The Theatre

The Theatre from LUmkA


158 Rivington Street NYC, NY
May 3 - 30, 2025

LUmkA is pleased to present The Theatre at 158 Rivington Street, NYC, NY, on view from 3 to 30 May 2025. Please join us for an opening reception on 3 May 2025 from 6 - 8 PM.

The Theatre houses environmental installations by Anna Ting Möller, Luca Rekosh, Marianna Rothen, and Miles Scharff to disrupt the consumer mind and propose a more authentic mode of being. Opposing qualitative and quantitative reasoning, sensory perception, memory, and physical and immaterial realities organize the experiential model of exhibition.

In a late-capitalist society that validates existence through perpetual consumption, we lose sight of the fact that reality is largely immaterial at its atomic level. Meanwhile, consumption becomes data, feeding algorithmic systems that target the unconscious mind—awakening desire like a sleeper agent. These subliminal cues amplify consumer longing, reinforcing a positive feedback loop that commodifies even the most intimate practices and distances us from embodied experience.

In the ruins of a hype beast retailer, a mélange of mannequins, animism, and electromagnetic field interpretations becomes The Theatre. Through sensory-based interventions, the exhibition disrupts this addictive compulsion toward materialism, proposing an invitation to return to presence, perception, and the reality of lived experience.

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Organized in collaboration with Mila Rae Mancuso as LUmkA's last New York City exhibition before moving to London, UK (Fall 2025)

Anna Ting Möller (B. 1992)

ANNA TING MÖLLER has an MFA in Visual Art, with a concentration in installation and expanded practices and a BFA from Konstfack University, Stockholm 2018). The artist explores the intersections of materiality, transformation, and bodily processes by working in symbiosis with a kombucha mother to create ephemeral sculpture/installation/performance that challenge conventional notions of life, death, lineage and care. Focusing on themes such as the sexualized and grotesque, Möller’s art critiques societal constructs, particularly the fetishization of the Other. Möller recently completed a commission for and currently exhibited by MASS MoCA. Möller’s work has been exhibited by Liljevalchs Konsthall, Stockholm, SE; ArkDes, SE; Carl Eldh, SE; ICPNA La Molina, PE; Luan Gallery, CH; Jyväskylä Art Museum, FI; Titanik, FI; Supper Club Fair, Hong Kong, HK; Gallery Tutu, US; Island Gallery, US; Murmurs, US; Urban Glass, US; Alexander Berggruen, US; Phillips New York, US; and Ceysson & Bénétière, US. They participated in the 45th Tendencies Biennale in Norway and The Immigrant Artist Biennale in New York. The artist’s work has been reviewed in publications such as Hyperallergic and Brooklyn Rail, among others. Möller has received residencies and fellowships from EFA Robert Blackburn, US; Kronobergs Kulturpris, SE; Asia Art Archive in America, US; Lower Manhattan Cultural Council (LMCC), US; The Sweden-America Foundation, SE, and presented public lectures at several universities and institutions, including Brooklyn Rail’s The New Social Environment #1180 (2025, Online), Zurich University of the Arts (2024, Online), Jyväskylä Art Museum (2024, Online), School of Visual Arts (2024, US), and Accelerator

Kunsthalle, Stockholm University (2020, SE).

Luca Rekosh (B. 2001)

REKOSH is a Romanian-American, Brooklyn-based artist. Born in Manhattan, the artist spent formative years in Budapest and New York City, returning to New York permanently in 2008. Informed by a classical and life-long art education, Rekosh constructs multimedia sculptures that bridge place, medium, and language. The artist graduated from Pratt Institute in 2023 with a BFA in Sculpture and Integrated Practices. Rekosh is a 2024 recipient of the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA) for the FY2024 grant. 

Marianna Rothen (B. 1982)

(b. 1982) Rothen uses her photographs, films and installations to explore and deconstruct conventional conceptions of female beauty and gender politics. Screenings and solo exhibitions of her work have been organized at Steven Kasher Gallery in New York, Polka Galerie in Paris, Biennale Images Vevey, Galerie Stephan Witschi in Zurich, The Little Black Gallery, London, Ingrid Deuss gallery in Antwerp and Kaune Contemporary in Cologne. Her work has been the subject of four monographs; Snow and Rose & other tales, Shadows in Paradise, Mail Order and Making It Real all published by b.frank books. Rothen's films include Like a Dream (2024), Mail Order (2019), The Woman with a Crown (2014) and Desert of June (2014). Her work has been featured in Apartamento Magazine, The New Yorker, Upstate Diary, New York Magazine, The Paris Review, Vogue, Photoworks, Elephant, Interview, AnOther and Huffington Post.

Miles Scharff (B. 1999)

A sound artist and improvisor working with radio electronics, sound sculpture, video, spatial audio, and performance. His current research explores how everyday objects double as involuntary antennas, absorbing and re-broadcasting stray electromagnetic and acoustic signals. Spawned by telecom and other industrial systems, these accidental relay points become unlikely portals for intimate acts of listening. Scharff sees them as case studies along a continuum that stretches from the epistemic rigor of Western science to its détournement by conspiratorial and fringe-spiritualist cultures. He builds devices and software that stage, record, and recontextualize these object–signal interactions, transducing latent fields into audible and kinetic forms; granting physical presence to phenomena that usually escape perception, situating them in relation to our bodies, architectures, and ecologies. His aim is not to affix a definitive truth, but to materialize the unseen so that it can be examined—critically and sensorially—within the complex infrastructures that shape contemporary experience.

Backstage at The Theatre (Documentary)

Directed by K14N4

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Works

Even if something did you would never really know
Miles Scharff, Even if something did you would never really know, 2025

Copper, steel, conductive fabric, felt, variable electromagnetic receiver, magnets, amplifier, speaker 47 x 47 x 66 in. Photo: Mila Rae Mancuso

Untitled (Bone III)
Anna Ting Möller, Untitled (Bone III), 2022

Ceramic and kombucha

5 x 15 x 5 in.

Shed
Anna Ting Möller, Shed, 2024

Kombucha on wood panel

11 x 7 in.

Babyface
Marianna Rothen, Babyface, 2017

Archival pigment print

25 x 25 in.

Edition of 4/5 + 1 A.P.

The Italian
Marianna Rothen, The Italian, 2017

Archival pigment print

17 x 17 in.

A.P.

Glory Daze
Marianna Rothen, Glory Daze, 2020

Diary entry 6 x 8 in.

Photograph 20 x 15 in.

Frame 21 ¼ 24 ¼ in.

Edition of 1/5 + 1 A.P.

Valentine's Day
Marianna Rothen, Valentine's Day, 2020

Archival pigment print

Diary entry 6 x 8 in.

Photograph 20 x 15 in.

Frame 21 ¼ 24 ¼ in.

Edition of 1/5 + 1 A.P.

Cock-A-Doodle-Doo
Marianna Rothen, Cock-A-Doodle-Doo, 2019

Installation, Male mannequins (fiberglass and plastic), wigs, moustaches, clothing, fabric, plastic food, aluminum cans, cigarettes, wood, table, chairs, picture frames, glass, photographs, tape

Dimensions variable

Making It Real
Marianna Rothen, Making It Real, 1997-2024

Installation, photos, diary entries, and model tear sheets from the series, ‘Making It Real’, 2020 and ‘Like a Dream’

Soup (So Up)
Luca Rekosh, Soup (So Up), 2025

Wood, muslin, rope

144 x 120 x 85 in.

Dede
Luca Rekosh, Dede, 2025

Wood, digital displays, sound

24 x 20 ½ in.

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