Nadin Reschke
bangaloREsident@1 Shanthi Road

Nadin Reschke (*1975 in Bernburg an der Saale) studied fine art at the University of Wales and at the HfBK Dresden, where she was a master student of Ulrike Grossarth. In 2008 she completed the Goldrausch postgraduate program and received a working grant in 2009, a project grant from the Berlin Senate Administration in 2013 and a travel grant from the ifa/Institute for Foreign Contacts in 2018. 

She works as an artist in a wide variety of social contexts. At the center of her work is the design of processes and situations of communication. The result is a way of working that is based on direct exchange and often leads to multiple authorship. She lives and works in Berlin, but many of her works are created in transcultural contexts. The themes that occupy her in these often long-term projects are inclusion/exclusion, identitary attributions, migration and mobility.

Fabrics as a versatile and changeable sculptural material are frequently used in Nadin Reschke's artistic practice. She uses them to visualize identities, collective history and individual experiences. The fabrics serve both as an image carrier and as a means of artistic expression. This was also the case in her project so far so good (2004/05): With a self-designed tent made of white, almost transparent parachute silk - which she had made according to her individual measurements - the artist traveled for two years along the Silk Road to fourteen countries, including Iran, Pakistan and India. She offered residents of the respective places the opportunity to use the tent temporarily for joint activities and to embroider pictures and texts on the tent walls. These could be read by others as artistic and personal messages across borders and enter into a dialog with new recordings.
 
During the bangaloREsidency, Nadin Reschke plans to invite local artist colleagues and Bangaloreans from diverse backgrounds to develop a series of site-specific interventions in everyday urban life. She will get to know Bangalore through her textiles and create a temporary textile city archive at 1 Shanthiroad with various textile mappings.

Final Report