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Products description
Anonym
poster for Hamburger Moorweide
LUNA LUNA
André Heller
1987
colour offset
84 cm x 59 cm
good condition
order no.: 33561
Under the slogan “A Wonderful Treat”, from 4 June to 31 August 1987, the public was able to visit an avant-garde amusement park and “contemporary art fair” at Hamburg’s Moorweide, near Dammtor station. Performers there included jugglers, tightrope walkers, street musicians, acrobats and artistic flatulists; street theatre was performed and there were walk-in sculptures.
According to Heller, the realisation of the project fulfilled a childhood dream of his. [1] This took place with the collaboration and participation of Hubert Aratym, Christian Ludwig Attersee, Joseph Beuys, Georg Baselitz, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Arik Brauer, Günter Brus, Salvador Dalí (whose nudes could be viewed on mirrors in the ‘Dali-Dom’ accompanied by music by Philip Glass), Manfred Deix (‘Palace of the Winds’), Sonia Delaunay (entrance gate), Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Erté, Gerti Fröhlich, Monika Gilsing, Keith Haring, Wolfgang Herzig, David Hockney, Rebecca Horn, Friedensreich Hundertwasser, Jörg Immendorff, Roy Lichtenstein (who designed a glass labyrinth with exterior façades), Hermann Nitsch, Peter Pongratz, Patrick Raynaud, Kenny Scharf, Susanne Schmögner, Daniel Spoerri, Jean Tinguely, Roland Topor, August Walla and Jim Whiting (in whose installation elaborately constructed robots ‘performed’, one of which read out texts by Enzensberger). Philip Glass, Miles Davis and Al Jarreau were the composers of the ‘fairground music’.
Translated with DeepL.com (free version)
poster for Hamburger Moorweide
LUNA LUNA
André Heller
1987
colour offset
84 cm x 59 cm
good condition
order no.: 33561
Under the slogan “A Wonderful Treat”, from 4 June to 31 August 1987, the public was able to visit an avant-garde amusement park and “contemporary art fair” at Hamburg’s Moorweide, near Dammtor station. Performers there included jugglers, tightrope walkers, street musicians, acrobats and artistic flatulists; street theatre was performed and there were walk-in sculptures.
According to Heller, the realisation of the project fulfilled a childhood dream of his. [1] This took place with the collaboration and participation of Hubert Aratym, Christian Ludwig Attersee, Joseph Beuys, Georg Baselitz, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Arik Brauer, Günter Brus, Salvador Dalí (whose nudes could be viewed on mirrors in the ‘Dali-Dom’ accompanied by music by Philip Glass), Manfred Deix (‘Palace of the Winds’), Sonia Delaunay (entrance gate), Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Erté, Gerti Fröhlich, Monika Gilsing, Keith Haring, Wolfgang Herzig, David Hockney, Rebecca Horn, Friedensreich Hundertwasser, Jörg Immendorff, Roy Lichtenstein (who designed a glass labyrinth with exterior façades), Hermann Nitsch, Peter Pongratz, Patrick Raynaud, Kenny Scharf, Susanne Schmögner, Daniel Spoerri, Jean Tinguely, Roland Topor, August Walla and Jim Whiting (in whose installation elaborately constructed robots ‘performed’, one of which read out texts by Enzensberger). Philip Glass, Miles Davis and Al Jarreau were the composers of the ‘fairground music’.
Translated with DeepL.com (free version)