| 15% architecture 17% recycling 22% being together 46% day and night
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For raumlaborberlin, building in an age in which the Holocene era has long since given way to the man-made Anthropocene era, when the sediments of the waste products of civilisation by far exceed those of nature, means building with materials that do not need to be newly produced. With material intended for recycling, or with things that have reached the end of their useful lifecycle.
But building a camp for this steirischer herbst also means building for artists, activists, theorists, for visitors, for the city of Graz, for its inhabitants. Building for content, building for the 24/7 enjoyment of being there, giving and taking, discussing, thinking for yourself, learning something new, having a different opinion, having a place where you can be left alone for a while, so as to be able to carry on watching, listening, singing along, getting tired, fighting it. Get a breath of air, go back in, take a break, moan about everything, grab a bite to eat, go to bed.
raumlaborberlin, who transformed the Joanneum into a festival centre at the 2008 steirischer herbst, gives the marathon camp a flexible form, linking the two buildings, the Thalia and Opernring 7, creating a landscape for working and living, a landscape that wants to be used. Not a turnkey facility handed over when the festival begins, but one that is constantly changing during the course of the marathon camp. And which will afterwards proudly sport the scars of a bustling week of living and working.
Programme at the Camp / festival centre
Truth is concrete
A 24/7 marathon camp on artistic strategies in politics and political strategies in art
By raumlaborberlin (Benjamin Foerster-Baldenius, Andrea Hofmann & Jan Liesegang) (D)
With Samuel Carvalho (P), Dan Dorocic (CAN), Anika Neubauer (D), Christian Tonko (A) et al.