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ABOUT

Bad Machines

I first saw one of Steinmacher’s Manifestos, consisting of a lonely yellow parasol appearing to independently rotate, canary sail’s hypnotically twirling above a concrete chunk shaped like a helmet cut midway through, like a mad dandelion sprung from a decapitation. I was touched by how bad this machine was, how whatever task it had been designed for, it seemed pathetically ineligible. It seemed to be a machine with no destination or use, getting dizzy in its dogged pursuit of a sisyphean circle and this felt a little tragic, and a lot relatable. Perhaps what makes Miriam Steinmacher’s instruments special is their very failure of function, where the emphasis isn’t on efficiency but expression and in their aptitude for unsteadiness, they end up resembling people more than machines. Her works are often composites of the detritus of everyday doings, things which unconsciously accumulate, umbrellas, spoons, mirrors, to-do lists, pots and pans, and then some more unique items, such as organ pipes, which suggest another kind of ritual, and the contemporary trend of self-improvement as another kind of religion. Her work often questions the social fascination with progress and accumulation at the expense of life, by embodying inverse relations to a capitalist tendency of dehumanization. Seen again in Fountainheads - composed of gurgling fountains and reclaimed mattresses, arranged in stoic columns like nymphs bathing in a fleshy sculpture garden. Again, the viewer is asked to challenge their own corporeality, to suspend their disbelief for the anthropomorphisation of object, because if you look at it one way, what are people if not mumbling, padded towers of water? Or in Rippled Echoes, where organ pipes pierced through pots chirped, spit and sung in the space, giving the little kitchen machines competitive voices. All of Steinmacher’s works contemplate the social arrangement of people through objecthood, while reflecting a contemporary paradox of the prosumer, wherein the producer and consumer become indistinguishable, and like our parasol, enter the sisyphean spin cycle.
It is this feeling which is evoked in her works time and again, which feels so true to the contemporary, of continuing to spin without course, of living in the tide of an impossible motor, but also of the fragile beauty and movement of that moment, which is to say life.

by Alex Thake

CONTACT

miriamsteinmacher@live.de

CV

1992
born in Flörsheim am Main

2021
diploma with distinction, University of Art and Design Offenbach,
art department with Kitty Kraus (sculpture), Prof. Dr. Juliane Rebentisch (philosophy), Eike König (graphic design) & Frank Witzel (text)

2019 - 2020
Athens School of Fine Art

Living and working in Frankfurt am Main.

SCHOLARSHIPS / RESIDENCIES

Fellowship Hessische Kulturstiftung 2025/2026

2023
Artist in Residency, Museum for Modern and Contemporary Art Seoul

Annual fellowship Stiftung Künstlerhilfe Frankfurt

2022
project funding by Hessisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst

2021
NEUSTART KULTUR- stipend of the Stiftung Kunstfonds

Theory Prize through the sponsorship of the Schleicher Foundation

2020
project scholarship Hessische Kultur Stiftung, Wiesbaden

2018 & 2019
nominated for „Rundgrangspreis Künstlerhilfe Frankfurt e.V“

EXHIBITIONS

2025
LOLLYGAGGER Kunstverein Bellevue-Saal, Wiesbaden
Tales of Trickles III
Bistro Bonanza, Frankfurt (S)
A GIRL NAMED LUCKY_ GOLD+BETON, Köln (G)

2024
Until Then I Levitate tresor35, Frankfurt (S)
Die absoluten Früchte ernten
Freitagsküche, Frankfurt (L)
Trampelpfad Der Gefühle drei: Stainless Steel Edition_ Frankfurt (G)

2023
Heavy Rotations_ MagmaMaria, Offenbach am Main (G)
Nachbilder, Frappant Galerie, Hamburg (G)
Jeans Vorhang, Projektraum Elbestraße.10, Basis Frankfurt e.V (G)
Saturn oppositions, Offenbach am Main (G)
Am Wegesrand gehen, die Uhr tickt, Magma Maria, Offenbach am Main (G)

2022
REMEDY, Cream Athens, TAF Foundation, Athens (G)
AMUSE GUEULE, OKAY Initiative Space, Athens (G)
Literatur und Leichtigkeit, Studio294, Frankfurt am Main (R)
Katze im Sack, Projektraum Elbestraße.10, Basis Frankfurt e.V (G)
Ora Forma, BlumenOraOra, Frankfurt am Main (G)
Of Second Glances, MagmaMaria, Offenbach am Main (R)

2021
HAUS WIEN, Kunstverein Haus, Vienna (G)
Leasing Vol.1, AutohausAutohaus, Kassel (G)
stone in a riverbed, MagmaMaria, Offenbach am Main (S)
window smooches, MagmaMaria, Offenbach am Main (G, A)
Sugar Tip, flowershop, Offenbach am Main (G)

2020
internal fantasies, diegrotte, Offenbach am Main (G)
Edeltropfen, Finowfurt (G)
Fast Forward Threshold On Until Then I Levitate, Fonda Space, Leipzig (S)
Trampelpfad Der Gefühle zwei: Jetzt erst recht!- Edition, Frankfurt (G)
Trampelpfad Der Gefühle eins: Agapi Edition, Filopappou, Athens (G)
Skrupel, Kerameikos, Athens (G)

2019
I caught a glimpse of you on the escalator stairs, Projektraum Elbestraße.10, Basis Frankfurt e.V (G)
Die Krise, Offenbach (Kollaboration mit Kathrin Baumgartner) (P)
Blockadia Tiefsee, Gallerikit, Trondheim, Norwegen (G)
Junge Kunst im Garten, Sommerfest der Opelvillen Rüsselsheim (G)
Cuore croccante, Calle Ramo III Piave, Venice (G)

2018
above and against: random, Projektraum Elbestraße.10, Basis Frankfurt e.V (R), (C)
lounger, Universitätsgalerie Oktogon, Wuppertal (S)
eight corners comfort, Universitätsgalerie Oktogon, Wuppertal (G)

(S) Soloexhibition; (G) Groupexhibition; (R) Reading;
(C) Catalogue; (P) Performance; (A) Auction

IMPRINT

Inhaltlich verantwortlich gemäß Paragraph 55 Abs. 2 RStV:
Miriam Steinmacher
Seilerstraße 15
60313 Frankfurt am Main

Die Meritokraten, 2025
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organ pipe, radial blower, tape,
wire, exposed concrete

Miriam Steinmacher & Thilo Jenssen: Lollygagger
Kunstverein Bellevue-Saal, Wiesbaden
18 September – 2 November 2025

Five years ago, when the overdriven machinery of late capitalism suddenly ground to a halt, a question emerged: could such a rupture also hold potential, a pause in the hamster wheel, a space for different ways of thinking? That brief moment of idealism soon gave way to renewed acceleration. The race for efficiency intensified, and technological change sped up processes at an almost unimaginable pace. Within a short span, artificial intelligence transformed from utopian promise to everyday companion – an extension of both physical and cognitive being with the explicit aim of eliminating human error.
Against this backdrop, the title Lollygagger—an old-fashioned English term for idling, dawdling or procrastinating—appears almost defiant. It describes precisely that which has no place in a culture of constant self-optimisation. Steinmacher and Jenssen take up the term as a productive counterfigure, an emblem of slowness, hesitation, and the generative potential of failure.
Lethargic yet striving, Miriam Steinmacher’s fragile characters stretch across the exhibition space in The Meritocrats (2025). Four organ pipes, connected to a radial blower, hang from wire rods, taped to their concrete bases. As if exhausted, these supposed representatives of a performance-driven society bend from their round pedestals towards the ground. Each pipe produces a single tone; together they form a slightly dissonant polyphony. Originally designed for harmony within an organ, they falter here in their function. Instead of consonance, they produce an echo that lands nowhere. They appear as solitary figures on alien terrain, their communication falling flat.
Concrete bases, wires and organ pipes combine in Steinmacher’s practice into corporeal forms that oscillate between the anthropomorphic and the animalistic. Sculpturally, the quartet moves somewhere between the tactile materiality of Franz West and the situational humour of Erwin Wurm. In this vulnerable yet comic reimagining of everyday objects, The Meritocrats become stand-ins for our own selves within a society of relentless achievement. Their overstretched exhaustion mirrors the communication mechanisms of the present: constant availability, much noise, little substance. Steinmacher treats failure not as a shortcoming but as a principle. Her sculptures are disarmingly human precisely because they resist the illusion of flawless perfection.
Thilo Jenssen likewise foregrounds the human element of making. His Blech Paintings (all 2025) are composed of lacquered and ground steel panels joined by spot welding at 1700 degrees Celsius. Marked by prominent seams, they assert a raw, Frankenstein-like presence. Stretched along the gallery walls, they trace a material line through the Bellevue-Saal. What once seemed fragmentary resolves through proportion and colour into a dystopian vision of abstract modernism. Using recycled metal, Jenssen’s approach evokes an uneasy, futuristic premonition. What once belonged to the domain of smooth, impersonal colour-field painting becomes here a visible record of labour and process. The works play with the genealogies of the traditional painted panel and testify to the physical presence of work itself.
His palette—yellow, green, red, blue—and his formats often reference visual systems of the public sphere: underground lines, wayfinding schemes, floor plans, shop signage. In abstracting these semiotic structures, Jenssen reveals his interest in the invisible power of architecture to guide movement. He points towards a built reality that is never neutral but one that shapes behaviour.
In his new video work Sisyphean Loop (2025), developed in collaboration with his brother Ole Jenssen, this enquiry is translated into the digital. A neural network, fed with prompts and datasets from hardware stores, scenes of manual labour and DIY tutorials, generates endless sequences. Yet the actions derail. What first appears as staged reenactment of human tasks soon reveals itself as synthetic simulation: sand being polished, spray cans emitting light, screws turned into nothingness. Like a game of digital Chinese Whispers, seemingly logical operations dissolve into absurdity, forming a dadaist chain of misfires.
The screens are mounted on steel-tube structures reminiscent of handrails in buses or underground carriages, frameworks that stabilise the body while also directing its position. A solid construction, then, for an increasingly unstable video. The longer one watches, the more dystopian and surreal the details appear, as if reality itself were slipping out of joint. The work speaks to our sensorily overloaded present while offering a comic relief, a brief moment of humour amid the growing pressures and promises of digital optimisation.
At the core of both the Blech Paintings and Sisyphean Loop lie fundamental gestures: adding and removing, dismantling and reassembling. In the metal works, these are inscribed materially as welds, abrasions and seams. In the digital realm, they are simulated, varied and looped into absurd perpetuity. The AI-generated video unfolds from technoid transformation into visually heightened fragments of everyday life. Across this shift emerges a hypervisual artificiality that transcends material boundaries and examines the relationship between body, technology and action. Jenssen’s practice spans an ontologically and materially charged spectrum, from the physical presence of the Blech Paintings to the purely digital existence of algorithmically generated images.
To the absurdity of omnipresent echo chambers and the immaterial promises of artificial intelligence, Steinmacher and Jenssen respond with analogue, almost playful installations and sculptural works. They open a space for reflection on the material and the bodily, particularly at a moment when the physical world seems ever more diminished in comparison to the digital webspace. What remains uncertain is how long it will take before, amid the delirium of imminent AI perfection, the flawed and human-made might once again be recognised for its value.
Kierkegaard, Sartre and Camus all understood failure as a fundamental condition of human existence. Steinmacher and Jenssen’s sculptural characters and metallic paintings recall this insight. Comforting, almost encouraging, they affirm the processual, the failed, the imperfect—and with it the tangible and the authentic.
— Maja Lisewski

Link

@installationshots / Jakob Otter