After a successful premiere as part of Performa 2025 in New York, The Color Scheme, Aria Dean’s latest Hartwig Art Foundation × Performa commission, will have its European premiere in Berlin at Haus der Kulturen der Welt (HKW) near its original site, the historical Siegesallee.
Set in Berlin’s Tiergarten shortly after the First World War, artist and writer Aria Dean’s performance imagines a dialogue between two African American expatriates—the Poet and the Philosopher—as their date in the park becomes a broader meditation on the relationship between Black avant-garde aesthetics and the nascent political movements of the twentieth century.
A few steps away from what is now HKW, the original statues of Kant and Goethe offered Dean an opportunity to critically examine nationalist and imperial monuments and serve as the mise-en-scène for the characters’ date. Loosely inspired by a real encounter between philosopher Alain Locke and poet Claude McKay, Dean avoids heroization by presenting characters without names and operationalizes them as figures through which to explore the clash of political and aesthetic perspectives. Their disagreements—over nationalism, the function of art, and the political and economic transformations required for life to become liveable—contrast the monumental historical ambitions of Tiergarten. In the 1920s, the park served as a backdrop to Prussian imperial narratives even as its grounds were a meeting place for Berlin's queer social scene. History’s tensions are further heightened by the presence of a rendered version of the Siegesallee, Kaiser Wilhelm II’s boulevard adorned with monarchical sculptures, later moved by the Nazis to grant space for large military parades, and finally dismantled completely after the war. Dean 3D-scanned the remaining ruptured statues, which are currently located at the Zitadelle Spandau, for production designer Filip Kostic’s digital reconstruction of the park as it was in 1923.
Accompanied by a score by composer Evan Zierk, featuring Intonarumori, the experimental noise machines invented by the Italian futurist Luigi Russolo, the result is a theatrical space where history, form, and speculation converge. The theatre stage doubles as a film set: The actors are captured in real time within the virtual Tiergarten landscape, while the film is simultaneously projected live onto the stage, binding the present to a historical frame in which the “truth” of the encounter resolves as image.Far from a picture-perfect representation, The Color Scheme explodes history’s debris cluttering up the here-and-now.
For our Amsterdam audience, a special live screening set up with an introduction by Aria Dean on stage in Berlin will be organised at Hartwig Proxy. Register here
The European premiere of The Color Scheme is presented as part of the closing weekend of the exhibition Tirailleurs: Trials and Tribulations. From Cannon Fodder to Avant-Garde—The Forgotten Soldiers Who Freed Europe at Haus der Kulturen der Welt (HKW).
Commissioned by Performa and Hartwig Art Foundation. The piece was initially curated by Ikechúkwú Onyewuenyi, Curator and Manager of Curatorial Affairs; Madeleine Seidel, Assistant Curator; and Jeanette Bisschops, Hartwig Art Foundation Archival Fellow. Produced by Vic Brooks with Andreas Huang.
Read more about the collaboration between Hartwig Art Foundation and Performa here.


