In Klause (Scheinprobleme in der Philosophie), Thomas Demand transforms a meticulously constructed paper model into a haunting photographic image. The work draws on press photographs of a tavern that became associated with a crime scene and entered collective memory through the widely circulated image of a lone palm-like plant in an otherwise ordinary interior. Demand restages this medially charged place, showing how a simple room becomes a symbolic site shaped more by reproduced imagery than by its physical reality. The delicate remains of the potted plant emphasize themes of decay, fragility, and the shifting boundary between documentation and interpretation.
Presented as a digital pigment print with a screenprint bookplate, this edition reflects Demand’s conceptual engagement with reconstruction and perception. The piece accompanies a 2006 artist’s reprint by Thomas Demand of Rudolf Carnap: Scheinprobleme in der Philosophie, part of the Ex Libris series (originally published 1928).

























