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The
research-oriented practice of Anca Benera and Arnold Estefán spans a
range of media, including installation, video, and performance. Their
work addresses historical, social, and geopolitical narratives and their
underlying power structures. In recent Benera and Estefán focus on
ecological issues such as extractivism and the overexploitation of
natural resources as well as the overlaps between environmental concerns
and military affairs.


Rehearsals for Peace – their first solo exhibition in Germany – looks at the absurdities of warfare and the militarization of nature. In particular, it examines the paradoxical dynamics between military readiness, simulated operations, and the desire for peace.

Member countries of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) on the edge of Eastern Europe, such as Romania, occupy an important geostrategic role in the establishment of military training grounds and bases. These sites are often located in nature reserves – places that otherwise stand for seclusion and recreation – and include areas in rural Transylvania, endangering local ecosystems. The video Rehearsals for Peace (2023) – co-produced by the n.b.k. Video-Forum – draws on various folk traditions for warding off evil spirits, such as the Transylvanian custom of Urzelnlaufen. Rehearsals for Peace will be shown for the first time, as part of a site-specific installation and together with Perpetual Harvest (2023), a series of woven straw sculptures that recall an ancient harvest ritual accompanying the seasonal rhythm of wheat cultivation.

Anca Benera (*1977 in Constanța / Romania) and Arnold Estefán (*1978 in Târgu Secuiesc / Romania) have worked together since 2012 and are based in Bucharest and Vienna. In 2022, they received the Birgit Jürgenssen Award of the Austrian Federal Ministry for Art, Culture, Civil Service and Sport. Their work has been shown at venues such as Museum Tinguely, Basel (2023); Whitechapel Gallery, London (2023); Biennale Matter of Art, Prague (2022); Trafó Galéria, Budapest (solo, 2021); Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zurich (2021); MUCEM, Marseille (2019).

Curators: Krisztina Hunya, Diana Marincu
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Participating artists
Anca Benera & Arnold Estefán