Kunstpalais Erlangen

Cyrill Lachauer. The Sunset Route

feat. Mike Brodie, Mouse Green, Rhyw, Mia Justice Smith, Moritz Stumm

In the exhibition The Sunset Route, on view at the Kunstpalais Erlangen and created in collaboration with the Sammlung Goetz, Cyrill Lachauer presents works from 2020 to 2025, a period during which he traveled on freight trains through the USA, Mexico, and Bosnia. In the spirit of poetic ethnography, he created photographs and films that are now being shown together for the first time. They all explore questions of freedom, self-determination, and resistance, as well as colonization, exclusion, and exploitation.

 

Landscape as an expressive space imbued with meaning is a point of reference to which Cyrill Lachauer (born in 1979 in Rosenheim, Germany) repeatedly returns in his photographic and film work. With a keen sense of historical and political contexts, Lachauer traveled extensively throughout the United States, Mexico, and Bosnia over many years. The exhibition The Sunset Route at Kunstpalais brings together works created between 2020 and 2025 that address pressing questions in the form of a poetic (auto)ethnography: questions of freedom, self-determination, and resistance, but also colonization, exclusion, and exploitation.

The title The Sunset Route refers to the railway line of the same name, which is over 3,000 kilometers long and connects the interior of the United States with the Pacific coast in the far south of the country. Since the end of the 19th century, hobos and other transient people have been traveling on this and other routes on freight trains through North America. Lachauer himself began crossing the country as a train hopper in 2019. This phase led to the film project Slack, on which Lachauer worked with US photographer Mike Brodie from 2022 to 2025. The work commemorates Brodie's late partner Mia Justice Smith, alias Slack, who is also symbol of a generation marked by the fentanyl crisis, social media, and a personal desire for freedom. The Slack universe includes two new short films shown for the first time, The Prologue (in collaboration with Rhyw) and The Epilogue (in collaboration with Mouse Green and Moritz Stumm). They expand on the railroad motif with industrial relics from the Nazi era in Bosnia and the dangerous migration from Mexico to the US.

The exhibition also provides an in-depth insight into Lachauer's photographic work. The extensive series Cardboard & Copenhagen and Birds (Nat. Geo. 1989–1999) are based on different concepts and each play with their own unique aesthetic. Cardboard & Copenhagen was shot exclusively with disposable cameras and accordingly captures casual moments from life on freight trains – constantly on the move and only temporarily coming to rest on insulating cardboard sheets. For the Birds series, Lachauer collaged landscape photographs from a decade of National Geographic magazine into abstract bird figures. They document the beauty and destructive decline of landscapes, but at the same time embody symbols of hope and resistance.

Lachauer's artworks, which often consist of several elements, have been rearranged specifically for the Kunstpalais. This reflects the artist's approach of “communicating” with places, entering into dialogue with their character and the spirituality of the people and objects that inhabit them, rather than presuming to speak “about” them. 

The exhibition is a collaboration between the Sammlung Goetz in Munich and Kunstpalais Erlangen and is curated by Susanne Touw and Malte Lin-Kröger.

Vernissage: 19.06.2026

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