
Sa, 18.07.2026
2 pm
Music-Performance
about 60 Minuten
The Bird Feeder
In The Bird Feeder, the focus is on our relationship with animals in public urban space. Berlin’s residents affectionately call their city pigeons the “rats of the sky” – perhaps the animal people encounter most often, aside from flies or clothes moths: alive, injured, or dead. We know them in almost every possible state: alone or in groups, cooing outside windows, gathered beneath U-Bahn bridges, flying low overhead, or appearing unexpectedly on our doorsteps. Yet these “rats of the sky” are only one of many non-human creatures with whom we live in a quiet symbiosis every day, alongside rats, foxes, squirrels, the swans on the Landwehr Canal, and the hares in the Hansaviertel. Sometimes it is not entirely clear who is host and who is parasite.
Olga Hohmann works with a vocal ensemble and is costumed by Eva Noeske.
Photo: Ryan Molnar
About the artist
Olga Hohmann writes essays, prose miniatures and meandering texts intended to be read aloud. In an almost musical form, she combines more or less fictional narratives with found material, which coalesce into a rhythmic murmur. Slogans, aphorisms and flashes of insight are treated as equal in the hierarchy.
She has most recently performed at the Westfälischer Kunstverein in Münster, the Kunstverein in Munich, the Schinkel Pavillon (Berlin), the Stoschek Foundation (Düsseldorf), the Kunsthalle Osnabrück, the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf and the Deutsche Oper (Berlin).
Sa, 18.07.2026
2 pm
Music-Performance
about 60 Minuten
The Bird Feeder
In The Bird Feeder, the focus is on our relationship with animals in public urban space. Berlin’s residents affectionately call their city pigeons the “rats of the sky” – perhaps the animal people encounter most often, aside from flies or clothes moths: alive, injured, or dead. We know them in almost every possible state: alone or in groups, cooing outside windows, gathered beneath U-Bahn bridges, flying low overhead, or appearing unexpectedly on our doorsteps. Yet these “rats of the sky” are only one of many non-human creatures with whom we live in a quiet symbiosis every day, alongside rats, foxes, squirrels, the swans on the Landwehr Canal, and the hares in the Hansaviertel. Sometimes it is not entirely clear who is host and who is parasite.
Olga Hohmann works with a vocal ensemble and is costumed by Eva Noeske.
Photo: Ryan Molnar
About the artist
Olga Hohmann writes essays, prose miniatures and meandering texts intended to be read aloud. In an almost musical form, she combines more or less fictional narratives with found material, which coalesce into a rhythmic murmur. Slogans, aphorisms and flashes of insight are treated as equal in the hierarchy.
She has most recently performed at the Westfälischer Kunstverein in Münster, the Kunstverein in Munich, the Schinkel Pavillon (Berlin), the Stoschek Foundation (Düsseldorf), the Kunsthalle Osnabrück, the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf and the Deutsche Oper (Berlin).
TROPEZ
at Sommerbad Humboldthain
Wiesenstraße 1, 13357 Berlin
Google Maps
Monday – Sunday
10.00 am – 6.00 pm



TROPEZ
at Sommerbad Humboldthain
Wiesenstraße 1, 13357 Berlin
Google Maps
Monday – Sunday
10.00 am – 6.00 pm
