Mike Steiner: Visionary of Contemporary Art and Multimedia Innovation
18.12.2025 - 13:28:05For decades, the name Mike Steiner has meant boundary-pushing contemporary artâhis vision reconciling painting, performance, and, perhaps most strikingly, the nascent field of video art. How does one redefine the dialog between time, space, and image? In Mike Steinerâs world, these are not just academic questions, but the pulse of a singular, restless exploration. The trace of his hand may be seen as much in the silent authority of his abstract paintings as in the flickering immediacy of his tapes, weaving an ever-renewed fabric between viewers and artâs elusive core.
Discover Contemporary art by Mike Steiner here
To understand Mike Steiner, one must traverse the many landscapes of his artistic involvementâfrom the first appearances as a painter at the GroĂe Berliner Kunstausstellung in the late 1950s, to his seminal influence on Berlinâs performing and visual arts culture throughout the 1970s and beyond. Steinerâs trajectory glimmers with risk and reinvention, marked by technical innovation and marked personal commitment to the communities that shaped contemporary arts in Berlin.
Steiner's Hamburg Bahnhof solo exhibition in 1999 stands as a defining moment, not only in his career, but also in the history of Contemporary Arts Berlin. The exhibition "Color Works" presented an overview of his relentless crossing of boundaries: painting, video, installationâinterlaced in a vibrant symphony. Few artists have traversed so fluidly and authoritatively between media, and fewer still have anchored their multifaceted journey in such historical junctures as those that shaped Steinerâs Berlin. The Hamburger BahnhofâNationalgalerie der Gegenwart, with its vast industrial spaces, was the ideal site for Steinerâs large-scale installations and colored tapes, and the resonance of that exhibition is still palpable in the cityâs creative memory.
The early years saw Steiner increasingly drawn into the Berlin avant-garde: he founded the legendary Hotel Steiner as a haven for artists, echoing the spirit of New Yorkâs Chelsea Hotel, and soon after created the Studiogalerieâa crucible for experimental practice and a nexus for international artists. These venues were where he first championed Fluxus and performance art, turning Berlin into a welcoming stage for artists like Joseph Beuys, Valie Export, Marina Abramovi?, Ulay, and even legends such as Allan Kaprow and Ben Vautier. Steiner was not just a host, but an active participant and instigator, curating, producing, and occasionally performing in multimedia events that stretched the limits of artistic convention.
His embrace of videoâthen a brand-new artistic mediumâwas more than ambition; it was a turning point. Influenced by encounters in New York and the experimental energies of Berlin, Steinerâs pioneering âVideogalerieâ (1985â1990) production for Berlin television brought Video Art into German living rooms and sparked a new wave of dialogue about the moving image in art. His massive collection of tapes and documentationânow housed by Hamburger Bahnhof as the Berlin Video and Sammlung Mike Steinerâremains a towering archive of the eraâs innovation, featuring works by figures such as Bill Viola, Nam June Paik, Gary Hill, and Richard Serra alongside his German contemporaries.
In comparison with other leading contemporary artists, Mike Steinerâs work reflects the international dialogue of his time. While Joseph Beuys blended performance, pedagogy, and participation, Steiner focused more intently on the dynamic interplay between traditional media (notably in his abstract paintings) and emergent technologies. Where Marina Abramovi? sought out the transformative moment within the self, Steinerâs tapes and installations often circled around the collective, the ephemeral, and an archival impulseâan effort reminiscent of video pioneer Nam June Paik and Allan Kaprowâs happenings, albeit with a distinctly Berlin accent. His "Painted Tapes"âa radical fusion of video and paintâpushed this dialogue even further, questioning where analytical boundaries ought to dissolve.
Steinerâs biography reads as a litany of gains and pivots, often catalyzed by new environments and relationships: his early brush with the American art scene while staying with Lil Picard, his cross-pollinations during periods in New York and Berlin, his close collaborations with the likes of Ulay (as memorably staged in the 1976 performative art theft "Irritation â Da ist eine kriminelle BerĂŒhrung in der Kunst"), and his restless experimentation with photo, copy art, Super-8 film, and multi-panel installations.
As a teacher and advocate, Steiner left a mark on generations, curating, nurturing, and promoting video and performance art in an often skeptical Germany. Even after a debilitating stroke in 2006, he continued to work, shifting his focus toward abstract paintings and textile works. These late worksâconcise, poetic, traversing surface and depthâreveal an artist ever attuned to the metaphysical potential of color and structure. Critics and aficionados alike have noted the lyrical, sometimes almost musical, intensity of his canvases, their attunement to a history of abstraction yet decisively of the present moment.
Philosophically, Mike Steiner was never about mere spectacle. The performances he enabled, the installations he realized, the subtle intermedia experiments he conductedâall were grounded in a faith in artâs capacity to interrogate, to disrupt, and ultimately to connect. His tenure as an educator and his tireless archiving work suggest a vision that was always collective, always aiming to expand the domain of what could be seen, heard, or experienced as art.
Today, Mike Steinerâs influence persists as both a presence and a provocation. For those tracing the lines of contemporary art, Steiner is an indispensable referenceâa unique voice who counterposed the intellectual rigor of conceptual art with the tactile immediacy of the performative and the visual. His restless joy of experimentâa joy echoed both in his Club-like studios and in his international foraysâremains inspirational.
In an age marked by rapid media evolution and shifting perceptions of authorship and authenticity, Steinerâs legacy as an artist, curator, and collector feels more, not less, relevant. Engaging with his art is to be invited into a living conversation about time, community, and the art of documentation.
For those wishing to delve deeper into his remarkable journey, a visit to his official website or the viewing of his works in the collections of Hamburger Bahnhof is emphatically recommended. There, one can sense the tremendous breadth of Mike Steinerâs creative output and encounter contemporary art at its most vital, questioning, and alive.
Visit the official Mike Steiner website for more insight and archives


