Instructions for waiting

Schwerpunkt: Umherschweifen

Instructions for waiting

Mirrors in the elevator
Julianne Cordray and Julia Fabricius
Waiting can be
executed at any place
and any time
You may want to
set a timer
15 minutes long
Don‘t do anything
but wait
Thinking is allowed
Try not to move
around too much
Don’t use the phone
Eyes can be closed
or open
Observe the sounds
and surroundings
Notice how you feel

The architecture of waiting: a room, maybe one with seats – usually not many, not enough, but some. Maybe it offers a margin of comfort, or even distraction – a pile of old magazines, a mounted television set. In a way, just waiting has become easier to avoid. We’re so often occupied, on the go, or distracted by something. What if we were to consciously wait — for what? Doesn’t matter — just wait. No reading materials, no television, no podcast or music. No pacing, strolling, or fidgeting. No conversation. Just idle thoughts. Observations and feelings. Just attention.

And so we waited. And waited. And waited. Just for fifteen minutes a day. For 20 days in a row. At the same time, but not the same place.

Almost like a rehearsal. One that doesn't necessarily apply to every waiting context, but at least to those minor, everyday ones. Those small, shared annoyances. 

During this project, not just waiting, but also boredom, flow, and distraction were some of the key words for us. We thought about waiting as a physical space — like an airport or elevator — a non-place, possibly enclosed by windows or mirrors, those hazy boundaries.

We wondered: is waiting necessarily something passive? Maybe to give into distraction, to go with the flow, is the passive part. The flow can feel comfortable and effortless. It keeps the thoughts and feelings away — like how a quick, intuitive drawing turns out best, and as soon as you start to think, you get tangled up. The decision to break from that flow, to instead be fully in the moment of waiting, is perhaps something far more active. Even within this in-between space, you can’t stop the flow of time. You can only connect to it more. Feel it more.

For us, waiting actually required quite a bit of organization. It meant being in touch, checking in daily, discussing which fifteen minute window would work for us both. We were curious how the same moment and stretch of time, of waiting, is experienced by two people, separately but together.

The correspondences that emerged were uncanny at times, if not outright unexpected. You can flip through the enclosed booklets to see those parallel moments unfold through the words and images that bounded them. Or jumble up our diary-like entries, move outside of linear time, to find parallels elsewhere.

Texts an pictures have been published in a riso-zine, in collaboratoon by krater books, june 2025.
Kurzbeiträge

Einwürfe

Vom Rande aus: Kamen Esra Canpalat geht dem "Am Rande sein" im doppelten Sinn nach - in der Peripherie der Ruhrgebiets und im Gefühl des Nicht-Dazugehörens.
50% Urban Anna-Lena Wenzel berichtet von einer einwöchigen Sommerschule zum Thema Transformation in Motion.
Zwischen Laternen und Flaggen Ein Essayfragment von Marco Oliveri über das fragile Konstrukt Nachbarschaft

Fundsachen

Gefährten* Eine Serie von Stoffbeuteln, hergestellt aus Stoffen aus der VEB Schirmfabrik Karl-Marx-Stadt, fotografiert von Lysann Nemeth.
Malheur Couleur Die Farbe Weiß weckt zuallererst Assozia
Sechser Inflationär verbreitet: gepinselte Sechsen auf temporärem Stadtmobiliar. 

Straßenszenen

Untitled History Anna-Lena Wenzel über die Arbeit "Untitled History" von Eske Schlüters und Tillmann Terbuyken im Hamburger Alten Elbpark
Ist das Kunst oder Vogelschutz? Mit ihren "Cuts" bearbeitet Birgit Hölmer Schaufenster und gibt im Gespräch mit Elke Fallat Einblicke in ihre Arbeitsweise und Motivation.
Berliner Trümmerberge Eine Recherche zu den Berliner Trümmerbergen von Karoline Böttcher mit einem Text von Luise Meier. 

So klingt

Detroit Kathrin Wildner schickt eine Soundpostkarte aus Detroit
ein Denkmal Sabine Ercklentz und Justin Time bringen mit "Denkmal streicheln - Denkmal hören" Denkmäler zum Klingen.
Cemal Kemal Altun Entlang der Berliner Hardenbergstraß

So lebt

Sorge „Sorge“: meine Platte, meine Heimat,
(e) es sich in der Schule der Arbeit Ute Richter deckt mit ihrer künstlerischen Forschung ein vergesenes Kapitel der emanzipatorischen Erwachsenenbildung in Leipzig auf.
man nicht mehr im Prenzlauer Berg Das war einmal: der Prenzlauer Berg im Jahr 1991, erinnert von Jo Preußler