#SEE YOU
AT HOME – THE DOMESTIC SPACE AS PUBLIC ENCOUNTER





2021 - ONGOING 
VARIOUS EXHIBITIONS 
@ ETH ZUERICH, GOETHE INSTITUT CHINA, ISEASANTA MÓNICA ARTS CENTRE BARCELONASEGAL CENTER FILM FESTIVAL ON THEATRE AND PERFORMANCE NEW YORK, DIGITAL IMPACTDISSENY HUB BARCELONA.


︎ CONCEPT & DESIGN | UWE BRUNNER, BETTINA KATJA LANGE, JOAN SOLER-ADILLON.
︎ COLLABORATORS & SUPPORT | BURKART SCHWAIGHOFER, JUAN DUARTE, MAX HAPP, MACARIO ORTEGA, YUKUAN WANG, STEFAN MAIER.
︎ PHOTO CREDITS | SO@P, LU SHAN, LI YINJUN, GAO XIAOTAO,  ELOY JÓDAR, EMMANUEL GRUNSTEIN, ISEA.
︎ PRESS & LINKS | ETH ZUERICH, GOETHE INSTITUT CHINA, ISEA @ SANTA MÓNICA ARTS CENTRESEGAL FILMFESTIVAL, DIGITAL IMPACT.


#See You At Home is an investigation on the private space and its meaning in times of ubiquitous connectivity and global pandemic crises.


Today, the domestic space can no longer be considered as an isolated one. Rather, it has become a transitory space that negotiates the ambiguous relationship between the home as a place of refuge and comfort, serving as an intimate archive for the preservation of identity and memory, and the home as an exhibition space, a node in a public and global network of the sharing economy that continuously trades personal data.


Under these conditions, our homes and houses are more than ever part of a multi-layered public sphere that has profound implications for our relationship with the built environment we inhabit and enact daily.
#See You At Home is an installation of an ongoing participatory project that reflects on our everyday domestic life between private and public spheres, and thus on our relationship with living spaces in general.


The project consists of a collection of hunreds of three-dimensional documents from domestic moments and homely memories taken between 2019-2021 in more than 40 different countries during the most intense periods of self-isolation and home confinement.


The project expands on The Smallest of Worlds - A Social Landscape of Collected Privacy, a VR piece developed by Bettina Katja Lange, Uwe Brunner & Joan Soler-Adillon during CPH:LAB (CPH:DOX copenhagen, 2021) and funded by Pixel, Bytes + Film 2021, federal ministry of arts, culture, civil service and sport, austria and the deutschen künstlerbund, neutstart kultur, module for digital mediation formats.
We also extend our sincere gratitude to Fabien Siouffi, Ulrich Schrauth, Mark Atkin, and Gayatri Parameswara for their invaluable support.