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Woman Portrait Gallery

Edition nr 4 of this serieS

May - July 2026

Long before this exhibition series began, the representation of women was already a wonderful mess of fascination, contradiction, and debate — And thankfully, it still is.

The Woman Portrait Gallery series returns to Kaffeemitte for its fourth edition, bringing together artists from different backgrounds, generations, and disciplines.

Alex Sokolov

NoirNoir / Berlin 2024 / Film, CineStill 800T, light leaks

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Anastasiia Khadzynova

Mermaid / Berlin 2026 / Digital illustration

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Andrea Luque

Shaving / Berlin 2026 / Acrylic painting on cardboard

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Jose Roberto

Night Sky / Dubai, UAE 2025 / Watercolour and ink on cotton paper

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katarina eva

Leila / Berlin 2026 / Photo with embroidery

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Martin Serpentis

Leaving Heaven / Berlin 2024 / Black & white ink on Hahnemühle paper

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Mein Lieber Prost

Title / place / year / technique

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Paolo Gallo

Madonnina / 2016 Berlin / Digital Photography

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Patricia Nigri

Rosa Luxemburg / Berlin 2026 / Digital illustration

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Pia Henkel

Lacrosse / Berlin 2025 / Digital photography

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Gregor: Who is the woman in your photo? Pia: She is a lacrosse player from Berlin. In her team, she is the goalkeeper. I met her through a post on Instagram when I was looking for young female athletes. I was searching for women who do a sport that is not very common and who I could photograph. It was not a paid job, just something I wanted to do for myself. G: So you were looking for a subject on purpose to create a photo series? P: Exactly. That is how I often work. I start with an idea and then I look for ways to make it happen. In this case, I made a post on social media because I wanted to give women’s sports more visibility. I do a lot of sports photography, and I have seen many times that there is still a big difference between men and women when it comes to payment. There are also far fewer female sports photographers. In professional sports, this problem is well known. Female athletes simply earn much less than their male colleagues. That is what I want to change with this series. People say, “Design is power,” and in this case I want to create a stage for these athletes. I want to present them in a positive way and maybe help improve the situation a little. So it’s not only design that is power, but today it is visibility. G: When you were the same age as the woman in the photo, what were you doing? P: I grew up in a small village and as a teenager, I spent a lot of time on the internet. Around 2010, websites like Flickr and Tumblr became popular. That was where I discovered that there was so much more than the world I knew. Back then, the internet was my window to the world. It inspired me and showed me that I could become a photographer myself. Later I left my village, studied photography in Dortmund and moved to Berlin. G: How would you describe your work as a photographer? P: On the one hand, I work as a freelance sports photographer. But I also see myself as someone who documents things. That interests me much more than creating staged pictures. Partly because the work is really interesting and I get to meet all kinds of different people. But also because I see myself as an activist, someone who can help change society for the better with my camera. If I can inspire young women with my photos, make them proud, and show them what is possible, then I am already very close to my goal. Of course, I am happy if I can inspire boys as well, or people in general. But young women are especially important to me because I experienced firsthand that woman often stay below their potential because they lack self-confidence. This confidence and commitment are not only important in my art but also in my work as a freelance photographer. I am a member of the Female Photo Club, and I work to help female photographers get into a stronger position when negotiating their pay. I also want them to connect with each other and support one another. G: What do you think about images created with AI? Does it worry you? P: Not really. Because I work as a documentary photographer and every one of my pictures has its own real story, I am not too worried. At least not about my own work. What I have noticed, though, is that people are becoming much more interested in how I work. On social media, content that shows the creative process has become much more popular recently. These behind-the-scenes stories are probably so popular because finished images now have to compete with pictures that can be created at the push of a button. The process that AI offers to skip for you is probably not worth skipping after all.

Ramona Ursache

Faceless Figure / 2026 / Acrylic paint on wall, 180 cm x 50 cm

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Tony Federico

Waiting / Koh Samui, Thailand 2026 / Digital photography

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The reason to present a photo by Tony Federico as the first contribution to this year's Woman Portrait Gallery has to do with an urgent situation. Both Tony Federico and his daughter Altea Federico have been part of our group show before — Tony with his backstage Polaroids from Milan's fashion world, Altea with photographs from Berlin's club culture. Their work appeared side by side: a father and daughter working in the same medium and style: Polaroid shots, behind-the-scenes. Today, the situation is very different. Altea has been in prison in Thailand for more than four months. Tony left Berlin and traveled there to be close to her. Without knowing the legal circumstances of the case, what I see is a young woman facing an extremely difficult situation and a father who has dropped everything to be by her side. When Tony sent me a photograph he had made in Thailand, at first I wasn't sure who I was looking at. The short hair, black-and-white, a partially hidden face. The woman in the photograph is not Altea, yet the image seems to carry the weight of everything Tony is experiencing. There is none of the glamour of his Milan Polaroids and none of the energy from Altea's nightlife photos. Instead, the picture feels dark and uncertain. But even in the middle of a crisis, Tony's drive to take photos remains. This will not solve his problems, but hopefully it helps to process what feels overwhelming. By presenting his work „Waiting" at Kaffeemitte, we want to signal to Tony and Altea that they are not forgotten. We hope they'll be back in Berlin soon!

Zora Jurenkova

La Femme Burlesque / Berlin 2022 / Digital photography

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concept

The subject of the woman's portrait is not only visually compelling – it is also a starting point for great stories about projection, identity, desire, power, memory, or contradiction. Who is a woman, and who is not? What are so-called positive feminine attributes, and how can all genders adopt them? And why do so-called negative masculine attributes seem to play such a significant role in our time? The collection has now grown to 50 works, with a selection once again presented at Kaffeemitte. Special thanks to all the artists who contributed their personal interpretation of a woman’s portrait.

with artwork by

Alex Sokolov / Alex Zika / Altea Federico / Anastasiia Khadzynova / Andrea Luque / Botticchio / Caro Pepe / Casa de Balneario / Dared / Darren Cullen / Eva Contreras / Florian Thiemann / Franka Sühlo / Gabriel Denaes / Gairah Praskovia / Jose Roberto / Käpt'n Kinky / Katarina Eva / Liliana Rasmussen / Lilika Strezoska / Lou Held / Lubomír Fiala / Lucille Guder / Lydia Prien / Macarena Cox / Marina Anken / Martin Krusche / Martin Serpentis / Matus Toth / Mein Lieber Prost / Michael Joseph / Naicha / Nina Barnini / Paolo Gallo / Patricia Nigri / Paul Rosenbauer / Pia Henkel / Pongsuang Choop / Ramona Ursache / Sunny Strange / Therese Rosier / Tom Pollhammer / Tony Federico / Vassilis Konstantinou / Zora Jurenkova

Contact

Kaffeemitte Weinmeisterstr. 9a 10178 Berlin

Gregor Hutz art@kaffeemitte.de

May - July 2026 at Kaffeemitte, Berlin