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Friday, May 8, 2026 |
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| Michael Beutler wins Nam June Paik Award 2026 for paper-processing 'Workshop' |
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Michael Beutler, Tapetenwechsel, Kunstmuseum Gelsenkirchen, 2026. © Michael Beutler. Photo: Bozica Babic, Kunststiftung NRW.
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GELSENKIRCHEN.- In collaboration with the Kunstmuseum Gelsenkirchen, the Art Award of the Kunststiftung NRWNam June Paik Award 2026 is awarded to the artist Michael Beutler. The internationally renowned award is endowed with 25,000 Euros.
Michael Beutler is honoured for his expansive installation Tapetenwechsel (Change of Scenery), which transforms the former industrialist villa from the late 19th century into an artistic and artisanal production facilitya multi-storey workshop where waste paper is processed into sculptural objects.
The manufacturing process itself becomes a central component of the exhibition. In specially constructed apparatuses, old books, catalogues and other materials are processed into pulp and used to create long paper webs, which are then used to redecorate the rooms of the villa. Machines, tools and production processes remain visible and on site, making the transformation of the material immediately tangible. The site-specific work combines the industrial and artisanal history of the city of Gelsenkirchen with the idea of the museum as an imaginative place where art inspires shared experiences and thinking ahead. With its interactive component, the work also ties in with the kinetic collection focus of the museum.
Jury member Zoë Gray (Director of Exhibitions, Bozar Centre for Fine Arts, Brussels) said in her laudatory speech for Michael Beutler: When I was asked to nominate artists for this prize, with a resulting exhibition at the Kunstmuseum Gelsenkirchen with its strong collection of kinetic art, I thought immediately of Michael Beutler. Working across genres, he encourages alternative perceptions, opens up new points of view, and explores new approaches to making art. His works can be understood as reactions to both architectural and social structures. In a world saturated with digital imagery, his work offers an experience rooted in materiality, and a direct, tangible encounter.
Michael Beutler (born in 1976, lives and works in Berlin and Aachen) studied at the Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main under Thomas Bayrle and at the Glasgow School of Art. He is known for his monumental and mainly walk-in installations made of simple, recyclable materials, which he processes with tools he has built himself. The concept of the workshop plays a central role in his work: each of these works is created in a newly established production environment that itself becomes part of the artistic practice.
A support award is also bestowed as part of the Art Award of the Kunststiftung NRW. It is conferred on artist and curator Lisa Klosterkötter (*1990, lives and works in Cologne). For the Kunstmuseum Gelsenkirchen, she developed the multi-part exhibition and event format "Ein Dorf" (A Village), which explores forms of community, neighbourhood and public coexistence. Readings, artistic interventions and performative formats, both indoors and outdoors, reflect the museums self-image as a place of reflection and exchange.
The exhibition will remain open until August 16, 2026. Admission is free.
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