Sandra Johnston
Bone-Battery//Flat-High
performance DateS
Performance week 1, July 13-20, 2025
Sandra Johnston's current research in the Joseph Beuys Archive explores the many ways in which Beuys worked with the concept of energy flows - visible in his actions, objects, drawings and language. A central theme here is Beuys' repeated use of the term 'battery' for his works, for example in Battery Flat-High (1963). This term refers to ideas of charge, current and transmission. Johnston interprets these ideas with a focus on the hidden, catalytic qualities of everyday objects and materials. The flow of energy is particularly visible in Beuys' drawings and scores: lines of movement around figures suggest processes of emanation and transformation. These motifs appear both in his visionary, personal works and in the later blackboard artefacts from lectures, where they condense into a language of thought in diagrams and action schemes. In her performance Bone-Battery//Flat-High, Johnston brings these concepts into a physical form where her actions make an inner, somatic space visible through gestures of marking, repeating, cancelling and adapting, she allows energy processes to be experienced in space.

TAVROS

Virginia Mastrogiannaki examined the latter years of Joseph Beuys’s life and oeuvre, during which his expressive language became increasingly politically charged. She explored the profound impact of the universalist and humanist ideas of Anacharsis Cloots on Beuys’s artistic and ideological framework, as well as Beuys’s spiritual affinity with the Enlightenment thinker known as the “Orator of Mankind.”

Anacharsis Cloots, a Prussian-born aristocrat and radical figure of the French Revolution, was perhaps the first to advocate a universal parliament, envisioned a world united under a universal republic, devoid of national borders and ruled by the ideals of human reason and equality. These ideas deeply resonated with Joseph Beuys, whose notion of Soziale Plastik was based on the belief that art and life are inseparable, and that every individual has the creative ability to transform society.

Beuys saw in Cloots a kindred spirit — someone who represented the fusion of philosophical idealism and political engagement. Beuys’s identification with Cloots was so strong that he would refer to himself as, “Josephanacharsis Clootsbeuys,” as a symbolic merging of their identities.

In 1983, Beuys performed at Schloss Gnadenthal, the former residence of Cloots in the Rhineland. There, he read aloud from Cloots’s biography in an “aktion” that functioned as both homage and political invocation. This performance demonstrated Beuys’s aim to rejuvenate Enlightenment principles in a modern, post-war European setting and to establish the artist as a catalyst for political transformation.

During the monthly residency at Artoll, Mastrogiannaki conducted extensive in-situ research. In addition to studying the archives and collection of Schloss Moyland, she also consulted the municipal archives of Kleve, explored Anacharsis Cloots’ letters and political speeches, some of which are displayed in the exhibition. She engaged in discussions with the Koekkoek Museum and visited Schloss Gnadenthal, the residence of Anacharsis Cloots in Kleve.

In her performance project TAVROS, Virginia Mastrogiannaki focuses on Beuys’s candidacy for the European Parliament in 1979, which reflected his vision  of  merging  artistic  practice  and  democratic  action. Mastrogiannaki examines the institutional texts that form the legal and political basis of the European Union today. Drawing on Beuys’s legacy, she studies the legal and political foundations of the European Union by engaging with the official Treaties that form its institutional framework.

Linguistic issues have long been a central focus of her artistic research. For TAVROS, the impact of language plays a central role. She is drawn to the multilingual and internationalist nature of the European Community, both as a political construct and a symbolic space.

In TAVROS, Mastrogiannaki removes all economic jargon from the institutional texts governing the European Union. While analyzing the Treaties that regulate the Union, she contemplates the elements that define our contemporary European identity.

The title TAVROS (Bull) refers to the transformation of Zeus, the second main figure in the myth of Europa’s abduction — a myth from which the European continent and, later, the European Union derive their name.

Virginia Mastrogiannaki, 2025

Travel Route

Daily documentation
Filmed by Nadja Stanišić

Day One
27 July 2025
Fruška gora, Serbia

Day Two
28 July 2025
Novi sad, Serbia -
Ilok, Croatia

Day 3
29 July 2025
Ilok - VUKOVAR - Varaždin, Croatia

Day 4
30 July 2025
Varaždin, Croatia - Maribor, slovenia

Day 5
31 July 2025
Maribor, slovenia -
Graz, Austria

Day 6
1 August 2025
Graz, Austria -
Nuremberg, Germany

Day 7
2 August 2025
Nuremberg -
Düsseldorf, Germany

Day 8
3 August 2025
Düsseldorf -
Bedburg-hau, Germany

about the artist
Dr Sandra Johnston has been active internationally since 1992 as an artist, researcher and educator working predominantly through performance art, video installations, drawing and writing. Johnston has held several teaching and research posts since 2002 and she currently lectures at Belfast School of Art. Her practice often involves fusing fragments of historical material into intricate relationships with performed gestures, enabling an opening out of personal narratives around trauma, memory, and implication. In 2020 Johnston was awarded the O'Malley Visual Arts Award by The Irish American Cultural Institute, and her work is represented in the Irish Arts Council, Northern Irish Arts Council and Irish Museum of Modern Art public collections.
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