Press Release

In RATIO, Congolese artist Jean Katambayi Mukendi (b. 1974, DRC) questions the dualities that shape our world—the natural and the artificial, growth and destruction, wanted and discarded materials, and the relationship between resources and power.

Katambayi’s practice is deeply informed by his training as an electrician and his sustained interest in engineering and mathematics. His work examines contemporary technological developments, while simultaneously addressing the social, economic, and ecological imbalances he witnesses as consequences of global structural inequities in resource extraction and power distribution. For Katambayi, there is a direct correlation between who possesses literal power (energy)—copper is extracted from the Democratic Republic of the Congo to power other nations, yet he lives with permanent power outages—and the broader geopolitical axes along which power is distributed between countries.

The sculptures, paintings, and drawings featured in RATIO, the first exhibition by the artist in Germany, were created during a residency at KW in 2025, using materials gathered from various locations in Berlin, such as KW’s storage and the city’s recycling yards. At its center sits _mukendi kabongo _Air hybird Wings RDC26FG, a large sculpture inspired by machines from the fields of aviation, agriculture, and the military. Katambayi merges and combines components of these machines to imaginatively multiply their functions, exploring the ecological potential of technology through a process of recycling and repurposing.

Two large-scale paintings frame the installation. Divina resembles a printed circuit board, a structure fundamental to nearly all electronic devices. Its title is an anagram of Nvidia, a leading US-based technology company for AI computing hardware. Combining technical schematics with spiritual symbolism—most notably the hand at its center, evoking the divine—the painting draws attention to the extraction of raw materials such as copper and cobalt in the DRC, essential to global electronics production. With _Vita, _Katambayi reflects on the social fracture shaped by competition over natural resources and living systems within a capitalist order that struggles to find balance. The painting evokes tectonic, floral, and faunal illusions to suggest nature’s own capacity for equilibrium, structured through invisible axes that govern the Earth. Growing from geometric figures and lines, the artist’s drawings—placed between windows—form speculative reflections on human experience in relation to ecology, technology, and the economy, ranging from the impact of climate on human routines to cryptocurrency.

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About the Artist

Since his childhood, Jean Katambayi Mukendi has been inspired by the copper tools, packages, and instruments he saw used in his home city of Lubumbashi, where the whole economy still relies on the extraction of copper. Yet the city suffers from electricity outages on a regular basis and the available copper is of a poor quality. Through his focus on copper, and artworks that combine art and scientific experiment, Jean Katambayi Mukendi addresses the socio-economic disparity often faced by African societies.

View Artist Profile Jean Katambayi Mukendi contemporary artist
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KW Institute for Contemporary Art is a place for the production and presentation of contemporary art, where the pressing questions of our time can be openly formulated and discussed. It is a center for the introduction of recent developments in national and international contemporary culture, and for further development, working together with artists and institutions, and commissioning new work.

As an institution for contemporary art without a collection of its own, but also without the specific mandate of a member-based art association, KW has a high degree of flexibility in creating its programs and addressing its audience. It is a resource both for the people who make active use of it, and for those who participate in it as visitors.

The building complex in Berlin's centre includes exhibition halls, function rooms, offices, and a café, alongside apartments and studios, and provides a space for encounters and exchanges.
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KW Institute for Contemporary Art
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Opening hours
Wednesday –  Monday, 12  – 7pm
Thursday, 12  – 11pm
Closed Tuesday
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