I print a black-and-white photo of an admission ticket on six postcards and cut the original ticket into six strips. I mount each strip onto its corresponding position on the postcard. I share the postcards with five German artists.
Work statement

In January 1998, during a short stopover in Madrid, Spain, I took the opportunity to visit the Museo Reina Sofía. It houses one of the most famous artworks of the 20th century: Guernica by Pablo Picasso.

When I arrived in front of the enormous painting (3.50 m by 7.80 m), several groups of mostly young people were gathered around, some standing, others sitting or lounging on the floor. They were absolutely silent: no chatting, not even whispering. They gazed at Guernica with reverence. While one can get an impression of the painting from books or images on the internet, the physical presence of the original is simply overwhelming. I spent half an hour in front of it, and so did many of the others. The amount of pain and despair expressed in this work is heartbreaking; its emotional impact is almost impossible to put into words.

When I left, I carried with me a sense of shared humanity, people my age from across the world, moved by the pain of strangers depicted in a painting. Now I would like to share this experience with five random people by cutting the admission ticket to the museum in pieces, each carrying a trace of that moment.

Postcard with a b/w-print of an admission ticket and a blue paper strip of the original ticket glued on.
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Admission ticket for the "Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía" in Madrid, stamped "08 ENE 1998".
Six postcards with b&w fine art prints and blue paper strips glued on.
Paper and fine art print on paper, 2025 | Set of six pieces, one of which is sent to myself as an artist’s proof.