
Noayama is the alter ego of 23-year-old producer, DJ, media artist, and documentary filmmaker Noah Berger. He is an artist on affine records.

“Im Lot” was originally a room installation by artist Josef Hamberger from Rosenheim. The installation primarily consisted of notes written by a severely dementia-affected woman. Josef Hamberger, who also works as an elder-care nurse, observed with his team, as his patient’s illness progressed, the calming effect that writing had on her. However, over time, the…

The work of Emilia Vogt and Noayama presents a human-cybernetic organism that enters into an interactive connection with its inner and outer world. The performance explores self-regulating mechanisms within a system and reveals the function of a transmitter. The visualization and magnification of mostly hidden structures and organs create a new sense of proximity. (All…

Plain Receiver” offers a serious critique of the system, almost wrapped in a comedic guise. The television in the center, though also an “Objet Trouvé,” clearly stands out from the rest of the objects due to its positioning. Naturally, the artwork centers around the television, both because of its sounds and its luminescence. Despite their…

Welcome to the “Consume Land Flea Market”. This is the atmospheric setting and at the same time the luminous title of the debut album of young producer Noayama , released on legendary viennese Label Affine Records. “It centers on the contradiction between turbo-capitalist consumerism and the desire for vintage stuff in all kinds of shapes and…

The piece It was is about the flow of one’s own individual and collective identity. The title includes a hint of change and movement, a transformation that resembles a metamorphosis. Something was, something is and begins, but both are always mutually dependent. In exchange with the two choreographers, the media artist Alex Villard and the…

“This group—I have the impression they’re speaking Romanian.”An elderly couple who have been living in Germany for decades unexpectedly hear their mother tongue again while on holiday in Italy. This moment becomes the occasion to reflect on their shared past through a series of tender, everyday scenes: old photographs tell the story of how they…

In the documentary “One Day You’ll Understand”, the focus is on giving a voice to queer people — and to myself. It’s about stories. Lived experiences of discrimination, suffering, oppression, and fear. Stories told with courage. The goal is to remind us all that the dream of an equal world is still far from reality. Achieving…