Tulip Art Projects are a Berlin-based art collective. According to their homepage, they like to imagine themselves "fighting artistic dysfunctionalty a day at a time with inclusive art strategies".
They do this by way of public art presentations and self-organized exhibitions at clubs and other public places in Germany, Holland, Italy, and China, since 1991.
Tulip Art Projects has had solo shows at Showroom MaMA, Haus am Lützowplatz, V!P'sLab. Its work can be found in the collections of Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, and in many private collections around the world.
Exhibitions they organized featured Jim Avignon, Jn.Ulrick Désert, Ari Versluis/Ellie Uyttenbroek, Kiddy Citny, Lutz Pramann, Daniel Ginelli, Betty Stürmer, Säckl & Schmalschläger, Cecile Coiffard, Astrid Küver, Kinya Hanada/Mumbleboy, Sharon Pazner, Cross stitch ninja & Kathrin Schaedlich.
An indeep interview with Betty Stürmer about Tulip's art projects has appeared in the Flyer Soziotope book. More recently, the My Gay Eye anthology has featured their Ceramixed Plates.
Tulip Art Projects like to listen to electronic music, old sound effects records, minimal classical piano music, ethnographic recordings, early Asian popular music & 80's synth and industrial bands.
Their favorite artists are outsiders like Yayoi Kusama and Henry Darger, sissy artists like Gilbert & George and Warhol, feminist artists like Rosemarie Trockel and Lari Pittman.
Tulip Art Projects like art movements that take art back into society, like Constructivism, Club-art, 60's Psychedelica, Kinetica and Pop-art.
Currently the artists are preparing new group shows, and are busy making erotic and political wall plates out of old G.D.R. porcelain for a select but growing audience.
IMPORTANT © COPYRIGHT NOTICE
TO AD AGENCIES, PUBLISHERS AND THE LIKE
The photos (ánd the art they depict) contained in our gallery is copyrighted ©1995-2011 Tulip Art Projects. All rights reserved. It may not be reproduced, copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without our written permission. The photos, and the art they depict, do not belong to the public domain. If you have doubts about this matter email us.
- JoinedApril 2005
- OccupationThey think they're artists.
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