
This musical theatre installation creates a space in which satisfaction can be experienced immersively and celebrated collectively, and in which the audience will be fully entertained through a multi-sensory experience. But can this honestly escapist shared experience really counterbalance the constant feeling of crisis and overwhelm?
A collective media meditation: coloured foam is gently sliced into disks, a dirty carpet gets a thorough deep clean, a hydraulic press crushes a variety of objects. Pointless processes, absurd repetitions, one-size-fits-all automations: they all trigger a sense of contentment and wellbeing in us as a counterpoint to an increasingly complex reality.
“Oddly Satisfying” is the name given to an internet phenomenon that forms the focus of SATISFACTIONACTION, an installation that has attracted millions of views on multiple platforms. Most of us are familiar with the odd sense of comfort afforded by day-to-day routine actions. Suddenly everything jells, luggage fits snugly into the car boot, the train is caught calmly with a minute to spare, the blackhead is discreetly squeezed.
What is it that gives us that warm feeling and what lengths are we prepared to go to to bring it about? Do these hard-to-define mechanisms function only on an innocent neuronal level or is there a social element at play involving norms of behaviour, success and failure, belonging and exclusion? And are these deep-seated needs not also met by our schadenfreude at the plight of an irritating colleague or by our membership of a group, which automatically implies the exclusion of others?
In SATISFACTIONACTION the gratification is both felt on an individual level and celebrated communally, with the public immersed in a multisensory experience. It also poses the question: can a transparently escapist, communal moment counterbalance a permanent feeling of crisis and pressure? Does communal satisfaction provide the basis for agreeing on a new understanding of reality, or is it just us running away from a world on fire?
Spotlight
The contemporary music of composer Max Andrzejewski is informed by the minimal and jazz genres and the ASMR movement. As a percussionist with improvised-music leanings, he is also one of the eight members of the SATISFACTIONACTION ensemble, which is made up of Kaleidoskop soloists and other musicians with close artistic links to Andrzejewski.
This collaboration with the singers of the Vocantare Chorus and choreographer Sylvana Seddig is embedded within the space and video installation of Lukas Zerbst. The result is a composition consisting of spatially and temporally shifting and overlapping layers, merging into constellations, one that mirrors and renders experiential the bases of our need for fulfilment.
Additional information
A strangely contenting musical-theatre installation within an art installation by Lukas ZerbstFirst performed on 14 September 2025 at Beethovenfest BonnBerlin premiere on 2 October 2025 at the Tischlerei of Deutsche Oper Berlin
Participating artists
Max Andrzejewski (Komposition, Konzept, Musikalische und Künstlerische Leitung)
Lukas Zerbst (Raumkonzept, Bühne, Ausstattung und Live Kamera)
Maria Buzhor (Dramaturgie)
Sylvana Seddig (Choreografie)
Philipp Wernemann (Chorleitung)
Yannick Wittmann (Chorleitung)
Jeremy Nothman (Sounddesign)
Martin Beeretz (Lichtdesign)
YMUSIC (Produktion)
Mari Sawada (Violine)
Gregoire Simon (Viola)
Isabelle Klemt (Violoncello)
James Banner (Kontrabass)
Annie Bloch (Gitarre / Truhenorgel)
Arne Braun (Gitarre)
Marco Mlynek (Gitarre)
Max Andrzejewski (Schlagwerk)
Sänger*innen des Chors Vocantare (sowie mit)