Entered from the elevator, everything is located on the ground floor

Entered from the elevator, everything is located on the ground floor.
A story of horizontal and vertical one-to-one relations.

Each poster pad shows a black-and-white photograph – in a 1:1 relation to reality – of the wall that is directly behind it.
And behind: the wall that is directly behind the wall, and behind the wall that is directly behind and opposite the wall, and behind the wall that is directly behind the wall behind, and then the wall that is exactly opposite the wall behind; and behind, then, the wall that is directly behind the wall, and behind the wall that is directly behind and opposite the wall that is behind the wall and exactly behind the wall that is behind. Directly behind the wall and behind, then, the wall that is exactly opposite and then the wall behind (at least as it were in mid May 2015) …to the wall where the last wall in the sequence of walls of the Landscape and Public Space Department adjoins the wall of the Architecture Department.

Directly next to it a second pad with a poster-filling, 1:1-sized black-and-white photograph of the wall behind (as long as no one tears it off/down) and the wall beside the wall that is on the wall directly behind it, behind it, then, the wall behind (as long as no one tears it off/down), and beside it, also on the photo beside, the wall that is the wall beside (as long as no one tears it off/down), and behind, then, the wall opposite and beside (as long as no one tears it off/down), and then the wall that is directly behind the wall behind (as long as no one tears it off/down), and beside it the wall beside (as long as no one tears it off/down), and then the wall that is exactly opposite the wall behind (as long as no one tears it off/down), and behind, then, the wall that is directly behind the wall, and behind, then, the wall that is directly behind and opposite the wall that is behind and beside the wall, and directly behind it the wall behind (as long as no one tears it off/down), directly behind it the wall and, then, behind it the wall that is exactly opposite (as long as no one tears it off/down), and then the one behind (as long as no one tears it off/down), and then the wall behind the wall beside the wall (at least as it were in mid May 2015) …to the wall where the last wall in the sequence of walls of the Landscape and Public Space Department adjoins the wall of the Architecture Department.

Claudia Märzendorfer, 2015