Notes on Roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal)

Sophia Mainka

in collaboration with Fondation Fiminco, Paris

6.09 – 13.10.2023

Lothringer 13 Studio, Lothringer Str. 13, 81667 München

Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, installation view
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, installation view
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, installation view
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, installation view
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, installation view
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, installation view
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, installation view
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, installation view
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, installation view
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, installation view
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, detail
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, detail
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, detail
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, detail
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, detail
Sophia Mainka, Notes on roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal), 2024, installation view

Photos: Thomas Spelt

In the summer of 2022, a Beluga whale strayed into the river Seine and began swimming towards Paris. It was stopped by a lock, refused to eat and was subsequently euthanised. Nobody knows when parrots entered Parisian airspace, but they have been observed in the French capital since the 1970s. They can now be seen in most of Paris’s public parks, from the Bois de Boulogne in the west to the Bois de Vincennes in the east. And dogs – well, dogs have been roaming Parisian streets since forever. Terriers, Dachshunds, Spaniels, and of course, the French Bulldog.


These stories of animals adapting to urban environments lay at the heart of Sophia Mainka’s video and sculpture installation, “Notes on Roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal)” produced and first shown during her residency at Fondation Fiminco in Paris. Amid the organic playful forms of the metal sculptures there are three videos, all filmed from the animal perspective. In the first two, Mainka paints her arms and hands to resemble a dog’s paws, and we see these on screen as the fictional dog walks, stops and occasionally runs around the cobblestones and concrete pavements, once even jumping from a wooden bench. In the third, she takes on the perspective of the whale, the camera capturing what the whale would have seen, providing it swam further, into the city canals. The image rises and dips to the rhythm of the whale’s breathing. Surrounding us are the sounds of birds singing, except this too is staged: these are not parrots, but a toy, a bird whistle device.


Her work then, could be described as ethological in spirit. Sophia Mainka does not imitate animals, but rather behaves like them. She scratches, she sniffs, she swims, she trills and peeps. She acts the way an animal would act, if she were a animal in this situation and in this sense, we can think of her work in terms of what the French philosopher Gilles Deleuze would call becoming.


For Deleuze and Guattari, the process of becoming-animal is best described by Vladimir Slepian in his short text, “Fils de Chien.” Written in the first person, Slepian confesses how, despite being a man, his hunger leads him to behave like a dog, putting shoes on his hands and tying them using his mouth. It is a reversal of the evolutionary process described by anthropologist André Leroi-Gourhan, in which humans, through their adoption of an upright posture, free their mouths from the task of grasping and develop speech. Slepian recomposes himself, so that his mouth instead of speaking, grasps like a dog’s. And it is irrelevant how this dog looks like, whether this is the short snout of a bulldog or longer nose of a dachshund.


Similarly, Mainka makes us rethink our relation to nature, which is redrawn along affective lines as a participatory process. Animals are not considered as distinct molar entities, standing alongside the human. All entities are defined by their capacity to act, which changes depending on how they affect and how they are affected by others. There is a sensing of utopia in the environs of the Canal Saint-Martin that Mainka would walk along so happily – a secluded, sheltered place of inter-species co-existence. Or rather, it is a place where different populations, human, mammal and bird, continually compose and re-compose together.

Notes on Roommates (a dog, a parrot, a whale and a canal)

Sophia Mainka

in collaboration with Fondation Fiminco, Paris

6.09 – 13.10.2023

Lothringer 13 Studio, Lothringer Str. 13, 81667 München

Sophia Mainka, Chien et canal, 2024 video still (3.44min, fullHD, without sound, loop)

We participate in nature and nature participates in us: in her art practice, Sophia Mainka has always been open to strange encounters with animals, plants and minerals. The work created during her stay at the Fondation Fiminco in Paris deals with the coexistence of different species within an urban space. Parrots fly across the city, a whale swims up the Seine and dogs walk on paved streets. Mainka responds ethologically, allowing the animal encounter to affect the way she acts.
“Notes on Roommates” is a series of video sculptures Mainka first presented at the residency, restaged at GiG Munich. To produce her fictitious gathering of animals, she builds a room for them: industrial material is bent into organic shapes and upholstered with fabrics featuring botanical patterns. Here we see her become dog, her painted fists becoming paws; we see her as the whale, in the murky river water, rising up to breathe.

Wir sind Teil der Natur und die Natur ist Teil von uns: Sophia Mainka öffnet sich in ihrer künstlerischen Praxis für ungewöhnliche Begegnungen mit Tieren, Pflanzen und Mineralien. Während ihres Aufenthalts in der Fondation Fiminco in Paris entstanden Werke, die das Miteinander verschiedener Arten im urbanen Raum thematisieren: Papageien fliegen durch die Stadt, ein Wal schwimmt die Seine hinauf, Hunde laufen auf gepflasterten Straßen. Mainka reagiert ethologisch, lässt zu, dass diese Begegnungen ihr Handeln beeinflussen.
„Notes on Roommates“ ist eine Installation mit Videoskulpturen, die sie während ihrer Residency präsentierte und nun im GiG Munich neu inszeniert. Um die Zusammenkunft der Tiere darzustellen, baut sie einen Raum für sie: Industrielles Material wird zu organischen Formen gebogen und mit botanisch gemusterten Stoffen gepolstert. Mainka verwandelt sich selbst in einen Hund, ihre Fäuste werden zu Pfoten; wir sehen sie als Wal, der im trüben Wasser auftaucht, um zu atmen.