It all started with a swinging bell,” she said. I want the bell to crack.

When a bell is struck, sign and time are given. For citizens to celebrate life in Old Town, for them to hide or worship, to lay off workers and to start again, to be reminded that life is finite, for the clearance sale to begin, for the photographer to rinse her exposed paper, a safelight blinking. Every time a bell is struck, it rings within. In this mutual implication of time and populace, RHYTHM, CITIZEN resounds.

RHYTHM, CITIZEN converges the brand names of two manufacturers of clocks and watches: Rhythm and Citizen. Found and coupled, they set the scene for an exhibition that unravels and complicates how the measures of time move and make move; how they give pulse to artifacts, their fictions and patina; how their fleetingness tantalizes the making of an image.

RHYTHM, CITIZEN punctuates the Grazer Kunstverein by way of sculpture, photography, design, and situated interventions. It marks the instance when time is halted, frozen and encrusted, and then again set into motion. It wandered from the city of Nicosia, like a passage or a crossing, like a captor of time—eyes unfurled, then, again, shut.

RHYTHM, CITIZEN takes shape through the cadence of a poem, the periodicity of labor, the sliding of glass doors, the frequencies of life, the patterns of music, and the movement marked by a succession of strong and weak elements. 

RHYTHM, CITIZEN gathers friends and collaborators, neighbors and facilitators: Felix Taylor (Platten Haus), Koula Savvidou, Tasos Lamnisos (x.ypno), Stelios Ilchuk, Claudia Paschalides, Kyriakos Kyriakides, Marietta Mavrokordatou, and Photo Net.

RHYTHM, CITIZEN is an occasion for EXHAUST [ΕΞΩΣΤ], an album by x.ypno & steliosilchuk to be played aloud and alive, and for Borrowed, a publication by Maria Toumazou, Aristotelis Nikolas Mochloulis, Georgia Triantafyllidou, Maya Tounta, Koula Savvidou, and Evagoras Vanezis, to be launched.

RHYTHM, CITIZEN is accompanied by R,C, a publication that combines artist statement, photography, and Cypriot rap, with contributions by Koula Savvidou, Tasos Lamnisos (x.ypno), Stelios Ilchuk, Maria Toumazou, Julie Peeters, and Tom Engels.

A bell is struck within her and keeps on ringing.
A bell is struck and keeps on ringing.

Maria Toumazou (b. 1989, Cyprus) is an artist and publisher based in Nicosia. Recent solo presentations include SCRAP B, Point Centre for Contemporary Art at Moufflon Bookshop, Nicosia (2022); Coil, Hot Wheels Athens (2021); and Fair-face Elysée, Thkio Ppalies, Nicosia (2019), among others. Toumazou has participated in group exhibitions including SISTERHOOD, Streaming voices unifying energies, Angelo Plessas and P.E.T. Projects, Nicosia (2021); Touch Release, Nassauischer Kunstverein Wiesbaden (2021); Hypersurfacing, NiMAC, Nicosia (2019); Soft stone documents, Municipal Arts Centre, Limassol (2017), among others. Neoterismoi Toumazou (Toumazou’s former collective with Orestis Lazouras and Marina Xenofontos) was invited as a special guest to the Cyprus Pavilion at Biennale Arte 2017, Venice, curated by Jan Verwoert. Toumazou is the (co-)founder of Neoterismoi Toumazou, Maria Editions, and Metafora. She was a guest student at Städelschule, Frankfurt, after completing her studies at Goldsmiths College, London, and the Glasgow School of Art. RHYTHM, CITIZEN is her first institutional solo presentation.   

The exhibition is realized with the generous support of the Cyprus Deputy Ministry of Culture – Cultural Services, Point Centre for Contemporary Art, and steirischer herbst ’22. Maria Toumazou’s residency at Grazer Kunstverein is made possible with the support of the Cyprus Deputy Ministry of Culture – Cultural Services (through the TRANSIT 2022 Artist Residency Programs scheme). 

The exhibition would not be possible without the support of Hot Wheels Athens, Claudia Paschalides, Mariel Kouveli, and Orestis Lazouras.

Maria Toumazou, Artist’s Collection, 2022. Courtesy of the artist.
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Installation view of Maria Toumazou & Photo Net, Developing, 2022. Loaned bellow pumps (spare parts for Noritsu Minilab), wiring, stainless steel plinth. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Maria Toumazou & Photo Net, Developing, 2022, and Maria Toumazou, “Entrance to offices”, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Maria Toumazou, “Entrance to offices”, 2022. Found and modified glass door, sliding door mechanism, motion sensor, wiring, dirt. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Maria Toumazou, Graduals, 2022, Felix Taylor, Banister bed prototype, 2022, Maria Toumazou, Found tongues, 2022, and Koula Savvidou, Borrowed time, 2008-9. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Maria Toumazou, Graduals, 2022, and Found tongues series, 2022, and Felix Taylor, Banister bed prototype, 2022 as part of RHYTHM, CITIZEN, Grazer Kunstverein, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Maria Toumazou, Found tongues (city keys), 2022. Nickeled bronze. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Maria Toumazou, Found tongues (body), 2022. Nickeled bronze. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Felix Taylor, Banister bed prototype, 2022, and Claudia Paschalides, Mahmoud/Istanbul, February-August 2022, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Maria Toumazou, Graduals, 2022, and Found tongues (city keys), 2022. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Maria Toumazou, “Caution”, 2022, and Koula Savvidou, Borrowed time, 2008-9. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Maria Toumazou, “Caution”, 2022, and Door (beat), 2022. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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 Installation view of Maria Toumazou, “Caution”, 2022, Door (beat), 2022, and Koula Savvidou, Borrowed time, 2008-9. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Maria Toumazou, “Caution”, 2022, Door (beat), 2022, Untitled, 2022, RHYTHM series, 2022, CITIZEN series, 2022, and Koula Savvidou, Borrowed time, 2008-9. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Maria Toumazou, Untitled, 2022, and RHYTHM (Flowers on white), 2022. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Detail of Maria Toumazou, Untitled, 2022. Fabric (Tecno 401 bronzo), fan parts, motor, wiring. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Maria Toumazou, CITIZEN series, 2022, and RHYTHM series, 2022. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Maria Toumazou, RHYTHM (Linear), RHYTHM (Bell pendulum), RHYTHM (Roman), and RHYTHM (Flowers on white), 2022. Nickeled bronze. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Maria Toumazou, CITIZEN (Blue), CITIZEN (Circle on circle), RHYTHM (Oval), RHYTHM (Clear), and RHYTHM (One piece), 2022. Nickeled bronze. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com

Attentive to the ways object, gesture, and affect are mutually implicated, appendage quivers between the remnants of fractured existence and the unbridled desire and pleasure to hold things—together and anew. Harnessing both situated and dislocated supplies, appendage unfolds as a series of fixtures, both material and situational, that are in turn connected or plugged into the architectural and social infrastructure of the Grazer Kunstverein.

doorways, door frames, bar handles, manual mechanisms, outdoor connectors, door eyes, cabin hooks, hinges, stoppers, 3M double-sided adhesive, self-adhesive, window tint removal kit, PVC shock absorber & screws, holes, original column, modern copy of original column, partition walls, galvanized steel, plasterboard, white paint, Olympia black corded phone, wall text, wall mount system, wall absorbers, phone memory, ring tone, handsets, large buttons, cell dead zones, audio assist feature, remote access, cable, splitter, missed calls, call history, membership fee, membership benefits, dispatches, open letter, agreement template, computer floor, calcium sulphate, high strength polypropylene, vinyl, linoleum, laminate, rubber, panels lowered and reversed, removed carpet, base, head, pedestal assembly, stringer, previous institutional identity, stationery, bumpers, nipple shields, sugar substitute, stretch film, food processor, standard blade, drinking water fountains, fittings, rings, stainless steel pipes, elbow, reducer, tee type, cross type, coupling, unions, adaptors, olet, fixtures, flanges, valves, drains, rub handling, outlets, distribution boards, equipment support, Humanscale NeatLink cable management, defender mini, channel rubber, defender cable crossover defender compact, line wiring, today’s standard, wall jack, 30 meter telephone extension cable, 300 bathing suit sets, 300 shirts, motors, chilled water pump, water booster, transducer, cable, charger, network, alarm, security key box, password, extender pro, repeater pro, long range access point, Waveshare screens, black glass, cartons, organic eggs, safety lights, lights on loan, lights for an exhibition, 3 racks, 6 squares, fluorescent bulbs, electrodes, shunted sockets, screw-type base, thermal paper, adding machines, coating, zero ink system, heat, sun, friction, arm fetish, hand fetish, transport van, CB0209PH, books on events according to your date of birth, old astrology guides, prefaces, wires, metal fences and cages retired from circulation, brushed nickel 6-pack stainless steel, gold threads, interior doors, separators, hand rests, windbreakers, wine glasses, magnetic panties, happiness pills, unseizable property, turquoise shades, exterior emulsion, buckets, ice machine loan, oxygen concentrator, PVC belts, plastic wrap, two identical melamine boxes with locks, Christmas trees, the last 230 objects from a store (sold), various for birds, some big black leather couches, we women complete series, free admission,… aggregate and detach.

appendage emerges in the structural dissection of the institution as a public body. Currents of access, data, phone calls, water supply, temperature, electricity, architecture, geography, legal bond, membership, and support structures are scored anew as they are redistributed, diverted, or disrupted. In such an instance of structural glitch, appendage lifts institutional functions from their normative behaviors and replenishes them with transient affiliations and elective affinities.

appendage exposes how objects and their functions continue drifting inseparably from personal and collective attachments and gives body to the enmeshment between infrastructure and affective economies. It lays the transactional conditions that constitute the collective dimensions of intimacy bare and inflamed.

appendage will be accompanied by prefaces to appendage, a publication with contributions by Arnisa Zeqo, Iris Touliatou, Julie Peeters, Lisa Holzer, Tom Engels, and Quinn Latimer.

appendage will host a sound program with oral contributions by artists including Alison Knowles, Eduardo Costa, Eleni Poulou, Hannah Weiner, among others.

On June 24, in addition to the opening at Grazer Kunstverein, HALLE FÜR KUNST Steiermark (18:00) and <rotor> (20:00) will open their exhibitions. The opening speech at Grazer Kunstverein takes place at 19:00. After the openings, there will be a DJ set and drinks at Kombüse. A shuttle bus from Vienna will be provided:
15:00: Departure Opernringhof, Vienna to Graz
22:30: Departure Burgring 2 to Vienna
Registration at: lw@halle-fuer-kunst.at

Iris Touliatou (b. 1981, Athens) lives and works in Athens. Recent solo exhibitions include Organs, EXILE, Vienna (2020); and Overnight, Radio Athènes, Athens (2019). Touliatou has been part of the group exhibitions 2021 Triennial: Soft Water Hard Stone, New Museum, New York (2021–22); Work and Leisure, Milan (2022), When I state I am an anarchist, PLATO, Ostrava (2022); Anabasis, Rodeo Gallery, Athens (2022); Eclipse, the 7th Athens Biennale (2021); Lives of an Object, Andreas Melas and ARCH, Athens (2021); The Way In, Haus N Athen, Athens (2021); Anti Structure, DESTE Foundation, Athens (2021); Interval, Goethe-Institut Athen (2021); The Same River Twice, Benaki Museum, Athens (2019); and Manifesta 12, 5x5x5: Selected Projects, Palermo (2018), among others. In 2022 Touliatou will participate in SIREN (some poetics) at Amant Foundation, New York. appendage is her first institutional presentation in Austria.

Grazer Kunstverein’s distribution box, 2022. Photo: Simon Veres.
Iris Touliatou, untitled (still not over you), 2022, detail.
Ceiling light fixtures acquired from defunct offices in Athens, fluorescents, circuit, cable, outlets. Photo:
Eftychia Vlachou.
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, frame fetish (column reduction), untitled (diversion) and untitled (sweet and low), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, frame fetish (column reduction) and untitled (diversion), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, untitled (diversion), untitled (oral) and untitled (still not over you), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, untitled (oral), untitled (still not over you) and untitled (sweet and low), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, untitled (oral) and untitled (sweet and low), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, untitled (oral) and untitled (sweet and low), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, untitled (oral) and untitled (sweet and low), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, untitled (oral) and untitled (sweet and low), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, untitled (adults) and untitled (sweet and low), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, untitled (placeholder), untitled (adults) and untitled (sweet and low), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, untitled (placeholder), untitled (adults) and untitled (sweet and low), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, happiness, 2018 to 2022, (to Laurie), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com
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Installation view of Iris Touliatou, untitled (sweet and low) and untitled (placeholder), 2022, as part of appendage, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Courtesy of the artist and Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-dokumentation.com

We are honed to tolerate boring work. The hundred letter words emerging like alphabet soup, like faces in a funhouse mirror, feeling more and more distorted in my body. Everything around, appearing quite tiny, as if seen through a keyhole. We sat rigid, except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production. We sat in this way, pointed to reassemble people. Lights flickering across our eyes. And propped up in attitudes, counterfeiting life,” a female voice rhythmically recites in Sandra Lahire’s Terminals (1986).

we sat rigid except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production is an exhibition that convenes the work of the late British experimental filmmaker Sandra Lahire and the Italian artist and designer Celeste Burlina. Coming from two distinct eras of feminist practice, their piercing meditations on the porosity of the body, labor, and environmental trouble enter into joint fabulation. 

we sat rigid… is host to six films by Lahire, of which five are newly digitized. Her galvanizing handling of the celluloid moving image addresses the ways in which capital and patriarchy mold and deplete vital faculties of the body, the earth, and ultimately the moving image itself. Her first two films, Arrows (1984) and Edge (1986), are firmly rooted in her persistent struggle with anorexia and the idealization of the female body. Together, they render a confronting account of the cultural causes of her drive towards thinness while she simultaneously seizes control over the production of her own image. Terminals (1986) broadens these autobiographical reflections and introduces another cycle of works—Plutonium Blonde (1987), Uranium Hex (1987), and Serpent River (1989)—, which probes into radiation, the mining of uranium, and the social and environmental destruction that comes with it. Against the backdrop of a looming nuclear war and the disintegration of miners’ communities in the United Kingdom and elsewhere in the 1980s, she examines this atomic reality in a fractured, sensitizing fashion. Approximately 35 years later, her concerns gain traction again and put the urgent need for the political recognition of corporeal vulnerability to the fore once more.

Celeste Burlina responds by way of an architectural intervention, carrier (2022), which echoes Lahire’s cinematic exploration of mining, industrial production, and female labor. Attentive to the ways infrastructure enables or obstructs the gathering of bodies and their circulation, Burlina’s proposition cuts through the three galleries of the Kunstverein. Starting off as a deceptive proposition reminiscent of minimalist sculpture, the work transforms and develops in function and meaning as it carries along. Oscillating between the functional and ornamental, carrier both serves as a support structure for Lahire’s moving image and interrogates the body of the Kunstverein as such. Burlina, who is trained as a structural engineer, rewires the function and purposefulness of raw, technical materials—H-beams, chains, rods, bits, and methyl methacrylate sheets—and thwarts her longstanding relationship with such supplies often associated with brute, subjugating forces. As Lahire’s films are brimming with these elements as well, Burlina performs a dialogical act and seeks to undo the rigidity these materials propose while insisting on their potential for powerful transformation.

What is called into being is a sensuous dialogue beyond the limitations of linear time—a resonant space sustained by two voices in fervent inclination.

On the occasion of the exhibition, Grazer Kunstverein will publish we sat rigid…, the first in a series of small volumes of correspondence, responses, and conversations. It includes contributions by Celeste Burlina, Tom Engels, Laura Guy, Calla Henkel, Charlotte Procter, Kerstin Schroedinger, and Miriam Stoney.

The exhibition is developed with the support of LUX, London.

Sandra Lahire (1950-2001, United Kingdom) was a feminist experimental filmmaker. Her artistic legacy includes ten 16 mm films in which she explores the body’s vulnerability. Lahire’s oeuvre investigates the representation of the (female) body and how it comes to bear traces of socio-political and ecological collapse. Lahire was a central member of London’s experimental filmmaking community in the 1980s and 1990s and was involved with the London Film-Makers’ Co-op and the London-based feminist film and video distributors Circles and Cinenova. Her essay “Lesbians in Media Education” was published in Visibly Female in 1987. In 1993, she composed a musical score for Just About Now by the British artist and filmmaker Lis Rhodes. Lahire studied Philosophy at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Fine Art Film at St Martins School of Art, and Film & Environmental Media at the Royal College of Art in London. She passed away after an enduring struggle with anorexia.

Celeste Burlina (b. 1988, Italy; lives in Berlin) works as an artist, designer, and writer. Her exhibition designs and scenographies articulate the relationship between people and infrastructure and focus on the dramaturgy of attention and attending. She developed made-to-measure installations and spatial interventions for “trust & confusion” at Tai Kwun Contemporary, Hong Kong (2021), “30 Years of KW: Anniversary Weekend” (2021) at KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin (2021), Creamcake’s 3hd Festival “Power Play” at Park Center Treptow, Berlin (2021), and “im garten der blicke” at Kunsthaus NRW Kornelimünster, Aachen (2020). Previously, Burlina worked for the design and architecture studio Sub, with whom she completed projects for exhibitions by Anne Imhof at Castello di Rivoli (Turin), Tate Modern (London), and Palais de Tokyo (Paris), as well as for Schinkel Pavillon (Berlin) and Balenciaga. Burlina is a Doctor of Engineering.

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Exhibition view of Celeste Burlina, carrier, 2022, as part of we sat rigid except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-documentation.com
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Exhibition view of Celeste Burlina, carrier, 2022, as part of we sat rigid except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-documentation.com
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Exhibition view of Sandra Lahire, Terminals, 1986, Plutonium Blonde, 1987, and Celeste Burlina, carrier, 2022, as part of we sat rigid except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-documentation.com
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Exhibition view of Sandra Lahire, Terminals, 1986, and Celeste Burlina, carrier, 2022, as part of we sat rigid except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-documentation.com
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Exhibition view of Sandra Lahire, Plutonium Blonde, 1987, Uranium Hex, 1987, and Celeste Burlina, carrier, 2022, as part of we sat rigid except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-documentation.com
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Exhibition view of Sandra Lahire, Arrows, 1984, and Celeste Burlina, carrier, 2022, as part of we sat rigid except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-documentation.com
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Exhibition view of Sandra Lahire, Serpent River, 1989, Arrows, 1984, and Celeste Burlina, carrier, 2022, as part of we sat rigid except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-documentation.com
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Exhibition view of Celeste Burlina, carrier, 2022, as part of we sat rigid except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-documentation.com
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Exhibition view of Sandra Lahire, Serpent River, 1989, and Celeste Burlina, carrier, 2022, as part of we sat rigid except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-documentation.com
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Exhibition view of Sandra Lahire, Arrows, 1984, and Celeste Burlina, carrier, 2022, as part of we sat rigid except for the parts of our bodies that were needed for production, 2022, Grazer Kunstverein. Photo: kunst-documentation.com