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Text: Tell me something about tomorrow
At Kunstverein Lüneburg, Ellen Möckel invites visitors to reflect on the attitudes, expectations, and perspectives they bring with them upon entering the exhibition space. The participatory spatial installation explores how encounters with art can open up new possibilities for action and generate alternative ways of seeing.
The exhibition is conceived as an open experimental field in which visitors assume not only observational but also active roles. Through interaction with the installation, they become part of an ongoing exchange between space, work, and perception. Visitors were able to inscribe their thoughts, associations, and responses directly onto a glass panel integrated into the wooden structure using a Dremel and stylus. The resulting traces were later transferred, after the exhibition’s conclusion, into a large-scale print on handmade paper, transforming them into an independent work.
At the same time, the artist incorporated fragments of these collectively produced drawings, marks, and texts into hern continuously expanding archive of forms. The visitors’ inscriptions thus became part of an open artistic process and serve as a starting point for future works. In this way, the exhibition extends beyond its own duration, revealing how individual perspectives can merge into collective visual narratives. »Tell Me Something About Tomorrow« opens a space of reflection in which personal experiences encounter broader social, technological, and cultural contexts, making new forms of agency visible.













photo credit: © Hans Jürgen-Wege, 2023





















Text: Tell me something about tomorrow
At Kunstverein Lüneburg, Ellen Möckel invites visitors to reflect on the attitudes, expectations, and perspectives they bring with them upon entering the exhibition space. The participatory spatial installation explores how encounters with art can open up new possibilities for action and generate alternative ways of seeing.
The exhibition is conceived as an open experimental field in which visitors assume not only observational but also active roles. Through interaction with the installation, they become part of an ongoing exchange between space, work, and perception. Visitors were able to inscribe their thoughts, associations, and responses directly onto a glass panel integrated into the wooden structure using a Dremel and stylus. The resulting traces were later transferred, after the exhibition’s conclusion, into a large-scale print on handmade paper, transforming them into an independent work.
At the same time, the artist incorporated fragments of these collectively produced drawings, marks, and texts into hern continuously expanding archive of forms. The visitors’ inscriptions thus became part of an open artistic process and serve as a starting point for future works. In this way, the exhibition extends beyond its own duration, revealing how individual perspectives can merge into collective visual narratives. »Tell Me Something About Tomorrow« opens a space of reflection in which personal experiences encounter broader social, technological, and cultural contexts, making new forms of agency visible.
photo credit: © Hans Jürgen-Wege, 2023







