7 Tage (7 Days) is a series of seven film installations. The films were created since 2009 one after the other over a period of almost seven years.

Visitors making their way through the exhibition will repeatedly encounter the same protagonist, played by actor Christoph Luser, as he faces a number of apparently mundane yet utterly contradictory situations over the course of the “seven days”. His ambivalent character, melancholic or menacing by turns, takes on a different, surprising aspect in each of the seven dual-channel installations. The result is a cinematic kaleidoscope of heterogeneous personality traits, human interactions and highly charged situations.

All seven film installations refer to key scenes from different movies, from the horror film Tenebre by Dario Argento to the dance film Saturday Night Fever by John Badham. But M+M often greatly distance themselves from the original film scene, investing their narrative with an interpretation all its own.

Each installation consists of two versions, projected in parallel, of the reinvented scene. Though synchronised, in most cases the two are strikingly dissimilar with regard to their emotional content. In the twin scenes, the protagonist simultaneously meets two different people – someone he talks to, imaginary lovers, murder victims. In Montag ( Monday), for example, the same conversation takes place between the man and his wife and, in parallel, between the man and his daughter. Or, in Samstag ( Saturday), the lead character dances with a girl and at the same time with a young man. Instead of clear-cut categories – family relations, erotic encounters, etc. – the scenes present a range of emotional nuances; the actions and shots of the two parallel versions are matched frame for frame and make constant reference to one another. What emerges is a multi-layered tapestry of gestures, music and text. A kind of oscillation sets in between the almost perfectly congruent dialogues and actions of the dual projections.

The common denominator of 7 Tage is the feeling of a state of crisis simmering just beneath the surface, an ambivalent state of uncertainty where it seems anything could happen, where the protagonist perhaps faces a turning point, conscious or otherwise, whether as lover, dancer, or murderer.

The choice of scenes is determined above all by M+M’s interest in typical human relationships and their psychological dimension. M+M appropriate the language of film in order to address a central social theme, the formation and dissolution of identity – as an individual, couple or collective. Whether assumed or projected, identity is invariably perceived and produced through language, facial expression, body language and the relationship between individuals with many complex interactions, connections and tensions. M+M’s parallel projection of two situations just ever so slightly out of alignment reveals the fissures and contradictions inherent in the character of the protagonist. In all “seven days” viewed collectively, they come more radically still to the fore. The identity of the protagonist seems unstable, nomadic. It consists of sudden changes triggered by fresh encounters or the contexts, but also – on a second semantic level – by the film genre from which the scene derives its inspiration.

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