From Parthenon of banned books to pipe homes of refugees - documenta 14 kicks off

By Tanya Wood| KASSEL, Germany

A life-sized model of the Greek Parthenon - covered in forbidden books donated from around the world - stands in central Kassel right where Nazis once burned banned books.

It is a centerpiece of Germany's biggest art fair, documenta 14.

The exhibit, created by Argentine artist Marta Minujin, is also a poignant visual bridge to Athens, where a sister documenta 14 show is being held for the first time since the prestigious art fair began in 1955.

This year's dual exhibits include work by 160 artists from more than 50 countries, including, in Athens some rare Communist Albanian painting.

Both the Athens and Kassel shows will continue for 100 days.

In Kassel, Kurdish-Iraqi artist Hiwa K. has created an exhibit with a series of ceramic pipes entitled "when we were exhaling" that centres on his experience after fleeing northern Iraq on foot in the 1990s, too poor to afford a hotel room, according to Polish curator Adam Szymczyk.

"He walked on foot across Turkey and then ended up for a time being in the town of Patras (Greece) where he lived in these ceramic pipes that are used for canalization," Szymczyk said.

Hiwa K. sees the exhibit as a broader reflection on poverty, capitalism and what happens when a person no longer has room for their belongings.

"The refugee crisis is ... the outcome of what late capitalism is producing and what it is bringing to us," Hiwa K. told Reuters TV. "It is interesting to show it in Kassel because you have a big industry for weapons here which are producing weapons for other countries."

He had hoped to turn the exhibit into an Airbnb space for documenta 14 visitors, but the city refused, citing health and safety reasons. Instead only the 13 students who helped decorate the cylinders will spend a night there during the art fair.

Across town, an installation by Mexican artist Antonio Vega Macotela, looks at the global economy and humanity, allowing visitors to push a wheel on the "Mill of Blood" that produces a both a metallic coin and a digital "bitcoin."

Macotela says the mill is remniscent of mills used in Mexico and Bolivia to mint coins, using the labour of animals and slaves.

"This machine is different of course because the energy is not going to be given by animals or by slaves. It is going to be given by the people coming to the documenta," Macotela said.

(Reporting by Tanya Wood, Writing by Andrea Shalal Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)

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