EastUnBloc: Networks of Net Art – Syndicate and Deep Europe
~ with Tereza Havlíková @tereza_max@mastodon.social and Andreas Broeckmann (curator and researcher)
📍 nGbK, TUE, 13 JAN 2026 at 7 PM
https://ngbk.de/en/programm/termine/eastunbloc-netzwerke-der-netzkunst-syndicate-und-deep-europe
nGbK, Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 11, 10178 Berlin, 1st floor
Mailing lists played an important role in net art in the 1990s. They were tools for sharing open calls, organising events and circulating art news. But they were also public spaces for fostering connections and building discourse around media art. In 1996, the Syndicate mailing list was started as an „East-West Network“, exploring the possibilities of collaboration and explicitly reaching out to artists in the newly „reconnected“ Eastern Europe. As the name suggests, the members of the mailing list saw themselves as part of translocal relationships and a wider community.
The EastUnBloc exhibition argues that net art is shaped by storytelling. Therefore, Tereza Havlíková invited Andreas Broeckmann, one of the initiators and administrators of the Syndicate mailing list, to share the stories of this particular network. Together, they revisit the term „Deep Europe“, which was associated with the Syndicate network and fostered a European identity that transcended national borders, „enmeshed in a complex ‘felt’ of layers“. By exploring the Syndicate archive and viewing net artworks created in close proximity to this art and culture network, we hope to capture some of the spirit that drove net artists in Europe in the mid-1990s, a time of political and technological transition.
Andreas Broeckmann is an art historian and curator who lives in Berlin. He is a Visiting Professor in the PhD Program at Malmö Art Academy, and he teaches at the Academy of Fine Arts, Leipzig (HGB – Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst).
Tereza Havlíková is an art historian and curator based in Berlin and Bochum. Her research focuses on net art and digital art within the broader context of internet history and culture.