Cabinet of the Unknown

28 Jul – 2 Oct 2017

The long tradition of museum practice calls for museums to serve as institutions that provide knowledge.

In classic museology, knowledge is a commodity that a museum offers, whereby the visitor accepts the validity of that knowledge.

The Museum of Things is known for being unconventional in terms of its curatorial concept, museological classification and knowledge production. Within this respect, the exhibition project “Cabinet of the Unknown” invites a particular section of Oranienstrasse to redefine the unknown and co-create a knowledge platform.

Taking the Berlin Key as the ‘key’ object of the entire project, the participatory exhibition “Cabinet of the Unknown” dwells on the unknown through the processes of knowing and creating acquaintance. As an object widely known in Berlin, but unfamiliar to those who are not from this city, it stands for the connection between the unknown and the known, between the inside and the outside, the museum situated in the back yard and the street.

The ”Cabinet of the Unknown” exhibition is composed of objects selected not only by a curator but also by its “cabinet members” (i.e. the Oranienstrasse participants). As the starting point of the project, every museum team member was asked to select an unknown object in the museum’s collection and to name ‘unknown’ or interesting locations on Oranienstrasse (between Moritzplatz and Görlitzer Bahnhof). The second act was to invite the ‘unknown’ people from the selected locations to the museum to discuss the unfamiliar objects of the museum team. They were then sent on a quest to find their own mystery object in the collection and, to generate a ripple effect, they also selected ‘unknown’ or interesting locations in the same area. Following this methodology, the circles of unknown objects and locations expanded over four ‘Cabinet Meetings.’

Within this collaborative curatorial process, the focus moves away from the museum, yet expands its borders through its participants from Oranienstrasse to the immediate vicinity of the museum. The street can be seen as a microcosm of the city of Berlin and as a hub of the different cultural backgrounds: a potential productive factor in generating collective knowledge.

To cultivate the connection with the street, the exhibition spreads out to five shops in Oranienstrasse, where these satellites display the unknown objects selected by the shops’ representative. Working with (and within) the neighbourhood through unknown and undefined objects, the museum offers an alternative approach to create a connection and brings a new understanding to its own position in the context of its audience, re-evaluating the notion of the institutionalisation of knowledge in the museum context.

The objects in the exhibition are constellated by the together with the museum team and the people from the following locations within the course of four ‘Cabinet Meetings’ in the neighbourhood: 360° Outdoor, Anaveda, Akrasu e.V., Bateau Ivre, Bilgisaray, Buchhandlung Mondlicht, Chocolateria Sünde, Coiffeur Selim, Collect Boutique, Coretex Records, DIM 26 – USE, Franken Bar, Galerie Knoth & Krüger, Hong Kong Shop, keuledruck, KIgA e.V., KinderMusikTheater e.V., Kisch & Co., Kraut & Rüben, Lebensmittel Hillmann, Modern Graphics Buchhandel, nGbK, Prinzessinnengärten, Propolis Farben, Quartiermeister, Rote Lippen Naturkosmetik, Scotty, Vintage Living, Voo Store, Werkhaus, Wollparadies Fadeninsel and Zentralrad.


guest curator/project manager

Ece Pazarbaşı

projekt assistant

Juliane John

Funded by the International Museum Fellowship Programme of the German Federal Cultural Foundation