You are inundated with information, disinformation, propaganda, images, videos, entreaties, siren calls, threats, promises, summaries, conjecture, stunning beauty, deliberate obfuscations, ethereal reveries, and alluring promises from the moment you awake until the moment you collapse, semi-sleepless—a waking stew that either propels you forward or leaves you immobile. Institutions and conventions are deteriorating and transforming, food is becoming fashion, tyranny is turning into entertainment, fiat currency is declining, and there is endless war in the name of peace. Do you have a plan? Will it succeed? Are we living in a Fellini film?”

“The actors are hired, the set if being built, the press is informed,” says Berlinian artist Johannes Mundinger about the film ‘8 ½’, “but what no one knows is that the director has no idea about the story line, yet.”
In a hyper-stimulated world, we are besieged by an onslaught of information and sensory overload—a somewhat relentless droning hum. The lines blur between reality and spectacle, much like the swirling confusion in Federico Fellini’s cinematic masterpiece, “8 ½”. The film portrays a director, overwhelmed and directionless amidst the clamor of production. Similarly, Berlin-based artist Johannes Mundinger captured this beautiful chaos in his recent solo exhibition, “La Bella Confusione,” at Urban Spree Galerie in Berlin.

Held at the renowned raw campus and sometimes circus at Revaler Str. 99 in the vibrant district of Friedrichshain, the exhibition spanned two months in early 2024. A showcase of paintings and the act of creation, Mundinger transformed the gallery’s vast 175 square meters into a live studio. Here, the walls became canvases and vice versa, reflecting the artist’s internal musings and the external pressures reminiscent of Fellini’s fictional director. The title “La Bella Confusione” or “The Beautiful Confusion” aptly encapsulates the essence of Mundinger’s work—drawing parallels between the chaotic process of artistic creation and the disorderly splendor of our contemporary existence.
Here we show Mundinger’s extended artistic dialogue on an outer wall of Urban Spree, perhaps serving as a testament to the ephemeral nature of creativity and the perpetual influence of our surroundings.




Other Articles You May Like from BSA:
Happy Holidays! We’re celebrating the end of one year and the beginning of the next by thanking BSA readers, friends, and family for all of your support in 2022. We have selected some of our favo...
Not quite spring, the Art Fairs are arriving in New York ahead of the tulips. We strolled the impossibly long aisles and peered into the booths to find the folks who have at other times been called ...
Today we celebrate the life of and honor the leadership of Martin Luther King Jr. on this very cold winters' day in New York. Among his many writings and speeches are the ones that ultimately ide...
To commemorate the third anniversary of the collapse of a 210 meter section of the Ponte Morandi on August 14, 2018, today we share Dourone’s newest mural in Genoa, Italy. The bridge collapsed during...
Contemporary Berlin is a city of many faces. It's vibrant and intoxicating. It feels safe and welcoming. It's raw and sleek, organic and planned, clangorous and calm. It's also joyfully permissive, a...