer

With ART HEALS, Erik Göngrich presented 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

Art in the City © Lukas Zitzer

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 displayed 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

Art in the City © Kevin Fuchs

Locations

Partners

Art in the City is generously funded by the Senate Chancellery of Berlin.

 

With friendly support by Kulturplakatierung

 

Villa Aurora & Thomas Mann House e. V. is funded by the Federal Foreign Office and the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media.