Nina Fischer (b. 1965, Emden Germany) and Maroan el Sani (b.1966, Duisburg Germany) have been photographing the entrances to temporary nightclubs in Berlin. Because they are illegal, these venues are often only occupied for one night, and the signs of the event are ephemeral graffiti and posters. The artists were invited to seek out and document similar events in Liverpool, a city famous for its club life. As it turned out, Liverpool did have such clubs 20 or 25 years ago, but these have now become established venues.
The artists decided not to show the entrances of these more established spaces, but instead to find obscure sites where a club could have been (or might one day be held). They brought with them posters made from their Berlin photographs, which they put up near the entrances of these phantom sites. They then re–photographed the posters in situ. The resulting photographs were run off as a poster series and pasted around Liverpool, suggesting potential or fictitious club sites.
Back in the gallery space the Berlin club photographs and the phantom images were hung together. Fischer and El Sani made interesting comparisons between Berlin and Liverpool. Whereas Berlin has been attracting thousands of young people since the ’90s, Liverpool has been partially emptied since the decline of its shipping industry. Like the Mitte of Berlin when the wall first came down, there are whole areas of empty buildings that lend themselves to informal occupation. In Berlin this happened spontaneously. First came the squatters, many of whom were artists. The authorities accepted and even encouraged their activities just to get life back into the streets.
Phantom Clubs Liverpool/Berlin, 1999
13 A0 lamda-prints, 500 A0 offset, 12 A0 digital prints
Courtesy of the artists and Galerie Eigen + Art, Berlin
Liverpool Biennial
55 New Bird Street
Liverpool L1 0BW
Liverpool Biennial is funded by
Founding Supporter
James Moores