An everyday domestic task, specifically, mopping the floor, is relocated to a new context to draw attention to a form of labor that often goes unnoticed. Performed on a floating platform by Insola, in the middle of Berlin’s River Spree, the act of cleaning is detached from its practical purpose and presented as a continuous, repetitive action.
The six-hour durational performance by artist Lara Lussheimer examines the tension between routine labor and the desire to impose order. By placing a familiar domestic gesture within an environment where it appears functionally unnecessary, the work, CAUTION WET FLOOR, reflects on the persistence of repetitive actions and the limits of control.

CAUTION WET FLOOR is a six-hour durational performance by Lara Lussheimer | image by Karacho Berlin
six-hour performance examines labor, repetition, and control
Throughout the performance, the sequence of wetting the floor, mopping, placing the ‘CAUTION WET FLOOR’ sign, and waiting for the surface to dry is repeated continuously by artist Lara Lussheimer before beginning again. Surrounded by the river, the action unfolds against an expanse of water that reinforces its apparent futility, transforming an ordinary maintenance task into a sustained reflection on labor, repetition, and the impossibility of ever fully completing the act.

the performance takes place on Insola’s floating platform | image by Karacho Berlin