KaDeWe : Magda Stojowska

The video quality is chosen according to your Internet connection.

KaDeWe, a drama written by a Polish dramatist and director Helmut Kajzar, is based on the adaptation of a text entitled “Next Part (KaDeWe); an opera libretto” which Kajzar created in the 1970′s during one of his frequent visits to West Berlin. It is a combination of raw images of the city and scenes from the author’s own imagination connected with love, art, the world of media etc. He presents KaDeWe, the largest department store of Europe at that time, as a metaphor of the dark, yet appealing, side of the world. This supermarket offering a sex shop, a brothel, and an art gallery, all in one place, allows the author-hero or the reader/viewer to observe a myriad of peculiar characters and objects. Among other things, it is an initiation journey. The hero of KaDeWe is you – the Stranger in the pulsating city. You are an anonymous person wandering around strange places like public toilets, railway stations, underpasses, airports, intersections; roaming around the parking lots of big cities, looking in car windows from time to time, entering shopping malls, night clubs, and suspect places revealing surreal images of possible pleasure, television paradises combined into unreal fantasies. Those are your non-places, spaces devoid of identity where you merge with a mass of anonymous people. Their loneliness is multiplied by a million – is a gesture still the same if you repeat it a million times? You, the Stranger, have the queen Mab and Mr Eden for companions. Their personalities are variable, impossible to grasp, reflecting the existences that the Stranger meets. Their presence becomes an unbearable part of the space, multiplying the images, indulging in voyeurism, and enduring the difference between life and artificiality. Who does the Stranger become at the end of the journey? What is the sense of his agony in the glow of spotlights, in the instantaneous television transmission?

The cats are in the cabbage.
Prostitues, we are veal!
Slaughterhouse, we are servants of meat.
We honor meat.
Meat, meat, meat!
Two-sided eyes!
The texts are quite difficult
but very interesting.
They are very contemporary,
although they were created
in the 1970's and the 80's.
We thought it was a good idea
to use some of Kajzar's dramatic texts
here at Meet Factory,
an experimental space.
8 hours in this idiotic position.
First position, second position...
Close-fitting pants are out of fashion now.
Girls resemble boys, and vice versa.
If you read the text in Polish,
it can be unbearably sentimental,
with an exaggerated esthetic aspect
and the whole way it's built.
But I think it'll be different in Czech,
maybe even better.
The government wants to mercifully poison
all widows and pensioners.
The fashion model surely wants
to steal her boyfriend.
She sips gin to get some courage.
She knows about sin.
Beer, contemporary ballet, bars,
discos, Russian pirogs, theatres, concerts,
helpline!
What does the soul desire?
In the 1970's and 1980's,
television was like a magical object.
I wanted to work with something
that comes from another period
and to try to use it in a way
that would allow us to transform TV sets
into weird shapes, not TV-like at all.
Nowadays, a television is a funny object,
nobody needs it anymore
and it's not magical at all, it's lame.
A storm approached from the west,
took his shirt, and threw it in the trash.
The live transmission of agony has started.
The queen came
and kissed him on the mouth.

Here you can express yourself.

Download low quality video.
Download big quality video.
Selected from the same category