TEAM



Conceived by


Almut Rink and Carola Platzek


Orientation as Gardening, Part I: Tokyo realized by


Almut Rink and Carola Platzek


Orientation as Gardening, Part 2: London realized by


Almut Rink

In cooperation with:


Ursula Reisenberger


Beyond Orientation: Vienna realized by


Almut Rink

Co-curated by:


Anne Eggebert

In cooperation with:


Ursula Reisenberger

With contributions of


Margot Bannerman (GB)
Ben Cain (GB)
Sarah Cole (GB)
Regula Dettwiler (AT)
Kyoko Ebata (JP)
Anne Eggebert (GB)
Polly Gould (GB)
Matthew Wang (SGP)


Collaboration, Realisation of the Assemblage Boards


Gerald Freimuth

Architectural and spatial cooperation


Burak Genc

Collaborative Writing (Part I)


Kathrin Schedl

Project Coordination Tokyo


Tatsuhiko and Hiroko Murata, Makiko Tsuji

Web Programming


Wolfgang Oblasser, althaler+oblasser

Translation (English)


Sophie Strohmeier, Hillary Keel

Translation (Japanese)


Yuta Negishi



Almut Rink

is an artist and looks back on over 17 years of exhibition practice. Her strategy in her exhibitions, books, lectures, and other projects has been to draw together and affect an audience with the semiotic content of language – text, images, gestures. Her videos and inter-media installations treat motifs such as topoi, nature, metaphor, I/ego/self, individual. Her work has been exhibited internationally.


Carola Platzek’s

is a writer. Her art research has focused for years on the mediation and translation of the image into language and vice versa. She understands herself to be a writer who sees a path in the visual arts. Her most recent explorations include the composition of narratives and the notion of the subject, like in Asian thinking, Greek discourses and it's possible entanglements with certain comtemporary approaches.

Tsukioka Kōgyo
Nōga taikan (Encyclopedia of Noh Plays )
Ugetsu (Rain and Moon)
1926, 25.4 x 37.1 cm
Seibi Shoten (or Seibi Shoin), Tokyo
Tsukioka Kōgyo
Nōga taikan (Encyclopedia of Noh Plays )
Ugetsu (Rain and Moon)
1926, 25.4 x 37.1 cm
Seibi Shoten (or Seibi Shoin), Tokyo