Concrete Jungle

Fri, 22 Jul 2016
18:00-22:00

On view
22 Jul-31 Jul 2016

Concrete Jungle

Every day, huge apartment buildings grow seemingly overnight in cities that appear to be outgrowing themselves. In Beijing, as blocks of hutangs are torn down to make way for new skyscrapers, massive apartment complexes further out from the city are built to house the workers that are misplaced. These apartments become run down due to shoddy material and building practices, are sometimes dangerous places to reside, and are often packed to the brim with more people than is appropriate.

Tenement Rising will be a 4 meter tall, 3 meter wide wall of small ­scale apartment buildings, butted up against one another to form a colossal shape of an over sized building. The buildings are attached together and appear as an overwhelming wall of concrete, plaster, windows, and dirty yet vibrant facades. Small lights, images, and video show through the dingy, curtained windows. The massive number of buildings alludes to the issues of overpopulation, crowding, and poverty in large cities across the world.

Tracey Snelling's exhibition Concrete Jungle at Hilbertraum, curated by Andy Holtin, will preview some of her works for her upcoming solo exhibition in September at Krupic Kersting in Cologne. She will also be exhibiting additional works. This will be Snelling's first exhibition in Berlin.

Snelling, a native of Oakland, California, is participating in a self-made residency in Berlin from February until October 2016. She is a recent recipient of the Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters and Sculptors grant, and is presently working on a commission with the Historical Museum of Frankfurt.

Sat & Sun 14:00-19:00;
Finissage July 29 18:00-22:00

Tracey Snelling
Tracey Snelling