Archives: Artists

  • Mark Von Rosenstiel

    Mark Von Rosenstiel

    Mark Von Rosenstiel is GlogauAIR resident
    from April, 2016 to June, 2016

    United States


    Meet the Artist

    Statement

    Mark von Rosenstiel is a multi-disciplinary artist using mathematical algorithms that interact with and explore human relationships and emotions. Through feedback loops and technology he strives to reveal the middle ground people occupy — the undeniably human place where truth is agonizingly close, but never touched. Mark’s site specific installations create internalized representations of the human experience that explore the boundary between observation and participation.

    Mark’s work has been featured in galleries across the globe, from Seattle to Bangkok. He lectures on ideas of incompleteness, randomness, and scale variance in relation to art practice and the potential to discover truths by creative means.

    GlogauAIR Project

    I’ve recently been reading Science and Hypothesis by Henri Poincare. In his writing about the evidence of geometry, he talks about our awareness of muscle movements (both our eyes and body) that result in the objects within our visual field deforming (i.e. their perspective is changed). He argues that these deformations that we witness, in conjunction with the subconscious awareness of our bodies movement in relationship to these objects, gives us the ability to deduce the construction and geometry of solid objects. I started reading his work because I have for a long time been fascinated with internal and external perspectives, and how we relate ourselves (the internal Self) to an external world view.

    The phrase that spearheads the direction of work I would like to investigate is Sound As Substance. I would like to explore how we create context for sound in environments where the sound has no source that relates to previous experience. Poincare talks about how we use our bodies movement in space to ascertain the geometry of solid objects, and I’d like to take that idea conceptually further and look at our internal/external spaces in relationship to the constructed sound of our environment and how we then contextualize those sounds.

    To do this I would like to explore making simple machines that create very basic soundscapes that immerse and interact with the viewer. The physical construction I see as giant wooden nests, or groves of artificial trees, with computer driven hammers that knock on them. The soundscapes would be self-organizing, in that they would use mathematical algorithms derived from flocking, nesting, or cellular behavior. I would then explore how these soundscapes could bend and alter based on a persons immersion in them and play with how to make the viewer contextualize and take on the experience in an internal way.

    CV Summary

    EDUCATION

    • 2008 – 2009 New England Complex Systems Institute (NECSI), Boston, United States Complex Physical, Biological and Social Systems
    • 2002 – 2002 Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore, United States Sculpture
    • 2000 – 2005 Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, United States BA Mathematics

    SOLO EXHIBITION

    • 2015 If only there were a place just quiet and bright, that also smelled good, Kostka Gallery, Prague, Czech Republic
    • 2014 Things I was meant to have said yesterday, Glassbox Gallery, Seattle, United States
    • 2014 Considerations of This Future. This Future. This Future, gOc Studios, Seattle, United States
    • 2013 Enigma Machine, Bumbershoot, Seattle, United States
    • 2013 I Want All of This. All of This I Want, [storefront], Seattle, United States
    • 2013 This time we see, this time we feel, H Gallery, Bangkok, Thailand
    • 2012 We turn our heads toward the light (or wander aimlessly in the dark), Olson Kundig Architects, Seattle, United States
    • 2009 Prescriptions for Awe and Wonder, Graypants, Seattle, United States

    GROUP EXHIBITION

    • 2015 Meet Factory Open Studios, Meet Factory, Prague, Czech Republic
    • 2011 Neighbors, Vermillion Gallery, Seattle, United States

    RESIDENCIES

    • 2015 AQB Artist-in-Residence Program, Artist Quarter Budapest, Budapest, Hungary
    • 2015 Meet Factory AiR program, Meet Factory, Prague, Czech Republic

    AWARDS AND GRANTS

    • 2015 Residency Program Funds The New Foundation, Seattle, United States
    • 2014 Emergency Grant Foundation for Contemporary Arts, NYC, United States
    • 2014 Recraft Ambassador Seiko Recraft Campaign, NYC, United States
    • 2013 Finalist, Pike Place Market Waterfront Entrance Project Pike Place Historical Society, Seattle, United States
    • 2012 Selected Artist Art Vetting, NYC, United States

    Gallery

  • Jia-Jen Lin

    Jia-Jen Lin

    Jia-Jen Lin is GlogauAIR resident
    from October, 2017 to November, 2017

    Taiwan


    Meet the Artist

    1. You were born in Taiwan, but are based in the USA for quite some time now. How do you believe that has helped your artistic practice? Is your fascination with hybrid cultures and shifting identities due to this cultural exchange?

    I had quite a traditional education in Taiwan, culminating in a Western Painting and Art Education undergraduate degree. After a year as an art teacher in high school, I then attended a master’s degree at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University in Boston. As a result of the school’s liberal and inspiring academic approaches, I discovered a new language of creation, learning how to integrate different media and express my subjects from more critical perspectives.

    My works are often related to my personal and life experiences, with particular focus on culture shock and shifting identities. Since moving to New York, I’ve gained a better understanding of the possibilities of an artist’s role and learnt that art can both empower human experience and reflect social phenomena.

    1. Unlike other artists you don’t necessarily focus on one specific topic at a time, but work on several different ones at once. Why do you feel the need to change what you are working on so often? How do you normally come to choose the subjects of your works?

    My works are mainly about process—the process of making, of experiencing, and of becoming. I have several subjects that I have been exploring over the past 12 years, such as human experience, body imagery, cultural differences, artificial nature, and the relationship between manufacturing and art making. Now I usually develop a main concept for at least one or two years.

    While looking at the art I have produced over a short period of time, it might seem that I work on two or three different topics simultaneously, or frequently switch between them, but they are actually connected and just appear under different titles or in different media. For example, the action of making and questions about society appear in my sculptures in the Manufracture Series but also in the performance collaboration titled Yǐ shǔ yí shù yí shú yí shū yī shù yǐshū yì shù, in which a performer sewed a long roll of fabric while reading a poem querrying our social values and systems.

    1. How does your artistic process usually work?

    Drawing on personal experience, I employ my body and mind as a platform to process the information. I start by research on relative subjects and the materials or objects that I might use. In general, my main stimulation comes from displacement and alienation, our synthetic selves and behaviors, and humanity’s experience. It’s like an ongoing investigation into the relationship between “the self” and “otherness,” rather than the self-obsession some may attribute to artists.

    Instead of always working in the same way, I prefer to find new means of presenting and enhancing my ideas. It has always been challenging to transform abstract ideas into visual presentations and written words for the audience to see, read, and re-experience. But I  enjoy working through experience, process, struggle, resolve, and sharing.

    1. You have recently stated that you use “sculpture integrated with photography, video, and performance to portray the ongoing negotiation between our latent desires and the manipulated realities in which we find ourselves”, could you please further explain your statement?

    I like to explore the concept of sculpture with a broader range of media. I mostly employ sculptures, photographs of sculptures, video documentation of the process, and performance collaborations and integrate them together into the final presentation. I often try to grasp the glimpse between our everyday norms and our psychological selves beneath this. Because we are living in an environment where most choices and algorithms are preset our ongoing negotiations with society’s systems become inevitable. It then only becomes possible to achieve happiness through feeling we have control in these systems, or through abandoning them and their accompanying social values.

    1. The inspiration for the project you have been developing during your stay at GlogauAIR – Funes’ Broken Mirror – comes from Jorge Luis Borges’ short story Funes the Memorious – the tale of Ireneo Funes, who, after a bad head injury, acquired the amazing talent—or curse—of remembering absolutely everything. In what way would you connect that to your practice and through what kind of media would you express the connection?

    Funes’ Broken Mirror explores the process of searching for and reconfiguring memories. It conveys how we can modify, override, and remap memories into new terms and terrains through a variety of physical and visual experiences.

    In this series of modular works, I re-edit sculptures, found objects, videos, photographs, and sound elements that I have collected from different times and spaces. By combining new and old elements, I modify and juxtapose them in a new environment structured with mirror-finished stainless-steel sheets and rods. The reflections of the objects and images resonate with themselves and also with other elements in the space. Through interaction with each other in an isolated space, new associations can be generated.

    This project is inspired by Jorge Luis Borges’ Funes the Memorious novella, in which he depicts Funes as a man who remembers everything and thus is incapable of thinking. Everything is forever imprinted in his mind as a vast mirror of the world, and his most distant memories are as vivid as those of a moment before. I began to imagine how the world might look from his perspective and if we can break this vast mirror and recompose the fragments into what we would like to see.

    When I was struggling to find a conduit for my abstract idea and the method of creation for this project, I found inspiration from reading The Brain That Changes Itself by Norman Doidge, more specifically the chapter Turning Our Ghosts into Ancestors. This explains how our experiences are linked despite differences in time and space. Memories are actually different every time we recall them, but with consciousness they can gradually be modified and turned into permanent long-term memories, after a certain number of reoccurrences of new events.

    I see each object as carrying its own memories, which are actually projections of our personal histories. Therefore, we create associations between objects and the meanings of objects that reflect our own memories, which also change from time to time. Although here I am using my personal process of memories to experiment with this idea, I have had feedback from people whose experiences mirror my descriptions. I think this is the most important aspect I would like to provide those viewing my art—to share common but likely forgotten human experiences.

    Resulting from my residency at the International Studio & Curatorial Program (ISCP), New York, and continued exploration at GlogauAIR and gr_und, Berlin, “Funes’ Broken Mirror” will be presented at the Rubber Factory in New York in April 2018.

    1. In your recent works like The Manufacture series and The Factory Series you have been exploring the relationship between manufacturing and art-making. One can’t help but notice the connection to movements such as Dadaism and Pop Art where the use of manufactured goods was a common practice in order to convey a certain idea. Could you explain how your approach differs from that of artists from that era? What exactly provoked your interest in bringing these two, quite often conflicting, practices together?

    My work is not really related to Pop Art, but people might associate some of my work with Dadaism since I often use found objects and sometimes create performance collaborations with different elements, such as visual art, performance, poems, and sound art. When I started to employ a lot of found objects in my work from 2010, I looked at some visual results of Dadaists’ activities, their creation processes, the way they decoded the meaning of objects, and their randomness as well as improvisation, so, yes, there is some influence from Dadaism in my sculptures and installations. However, I don’t see my idea of creation as really aligned with Dada’s main concept—anti-art activities from social and political perspectives (although, of course, Dadaism is more sophisticated than this loose definition suggests).

    Instead, I have been inspired by works from Arte Povera artists, with their emphasis on life as art and the return to simple objects and messages, and the Fluxus, which is more focused on attitude (rather than style, or a movement like Dadaism) and often intersects with different media.

    1. How do you believe your stay here at GlogauAIR and Berlin has influenced your work?

    My stay at GlogauAIR provided me with time and space to continue my projects. I was able to experiment with video installation at the studio and later present the results at gr_und. Being in Berlin also gave me a brief insight into the art spaces, underground music scene, and artists’ communities of Germany’s capital.

    Statement

    Jia-Jen Lin creates images of the human body and its surroundings as a reflection of our psyche. Drawing from personal experience and observations, Lin uses sculpture integrated with photography, video, and performance to portray the ongoing negotiation between our latent desires and the manipulated realities in which we find ourselves. Hybrid cultures, shifting identities, and the relationships between our physicality and psychology are subjects Lin has investigated since 2004. Her recent projects explore humanity’s experience of displacement, self-consciousness and loss and how memories change with modified experience and new events.

    Jia-Jen Lin is a Taiwanese artist based in New York. Lin received her MFA in sculpture, installation, and multimedia from the joint degree program at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and Tufts University, and her BFA in Western Painting from National Taiwan Normal University. She has participated in artist residencies at International Studio & Curatorial Program, New York; L’Estruch, Spain; Water Mill Center, New York; Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, Nebraska; and Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts. Exhibitions include Queens International 4, Queens Museum; Incheon Women Artists’ Biennale, South Korea; Young Artist Discovery, Art Taipei; and Manufractura, Hangar Art, Barcelona. She has received grants from Brooklyn Arts Council, Sculpture Space, Franconia Sculpture Park, National Culture and Arts Foundation of Taiwan, and Ministry of Culture of Taiwan.

    GlogauAIR Project

    During my time at this residency, I will develop a new project, “Funes’ Broken Mirror,” and conduct research on related subjects and their visual representations—such as memories, modifications of objects and images, and our cyborg-perceptions and consciousness within this prevailing era of technology. “Funes’ Broken Mirror” explores the process of searching for and reconfiguring memories. It will highlight how we can edit, override, and remap them into new terms and terrains through a variety of physical and visual experiences over time. This project is inspired by Jorge Luis Borges’ “Funes the Memorious” novella, in which he depicts Funes as a man who remembers everything and thus is incapable of thinking. Everything is forever imprinted in Funes’ mind as a vast mirror of the world. His most distant memories are as vivid as those of a moment ago. Based on this character, I start to imagine how the world will look from his perspective. Can we break this vast mirror and recompose the fragments into what we would like to see? In my studio, I will create a series of modular works composed of sculptures, videos, photographs, and sound elements.

    I will reedit the images and videos I have collected from different manufacture and post-industrial sites. By transforming them into other formats and structures, I will explore different possibilities and metaphors to recreate both physical memories and the digital memories that I recorded while visiting these sites. Furthermore, I will look at how digital devices become essential to my thinking process and eventually embed them into my body of sensations during the moments of receiving or recalling information. Besides enlarging original images into installations,

    I would like to edit those images, along with photographs of artwork, into a photo book. It will reflect how images and their content can be transported and altered throughout the processes and presentations.

    CV Summary

    Education

    • MFA, School of the Museum of Fine Arts (SMFA) in affiliation with Tufts University, MA, 2007 Concentration on Sculpture, Installation, and Multimedia
    • BFA, National Taiwan Normal University (NTNU), Taiwan, 2002 Major in Western Painting

    Solo Exhibitions

    • Manufracture Series: Bread, Steel, and Benjamin Moore, Temporary Storage, Brooklyn, NY, 2016
    • The Archival Body, Archetype Factory, Taipei, Taiwan, 2015
    • We Might Have to Excise Your Lung, chashama 461 Gallery, New York, NY, 2014
    • Mirror Therapy, Attic Gallery, Taipei, Taiwan, 2013
    • Turn Around the Back, tamtamART, Berlin, Germany, 2012
    • We Lost Our Arms and Legs in Groups, Black and White Gallery, Taichung, Taiwan, 2011
    • Flowing . Circulating, Power Space Gallery, Taichung, Taiwan, 2009
    • Manu-fractured, Taipei Cultural Center, New York, NY, 2009
    • Bow, Red Mill Gallery, Vermont Studio Center, Johnson, VT, 2008
    • Please Fold Up Along the Line, NTNU, Taipei, Taiwan, 2003
    • Display of Furniture, OSO Gallery, Taipei, Taiwan, 2002

    Selected Group Exhibitions And Performances

    • Spring Open Studios, International Studio & Curatorial Program, 2017
    • Borderless: In Perspective, Lite-haus Galerie, Berlin, Germany, 2016
    • Manufractura, Hangar, Barcelona, Spain, 2015
    • Open Studio, chashama Studio at Brooklyn Army Terminal, Brooklyn, NY, 2014
    • Open Studio, Sculpture Space, Utica, NY, 2014
    • Yǐ Shǔ Yi Shu Yi Shu Yi Shū Yī Shu Yǐ Shū Yi Shu, Treasure Hill Artist Village, Taipei, Taiwan, 2013
    • FSP/ Jerome Fellowship Artists on exhibition, Franconia Sculpture Park, Franconia, MN, 2012-present
    • Deep Brain Stimulation, Ruin Academy, Taipei, Taiwan, 2011
    • Made in Taiwan-Young Artist Discovery, Art Taipei 2011, Taipei, Taiwan, 2011
    • Enter-Exit-Enter-Exit : Experimental Body Exchange Project, Taipei Artist Village, Taipei, Taiwan, 2011
    • Lost in Digi-tration, Nanhai Gallery, Taipei, Taiwan, 2011
    • Figure of Illusion–Japan Taiwan Exchange Exhibition, Inart Space, Tainan, Taiwan, 2011
    • She : Visions of Women by Taiwanese Artists, Tenri Cultural Institute, New York, NY, 2009
    • 2009 Incheon Women Artists’ Biennale, Incheon Art Platform, Incheon, South Korea, 2009
    • Queens International 4, Queens Museum of Art, Queens, NY, 2009
    • The Paradox of Water, The Westport Arts Center, Westport, CT, 2008
    • The 13th Annual International Women’s Exhibition, SOHO20 Chelsea Gallery, New York, NY, 2007
    • Viridian 18th National Juried Exhibition, Viridian Artists, New York, NY, 2007
    • National Prize Show 2007, Cambridge Art Association, MA, 2007

    Selected Grants And Honors

    • Brooklyn Arts Fund- Interdisciplinary, Brooklyn Arts Council, USA, 2016
    • Creation Grant in Fine Arts, National Culture and Arts Foundation, Taiwan, 2015-16
    • International Cultural Exchange Grant, National Culture and Arts Foundation, Taiwan, 2016
    • International Cultural Exchange Grant, National Culture and Arts Foundation, Taiwan, 2015
    • International Residency and Cultural Exchange Grant, Ministry of Culture, Taiwan, 2014
    • Creation Grant in Fine Arts, National Culture and Arts Foundation, Taiwan, 2011
    • The Performing Arts Grant, Council for Cultural Affairs, Taiwan, 2011
    • FSP/ Jerome Fellowship, Jerome Foundation, USA, 2012
    • The First Place, The Paradox of the Water, The Westport Arts Center, USA, 2008
    • Jurors’ Recognition, SMFA Student Annual, SMFA, USA, 2007

    Selected Residencies

    • International Studio & Curatorial Program
    • L’Estruch, Sabadell, Spain, 2015
    • Sculpture Space, Utica, NY, 2014
    • Franconia Sculpture Park, Shafer, MN, 2012
    • Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts, Perth, Australia, 2010
    • Watermill Center, Watermill, NY, 2010
    • Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, Omaha, NE, 2010

    Gallery

  • Ainhoa Salas Richarte

    Ainhoa Salas Richarte

    Ainhoa Salas Richarte is GlogauAIR resident
    from September, 2018 to December, 2018

    Spain


    Meet the Artist

    Coming soon

    Statement

    Multimedia artist whose work moves between contemporary culture and the research of alternative ways of interaction. My artistic practice focuses mainly on installations and objects that have to do with the sensationalism and the seduction strategies of the media and the overload of stimuli to which we are subjected.

    As for my personal research, I’m interested in the use of alternative capacities and materials for the control of interfaces, new kinds of interfaces that speak of the relationship of people with the environment that surrounds them and that are part of their lives.

    GlogauAIR Project

    The context of the project I want to develop has to do with fascination, engagement, the sensationalism; it has to do with the aesthetics of the Internet and contemporary practices of immediacy, appropriation, frantic rhythms and mesmerizing loops, it looks like and uses marketing strategies focused in engage user’s attention.

    Those strategies not only seek to give us information about products, nowadays ads seek to seduce us through entertainment, to captivate us, engage attention, then, secondly, they give certain information that will have more or less to do with what we were told at first. We can notice this tactic also, for example, in super-morbid and incomplete headlines that look for the click and in which many times, when entering in the content, we find that the news or article has very little to do with what was reported in its headline, normally the content is disappointing and misleading.

    Mine it’s a kind of pop art that talks of contemporary culture using the same resources of the current Internet culture, as the previous ones we referred to (sensationalism, appropriationism, loops…) –and others like the overload of stimuli and information, the sensory chaos, the colors, etc. – to make a refexion about it.

    I would like to continue developing the present project at both practical and theoretical level.

    At theoretical level, I would like to continue researching in the ways of doing of society and in their ways of escaping on the internet and exploring the phenomenon of videos and internet content that act as oasis (satisfying videos), understand why of its emergence and what makes them so “satisfying”, how it relates with the current culture and which way it evolves.

    At the practical level I intend to set up several pieces I have sketched and work on the generation of new ideas, that is to bring the studied concepts into practice.

    The pieces to be created during the residence take notice in the industrial processes or the mechanical movements that are like mantras, with constant and repetitive rhythms and for that reason, they are mainly naked machines that allow to appreciate all the processes of the loops besides the loop itself.

    They are also based on appropriationism, since they are composed of found objects, objects that being decontextualized and used in absurd machines, acquire a new formal and aesthetic dimension, they become captivating objects that, in addition, placed in installation format, generate a seemingly chaotic immersion space. They continue the line of work already begun keeping on the research in the contemporary ways of entertainment.

    CV Summary

    Academic formation

    • 2008-2013: Graduated in Fine Arts by Universidad Politécnica de Valencia
    • 2013-2016: Master in Artes Visuales y Multimedia by Universidad Politécnica de Valencia

    Merits

    2017

    • Selection in XX mostra Art públic – Universitat pública. June 2017.
    • Presentation of interactive videomapping Project Reconstruïnt Cabanyal, result of the Emergents 2016 grant aid and presented in the 7th Cabanyal Íntim Festival of Performing Arts. May 2017.

    2016

    • Grant Emergents 2016 to creative, innovative and sociocultural inclusive projects. November 2016

    2015

    • Selection in XVII Call Luis Adelantado 2015. July 2015.
    • Collective Exhibition PAM! PAM! in Centre del Carme. May 2015.
    • Collaboration in Expociencia 2015, organised by Parc Científic of Universitat de València. Interdisciplinar collaboration project. May 2015.

    2014

    • Collective exhibition Mar-mar in Octubre Centro de Cultura Contemporánea taking place inside the program of Mostra Viva del Mediterràni. December 2014.
    • Mention in PAM! 2014, II Muestra de Producciones Artísticas y Multimedia de la Facultad de Bellas Artes de Valencia. May 2014.
    • Participation in the videomapping demonstration in 4th Cabanyal Íntim Festival of Performing Arts. May 2014.

    Gallery

  • Mark Son

    Mark Son

    Mark Son is GlogauAIR resident
    from July, 2019 to September, 2019

    South Korea


    Meet the Artist

    Coming soon

    Statement

    Since I was a child, I liked drawing and was so happy I could express myself through paintings. I am interested in new spaces, things and people and like to have new experiences. I have volunteered at the Seoul Olympic Museum in my early 20s. During that time I became interested in new fields. As a photographer I looked at the world through a photographic lens and got a lot of inspiration. Naturally, I got the chance to major in photography at university. I also had various experiences, such as as a lecturer at an art school, a stage artist, a publisher and illustrator. Such a time has been very helpful in my creative work. I am more active now and ready to accept everything in a new culture, play and discourse.

    GlogauAIR Project

    Project proposal: occupying a stronghold.

    Planning background: The stress of long distance couples is not often seen.

    The places we meet and the events that occur are very important. The area we meet is related to art and we often book accommodation in the vicinity. Naturally, we became interested in the center of the motel and hotel.

    Purpose: It was the interior, objects and a few bottles of beverages and water that were of interest. It is more realistic that the stationary objects and colorful, lavish lighting that are placed like a still life are in a secret space. Focusing on it, we tried new thinking about space while transforming and manipulating our own base.

    The artist wants to express the intrinsic nature of contemporary art as a transformation of space or a virtual space that the audience wants to directly experience and convey. In that sense, the slogan “occupying a stronghold” came up.

    The obsession gives birth to illusions and, therefore, tries to replace the virtual space with a private, secret space. The space will be a public space or a space that many people can easily reach. We want to create a space by replacing the private, private and secret space with the symbol of motel, adding fictional imagination and enthusiasm to it. As a result, we can feel the intricacy which is one of the attributes of contemporary art by directly experiencing the transformation of space to the audience.

    CV Summary

    EDUCATION

    • 2016 Bauhaus-Universität, Weimar, Fine art, Germany (University dropout)
    • 2008 Kaywon University of Art and Design, photograph SOLO

    EXHIBITIONS

    • 2019 Gallery C, Daejeon, South Korea (to be displayed)
    • 2019 Rund Gallery, Seoul, South Korea (to be displayed)
    • 2018 Light&Spectrum 2, Lift art galley, online exhibition, Sweden
    • 2018 Light&Spectrum 1,2, Gyeongju Arts Center, Gyeongju, South Korea
    • 2018 Mark & Son, SUH WOO gallery, Seoul, South Korea
    • 2018 Invisible gloom, Gallery TY , Tong yeong, South Korea
    • 2018 Invisible gloom – Camera Obscura, Yeongcheon creative studio, Yeongcheon, South Korea
    • 2017 Light&Spectrum 1, CYART Space, Seoul, South Korea

    GROUP EXHIBITIONS

    • 2019 Art Space, Seoul, Korea (to be exhibited) Art Fair
    • 2018 Artist to shine, Chosun Ilbo Art Museum, Seoul, South Korea
    • 2018 I face dreams, Gallery Ilho, Seoul, South Korea
    • 2018 Preview, Yeongcheon, South Korea
    • 2018 People Choice, CYART Space, Seoul, South Korea
    • 2018 10th anniversary exhibition, Yeongcheon, South Korea
    • 2018 Arts Center, Hangaram Art Museum, Seoul, South Korea
    • 2018 Open Studio, Yeongcheon, South Korea
    • 2018 Collection exhibition, Gyeongju Arts Center, Gyeongju, South Korea (to be exhibited)
    • 2018 Seodaemoon In Art Fair, Seoul, South Korea
    • 2018 Gyeongnam Art Fair, South Korea
    • 2018 ART Gyeong Ju, Gyeong Ju, South Korea
    • 2018 Daegu Art Fair, Daegu, South Korea
    • 2018 Residency 10th Yeongcheon Creative Studio, South Korea
    • 2018 Award Licht & Spectum – Repetition of Echo and Trembling, Silver Medal Award winner – Awards in San Francisco Bay International Photo Show, USA
    • 2018 Collection Gyeongju Arts Center, Gyeongju, South Korea
    • 2018 Collection Suh Woo gallery, seoul, South Korea
    • 2018 Interview swing by, Yeongcheon creative studio, P.10 / 11
    • 2018 Young Artist Project, Gallery TY
    • 2018 Gallery Rambant, Chosun Ilbo Fine Arts Museum, P.3
    • 2018 (Foundation) Gyeongju Cultural Foundation, Gyeongju Art, P.38 / 39, Monthly
    • 2018 Gallery Rambant, Hangaram Design Museum, P.101 / 102
    • 2018 Yeongcheon Creative Studio, 10th Anniversary Exhibition, P.40 / 41
    • 2018 CONCEPTUAL MAGAZINE, Online Magazine, USA
    • 2018 Selection of KHNP creative grant, South Korea
    • 2018 Selected as a Saatchi Gallery Screen Artist, UK
    • 2017 Enchanted, YVUA ARTS, Seoul, South Korea
    • 2016 Revolution, Bauhaus atelier, Weimar, Germany

    Gallery

  • Malcolm Smith

    Malcolm Smith

    Malcolm Smith is GlogauAIR resident
    from July, 2019 to September, 2019

    Australia


    Meet the Artist

    Coming soon

    Statement

    Malcolm Smith is an artist and art manager from Australia who is now based in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. He is one of the co-founders of Krack!, an artist run printmaking studio and gallery in Yogyakarta, that works collaboratively with artists to produce and exhibit print-based works that are visually innovative and respond critically to events, developments and cultural debates in the Asia Pacific region. Since 2013 Krack! has exhibited works in Indonesia, Australia, Singapore, China and Italy, delivered workshops with local and international artists, and collaborated with senior as well as emerging Indonesian artists.

    Before moving to Indonesia, Malcolm worked in contemporary artspaces around Australia including the Northern Territory Centre for Contemporary art (now NCCA), Object: the Australian Centre for Craft and Design and the Australian Centre for Photography. He has undertaken residencies and presented workshops and projects across Australia and South East Asia. He has exhibited in Australia, Indonesia, China and Europe. He has a Masters in Cultural Studies at Universitas Sanata Dharma in Yogyakarta.

    GlogauAIR Project

    A Plague of Rats

    This project relates to my ongoing research about hegemonies, ecologies and communities. I intend to build 20 robotic rats using Arduino and equipped with different sensors. The rats are set loose, like a plague, in a large space like a gallery or museum. They learn to map the space and undertake collective activities within it.

    Initially the rats explore the space randomly, collecting data from their environment and sending this to a centralized brain, or “Essence”. This “Essence” compiles and processes all of the rats’ data, building a map of the space and the position of the rats within it. “Essence” also sends individual instructions back to each rat, and can be tweaked to produce different kinds of group behaviors in the rats.

    I will develop a small prototype of this project for an exhibition in Yogyakarta in July. I would like to develop it on a larger scale (20 rats) in Berlin. If possible I would like to find venues to ‘perform’ the rats in Berlin during my residency. The project will involve collaborators in Jogja and Berlin. I am hoping it will be possible for them to work with me at times in the studio at GlogauAir, but I am only seeking accommodation for myself.

    CV Summary

    EDUCATION

    • Program Magister, Ilmu Religi Budaya (MA, Cultural Studies)
      Universitas Sanata Dharma, Yogyakarta
    • BA (Communications)
      University of Technology, Sydney

    SELECTED EXHIBITIONS

    • 2018 Artjog2018: Enlightenment, Jogja National Museum
    • 2017 Carte Blanche: Anxiety Mizuma Gallery, Singapore
    • 2016 Out of Joint, Dia.Lo.Gue artspace, Jakarta
    • 2015 Artjog: Infinity in Flux, Taman Budaya, Yogyakarta
    • 2014 Modern Times, Newsagency Gallery, Sydney
    • 2013 Signature Hair, Part of the Disana Project, Cemeti Arthouse
      Greetings from Silverside, Newsagency Gallery, Sydney
    • 2012 Semi Precious, Newsagency Gallery
      Ships Passing in the Night, Lir Space, Yogyakarta
    • 2011 The Calling, s.14, Bandung

    SELECTED PROJECTS WITH Krack! STUDIO

    • 2019 Evolutionary Tradition: Asian Contemporary Print Art Exhibition, Szechuan Museum of Fine Art, Chongqing, China
    • 2018 The Misfits (Krack’s 5th birthday exhibition), Krack! Gallery, Yogyakarta
    • 2017 Resistance is Futile (With Krack studio), Krack! Gallery, Yogyakarta
    • 2016 Obat Kuat (With Krack studio), Krack! Gallery, Yogyakarta
    • 2015 The Krackatorium (With Krack studio), Krack! Gallery, Yogyakarta
    • 2014 Tanah / Impian (With Krack studio), Krack! Gallery, Yogyakarta
      Flux Kit, Turin Italy, Footscray Community Arts Centre, Melbourne, Australia
    • 2013 Krack 3D! (With Krack Studio), Krack! Gallery, Yogyakarta
      Krack! Pameran Perdana (with Krack Studio), Krack! Gallery, Yogyakarta

    SELECTED CURATORIAL PROJECTS

    • 2011 Certificate no. 000358/ (The ongoing impact of nuclear accidents in Russia), Sangkring Artspace, Yogyakarta and Galleri Soemardja, Bandung
    • 2010 Lake, Lake Macquarie City Art Gallery
      Dream Home, Australian Centre for Photography
    • 2009 The Lake, Australian Centre for Photography
      Nollywood: Pieter Hugo, Australian Centre for Photography
      Inheritance, Australian Centre for Photography
      Batteries Not Included (Co-Curator with Joseph Allen), Australian Centre for Photography
    • 2008 Avatar: The New You, Australian Centre for Photography
    • 2007 Portal: The Space between the Real and the Other Real. Object: Australian Centre for Craft and Design

    SELECTED WORKSHOPS AND PRESENTATIONS

    • 2018 “Happily Ever After”: Obat Kuat advertising in Ylgyakarta in the 20th Century Ascoltaci, Sanata Dharma University
    • 2015 Obat Kuat: Modern Masculinities in Indonesian advertising, 1910 – 2015, Inter Asia Cultural Studies Conference, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya,
    • 2014 New Strategies of Artist Initiative/Community Spaces, IVAA-ArtJOG Forum, Langgeng Art Foundation, Yogyakarta
    • 2013 The Paper Trail (Presented by ANU School of Art and Krack Studio), Indonesian Visual Art Archive, Yogyakarta
    • 2012 Applying for International Artist Residencies (Intensive 3 day workshops)
      14-16 March 2012, Indonesian Visual Art Archive (IVAA), Yogyakarta, Indonesia
      7-9 April 2012, Zerostation, Siagon, Vietnam
    • 2005 Asialink Arts Management Residency, Indonesia, Cemeti Foundation (now IVAA), Yogyakarta

    SELECTED WRITING

    • 2016 Soft Diplomat, Equator newsletter
    • 2014 Solid Krack!, Inside Indonesia
    • 2013 The Instrument Builders Project, Realtime Online
    • 2012 Realtime Traveler – Yogyakarta, Realtime Online
      Survive Garage, Catalogue essay, Newsagency Gallery, Sydney
    • 2011 Driving in an Indonesian Traffic Jam, Art Monthly feature

    Gallery

  • Nicolò Brezza

    Nicolò Brezza

    Nicolò Brezza is GlogauAIR resident
    from July, 2019 to September, 2019

    Italy


    Meet the Artist

    Coming soon

    Statement

    Can personal work be considered a unitary body? Fragments and micro-events carry the power and energy of work. Holding on to past works and their theoretical value can bring to repetition without difference, minimising the potential of the work itself. Memory represents a fundamental theme in my work, that is not to be confused with tradition that universally tends to forget tiny events and detailed qualities.

    Recently I’ve been questioning painting and its space, trying to bring flat images to attack the environment in which they live, by changing their physical and chemical nature. At the same time, I attempt to reach a severe distance by remaining paradoxically tied to the criteria and tradition of old painting. I’m exploring this paradox through painting,with painting to reach painting. Questioning the nature of painting itself changes my work every time, giving me the chance to explore new medias and the different perceptions an image gives me. Consequentially, my relationship with space began to change, becoming irredeemably tied to the pictorial dimension gaining as much as importance. Thus, I began orientating my paintings towards their bond with space, firmly believing in the power of the image and its possibility of becoming a spatial, non-statuesque phenomenon. These paintings are then structured in an environment, mostly following the spatial dispositions I find in old paintings, especially from works done by renaissance masters for their fascinating use of perspective and for their installation-wise importance.

    This recent personal approach towards the past allows me to find installation criteria valuable to my work. My behaviour towards, and my perception of, images changed drastically after reading Pierre Klossowski’s novel Le Baphomet, in which spaces and bodies are “visited” by people that have abandoned their physical nature for an ethereal state. This allows them to live in every era and every space they desire without getting stuck in enclosed environments. To me, this piece of literature functioned as a working method.

    GlogauAIR Project

    What I would like to do, during my stay, is to complete a theoretically never-ending visual story. For this visual story, I intend to build aerial images that can contain (in or around themselves) some narrative text. By never-ending story, I mean that I’m going to keep on writing and designing the story until my time at the residency is over. Words and pictures may change depending on the environment I’m in, in this case the residency, but the guidelines will remain the same: I will start from these and create around them some sketched narratives and images. The number of pieces produced will vary on how much time and text there is and it will be expressed mainly with paintings immersed in the space surrounding the studio. I will manipulate chemically and physically the nature of these images depending on the meaning and energy of the text itself, pictures will occupy different heights and spaces with increasing measures or lowering ones and text will sometimes alter the image. Text will be presented through different medias: it could be written, audio or even video.

    My main focus, regarding the pictorial dimension, will be playing with the transparency of images and their behaviour in space. The transparency effect will be obtained by treating surfaces and materials with oil and other lubricants, then mixed with oil colours, depending on the needs of the story and image. The media on which I will elaborate these pictorial compositions will be mainly canvases and different types of paper (e.g. glossy paper, letterpress print paper, rice paper etc.) depending on their response to the lubricants and their weight. All of the images and their architectural structure (if needed) will be produced in situ, allowing the studio environment to establish the natural conditions of their dimension.

    Architecturally, I intend that the space will be occupied by the images that will be supported by a structure of varying size and material depending on their place in the studio (height, weight and dimension). When I build these spatial images I usually rely on objects of everyday use which I then manipulate and decontextualise. I would like to carry on my work using wooden pegs and fishing nets as a medium to perceive space and form in a different way. The specific function and nature of these materials allows me to research even more deeply painting’s nature and space.

    The text will be started and non-ended during the stay too. The story will rotate around the existence of a little seed, that grows and outgrows its environment every time, always researching new places where to live.

    The nature of this project is research. Research on what is spoken and written language and how, nowadays more often, written has become oral, due to the evolution being mainly synthesis orientated. By elaborating a story I wish to deepen my relationship between text and image, bringing it to places that change its perception and nature. To be more precise, I want to push narrative boundaries to act differently, to explore language and text through mediums and spaces they don’t usually inhabit.

    Concerning the images I will produce, my drive runs parallel to the narrative part. I want to research and explore image and its effectiveness through manipulation, by changing the structure and essence of few materials (as stated before in the proposal).

    This project could give me the chance to investigate the nature of, and relationship between, narration and image, questioning them both at the same time.

    CV Summary

    EDUCATION

    • 2016-2018 MFA, Academy of Fine Arts of Perugia, Italy, class of Prof. Arthur Duff
    • 2012-2015 Lettere e Filosofia, Discipline Arte Musica e Spettacolo (DAMS), Bologna, Italy

    WORKS IN PERMANENT COLLECTIONS

    • Luciano Benetton Collection (Italy), Imago Mundi

    Gallery

  • Jit Seo

    Jit Seo

    Jit Seo is GlogauAIR resident
    from July, 2019 to September, 2019

    South Korea


    Meet the Artist

    Coming soon

    Statement

    As an artist, I create, arrange or transform my own viewpoint and language into regular patterns. I create a new combination by uniting the surrounding environment with abstract forms. This arrangement provides new experiences that flexibly interact with the audience.

    My work is based on an unreachable and distant world: the world of colour and especially fantasy. I say that the secret of life lies in retaining ideality or fantasy and that only dreams can grant us meaning and order to an absurd and evanescent life.

    Life is eventually ‘loss’. If you strip it down, life is an unpredictable sequence of loss and torture and we live while constantly losing something. Being born in the world is to be born with death, thereby ultimately leading to death. Although we struggle to live day by day, vanishing is the final point we will get to. We are small entities in the universe and in front of nature. Life is so harsh and relentless.

    Only fantasy and ideality make life precious to live in this transient world.

    The world of colours is a romantic fantasy that grants the meaning of life and those who indulged in the illusion follow starts rather than shabby land. I would like to share sympathy with other people by creating a single world through conversation with colours.

    GlogauAIR Project

    I would like to take textile installation, which I previously explored, and work together with other people in the residency to develop it and execute a public installation under the concept ‘Utopia’.

    Everyone has ideal things and dreams in their minds. As Berlin has an abundance of resources and an excellent work environment, it is a dream workplace for artists and I am sure each person came with a distinct ultimate vision. I also share this thought as I want to gain experiences in Berlin.

    This not only applies to art, as Berlin is a city that has the power to make people move with ideal thoughts even when it comes to culture. When people come with such ideal ideas, it does result in a gap between individual dreams and reality. This causes the chasm to become even wider, but enables people to see what they could not see before and also dream of other new things based on it. Illusions that follow one after another become connected and turn into a single circle, and that circle functions as an encounter and the link between a stranger and myself.

    I want to apply this utopia text as the basis and display various works that contain dreams in places around the city or use touchable or visible senses to create substantial forms and carry out in works where I can commune and interact with people.

    I do not simply want to settle it as an individual work, as I wish to develop it as a floating work that continuously becomes connected through others during the residency.

    CV Summary

    EDUCATION

    • 2019 Master of Arts M.F.A, Fine Art, Chelsea College of Arts, University of the Arts London
    • 2018 Bachelor of Arts, Textile Design, Chelsea College of Arts, University of the Arts London
    • 2015 Fashion and Textile, Camberwell Chelsea Wimbledon Foundation Diploma, University of the Arts London

    TRAINING

    • 2012 Sociology, Seoul National University ROTC Leadership conference

    EXHIBITIONS

    • 2018 Spectacular Sensation – Medicine Gallery, The Five Bells, London, United Kingdom
    • 2018 Group 2 Show ‘Human’ – Cookhouse Gallery, London, United Kingdom
    • 2018 Art Yellow Book 2018 – CICA Museum, Gimpo, South Korea
    • 2018 Undergraduate Degree Show- Chelsea College of Arts, London, United Kingdom
    • 2018 ‘대한민국 신 예술인전’ Korean New Contemporary Artist – Seoul Arts Center, Seoul. South Korea
    • 2018 4482-2018: Butterfly Effect, Voices of Korean Contemporary Artist – Bargehouse, Oxo Tower, London, United Kingdom
    • 2017 ‘발광’ Group exhibition – Seojung Arts Center, Seoul, South Korea
    • 2017 Performance ‘Last night We Fought Here’, Goldsmiths, University of London BA Fine Art Degree Show – London, United Kingdom
    • 2017 Premiere Vision Paris (International Textile trade fair) – Paris, France
    • 2015 CCW Foundation Degree Show – London, United Kingdom

    Gallery

  • Shae Gregg

    Shae Gregg

    Shae Gregg is GlogauAIR resident
    from July, 2019 to September, 2019

    Australia


    Meet the Artist

    Coming soon

    Statement

    Shae Gregg is a contemporary visual artist who works in a range of media but primarily paints with acrylics and oils. Often expressionist portraits of herself, her friends or imagined characters her work relates to the human condition and fears within the contemporary world. Her paintings show faces seen grinning intensely or with a more contemplative, somber demeanour. Her works perhaps reminds us of characters met in a youthful dream or nightmare. A scenario which plunges the viewer into a destabilised, surreal situation where good and bad have become one.

    GlogauAIR Project

    I am an expressionist painter coming from a small coastal location of the Sunshine Coast, QLD, Australia, and coming to a large, busy city. I use found objects as canvases, making combines and incorporating my own personal view of the city through portraits. I make abstract portraits of people I see in the city, my own identity, the journey of inner change and the influence of city life. A strong focus on the fears and anxieties of the city and the contemporary world. I have a strong fascination with urban forms, observing the built environment and the people who make up the city, the beauty and the ugly. An attempt to show the reality of one’s inner emotional journey being surrounded by people in a fast city lifestyle and to capture the ephemerality and speed of the modern world.

    In spending just two weeks in Berlin and the influence of the city I have seen a change in my works. Berlin is like nowhere else I have ever been and is full of creativity and inspiration yet it is a difficult being a 21-year-old woman alone in a big city and the fears I have and sometimes feelings of being lost in translation.

    CV Summary

    EDUCATION

    • 2017-2018 BFA (Visual Art), Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia
    • 2016 Certificate III in Visual Art, Sunshine Coast TAFE

    SHOWS

    • 2019 Group pop-up show, Rokkstar, Los Angeles
    • 2019 Solo show, Solbar Music, Sunshine Coast
    • 2019 Group show ‘Femme et al’, Greaser Gallery, Brisbane May
    • 2018 Solo show ‘Behind the Mask’, Swampland studios Sunshine Coast, Australia

    Gallery

  • Marie Hendriks

    Marie Hendriks

    Marie Hendriks is GlogauAIR resident
    from July, 2019 to September, 2019

    Netherlands


    Meet the Artist

    Coming soon

    Statement

    I’ve always been telling stories. This habit comes from a family tradition. My ancestors liked to make children believe in the extraordinary. Born in the Netherlands in 1981, I grew up in the French countryside from the age of 10. My family education stayed in Dutch, my mother tongue, whilst my intellectual learning would be in French.

    My work as a visual storytelling artist circles around the central themes of false appearances, the house and the sensation of constraint, childhood wonder and fears. Often articulated around the use of video my works flourishes in many other mediums like sculpture, drawing or photography reunited in architectural installation. My work questions in particular the process of a narrative construction that emerges from playful and fictionalized associations of memories and family anecdotes. The intimate and banal statue of these stories is overruled through the staging and the physical and emotional impact procured by the installation. The action is redeployed to an environment with a spectacular scale, required for the uncanny and marvelous. I transmit my stories and play out their effective tensions within the exhibition space.

    I’m interested in architecture and interior spaces that have a theatrical aspect, or that show a sense of accumulation and excess. Throughout the last couple of years I’ve been interested in recreational architecture: pavilions, follies, grottos, kiosks, and seaside second houses… These constructions are discharged of the representation function and the seriousness of the permanent house. They have the particularity off showing the more fanciful aspect of the architect and the owner’s mind. Here the confusion and strangeness off shapes, colors and textures and the unlimited use of artifice are accepted. Like Les Esseintes’s house in Huysmans’s A Rebours novel, these constructions allow to forget everyday life routine and own a space that’s at the same time a home and an elsewhere.

    GlogauAIR Project

    Extra Ape

    Extra Ape focuses around three elements from the Chinese Pavillon of the Sanssouci park: the golden roof figure, the wise, musical monkeys, and the ornamental statues. A golden figure dressed in a kimono is sitting cross-legged under an oriental umbrella on the Chinese pavilion’s roof. He’s watching over the park, ruling over the pavilion like sitting on a throne. With his long beard and his imposing statue he could be a representation inspired by Confucius. One of Confucius’ learnings says: “Look not at what is contrary to propriety; listen not to what is contrary to propriety; speak not what is contrary to propriety; make no movement which is contrary to propriety”. This saying is often symbolized in the shape of the three wise monkeys. The Chinese pavilion shows numerous musical monkeys in its frescos and door decorations, following the XVIII century’s singerie trend. These playful and silly monkeys can be seen like funny satires of human vanity. And finally the real life size ornamental statues’ striking presence caught my attention. On the contrary of caryatids these sculptures aren’t integrated in the architectural supporting structure, as if they use the building like a pedestal.

    CV Summary

    • Marie Hendriks was born in 1981 in the Netherlands.
    • She studied at the Fine arts school of Bourges and later gained a film post degree at Studio Le Fresnoy.
    • She held solo exhibition at Musée Sandelin Saint Omer (2016), le château des Adhémar, Montélimar (2013); La Maison rouge, Paris (2010).
    • She participated in collective exhibitions and projections at CAN Neuchatel, MACRO Rome, the Fine art Museum in Calais, Fes- tival du documentaire Bruxelles, Festival Banditmages Bourges.

    Gallery

  • Paula Elion

    Paula Elion

    Paula Elion is GlogauAIR resident
    from July, 2019 to September, 2019

    Argentina


    Meet the Artist

    Coming soon

    Statement

    To whisper. Not shout. To suggest. Not determine. To ask – without expecting finite answers. To paint images which the viewer can relate to from their personal, ever-changing point of view. All this drives me when I am creating. The topics that arise in my art are related to the daily actions we take in society, which in turn, dictates its rules upon us. It begins with family relationships and dives into the female image in patriarchal society, identity and gender perception. Things which are swept down the carpet of the family dinner, reappear in my works on the table itself. My inspiration often comes from films, children’s stories, costume catalogs, old photos, social media posts, and more. I work with diverse surfaces such as canvas, cloth, cardboard, tablecloths, old books and plastics applying oil paints, acrylic, charcoal, colored markers and varnish.

    Being an immigrant artist and a child who kept travelling back and forth between Argentina and Israel, I feel that in order to read and interpret my work, one has to think of the term ‘translation’. When we use a certain term or reference in different languages, it takes on new baggage and connotations. I see the act of painting as an act of meta-lingual translation. An act that transmits a variety of cultural contexts through the same ‘word’ – or in my case – the same image.

    When I approach the painting of a family scene, for instance, I create it with contexts of different patterns that are not dichotomies but rather – fluid. The same goes for the way I refer in my works to the topic of gender. In the same image, I try to encompass a rainbow of identities and meanings, not reducing it to one single sense. My visual vocabulary also incorporates a process of abstraction and converses with both figurative and expressive painting. In addition, although my work carries an ongoing dialog with forms of representation & painting which are common to each of the cultures that I am part of – I remain a spectating outsider.

    GlogauAIR Project

    Family Snapshots

    Family snapshots– a project about a family during a tempestuous period in history

    My current project explores the “truths” about the historic figure of Magda Ritschel-Friedländer Goebbels, and the vast gap between her public image and her personal story. I perceive her as an exemplar of the tangled, complex relationship between people – and ideologies.

    Ideologies create sets of rules that must be totally believed and absolutely obeyed at all times. However, from a historic point of view, ideologies tend to come and go: what is considered the “ideal” in a certain time and place, may become the complete opposite once this ideology loses its grip.

    During the Nazi regime, Magda Gebbels embodied perfect Arian beauty, loyalty, and motherhood as a partner of one of the most powerful men in Nazi regime. Notwithstanding, today, this image appears in a different light, as the ideology she represented with her own body is despised by most of the liberal world. Her story is one of painful obedience – to her own husband, as well as to Third Reich’s set of rules. Disobedience was probably not an option for her, when she decided to murder her own six children and commit suicide in the Fuhrer’s bunker in Berlin once the Third Reich was defeated.

    My perspective of the image of Magda changed as I read her biography two years ago. As a Jewish child born and raised in Argentina, I was highly aware of the horrible deeds of WW2 and have always pictured the Nazis as inhuman monsters. Somehow, Magda’s story evoked different kinds of feelings within me, such as compassion and confusion. I’ve learned that Magda used to be an enthusiastic Zionist who was involved with Haim Arlozoroff and could have ended up in a Kibbutz in Palestine. Once she was engaged with Joseph Goebbels, her life took a different route as she became an emblem of Arian values. Suddenly, I felt that the narratives we are used to accepting as absolute truths can be challenged and can acquire different shades of meaning and interpretation.

    The personal and the national intertwined. History and memory collided. I started to draw Magda and her children from snapshots that documented the Goebbels’ family happy moments, captured in Nazi propaganda. By doing so, I started to wonder whether Magda was really in control of her own life when she chose to live by an ideology that dictated who can live and who should die.

    I addressed the question of choice through everyday material. I turned to Nazi posters and recreated them on cardboard, tablecloths and disposable plates – simple, conventional substances that can be found in every family home.

    I now wish to take my ongoing project forward by creating the next works in Berlin, where it all happened, where the origin of the ideology is. I intend to explore the city’s open markets, and second-hand, memorabilia shops and to use actual materials that Berlin has to offer. I plan to acquire used tablecloths, plates, old books and other materials that are both meaningful and original. In my eyes these objects hold actual memories within them: they belonged to someone, and were part of their household for many years. By using them in my work I can give them new life and add new layers of meaning.

    I also wish to attend Berlin’s archives, libraries and museums to search for letters, old photographs and documents, personal diaries and papers from those days. I’m moved by the idea of looking at these pieces of history first hand, and their contribution to my understating and practice is priceless.

    Creating the next works in this vast project in Berlin is highly meaningful to me. It is the ultimate location for me to explore the question I’m focusing on, regarding free choice, social norms and expectations and the nature of the fine line between people and nation. In my opinion, Magda’s story, as well as Berlin’s local history, carries a great political, historical and humanistic importance – as the ultimate materialization of the suspended tension between the personal and public.

    CV Summary

    EDUCATION

    • 2005-2009 Artist Diploma, “Hamidrasha”, Beit-Berl Art College
    • 1995-1998 B.A. in English Literature & Linguistics, Tel Aviv University

    SOLO EXHIBITIONS

    • 2018 “Fun Fair” , 4 Floretine Art Space, Tel Aviv, Israel. Curator: Jennifer Bloch
    • 2017 “Passe Partout – painted conversations”, Ruben&Carla project space, Berlin, Germany. Curators: Silvia Spacchetti and Gianluca Quaranta (“The Context”)
    • 2013 “Controversial”. Chlenov 3 Gallery, Tel Aviv, Israel. Curator: Gali Timen
    • 2012 “Secrets and Lies”. The Zaritsky Artists’ House, Tel Aviv. Curator: Arie Berkowitz
    • 2012 “Every mother needs a girl”. Zadik Gallery, Jaffa. Curator: Hana Coman

    SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS

    • 2018 “Not a word”, Rishon Lezion Artist House, Curator: Jennifer Bloch & Ruth Orenbach
    • 2018 “Motion”, Cuckoo’s nest, Tel Aviv, Israel. Curators: Beenee Sarid and Udi Itzhayek – Zooza Gallery
    • 2017 “Another Space”, Takt Kunstprojektraum, Takt A.I.R, Berlin, Germany. Curator: David Kantounas
    • 2017 “Paula Elion / Yun Nam¨(joint exhibition), Rasch Gallery, Kassel, Germany. Curator: Tobias Rasch
    • 2016 “Iran, Iran”, Kaye Academic College of Education Gallery, Beer Sheva, Israel. Curators: Nir Harmat and Israel Ravinovich
    • 2015 “On the face”, Zadik Gallery, Jaffa, Israel. Curator: Hana Coman
    • 2012, 2013, 2014 “Bread & Roses”, exhibition for the rights of Arabic women workers in Israel. Tel Aviv, Israel
    • 2014 “Money”, Zadik Gallery, Jaffa, Israel. Curator: Hana Coman
    • 2014 “Paper Whispers”, drawing exhibition, Muza Plus Gallery, Jaffa, Israel. Curator: Liliana Orbach
    • 2014 Third International Watercolor Biennale, Belgrade, Serbia. Curator: Pedja Asimovic
    • 2013 “Your body is a battleground”. International group exhibition. Pristine Gallery, Monterrey, Mexico. Curator: Raul Zamudio
    • 2012 “The Lunch Box Project”. Group exhibition at the Water Institute, Givataim, Israel. Curator: Gali Timen
    • 2012 “On a small scale”. Zadik Gallery, Jaffa. Curator: Hana Koman
    • 2012 Second International Watercolor Biennale, Belgrade, Serbia. Curator: Pedja Asimovic
    • 2012 Exhibition for Gesher Theatre. ST-Art Gallery, Jaffa, Israel
    • 2011 “Nisuy Kelim Festival No.8”, Tel Aviv. Curator: Arie Berkowitz
    • 2011 “Taboo”, “The Independent Salon”, at the former central bus station, Tel Aviv, Israel. Curator: Yael Ben Shalom
    • 2010 ” Memory tricks” (joint exhibition with Vered Aharonovich) Haddasa Gallery, Jerusalem, Israel. Curator: Ofra Zucker
    • 2010 First International Watercolor Biennale, Belgrade, Serbia. Curator: Pedja Simovic
    • 2010 “Tree of Knowledge”, Haddasa Gallery, Jerusalem, Israel. Curator: Ofra Zucker
    • 2010 “Freedom”, on line exhibition. Curator: Dorit Pokatz
    • 2010 The Heder Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv, Israel. Curator: Neta Gal-Atzmon
    • 2010 “Salon des Refusés”, Jaffa, Israel. Curators: Yael Ben-Shalom, Michal Rivlin
    • 2010 “Artists for Amutat Tamar”, Herzlilinblum Museum, Tel Aviv, Israel. Curator: Anat Ahuvi
    • 2010 “Ex-Territory”, Urban Gallery, Tel Aviv, Israel. Curator: Sigal Kashkash
    • 2009 Secret Art 4, Bank Leumi. Curators – Esti Drori, Doron Polak – Artura
    • 2009 “Agalogia” – ecology and women in modern society, Kfar Saba Art Gallery. Israel. Curator: Aya Bernhard
    • 2007 “Family Ties”, Zionist of America House. Tel Aviv, Israel. Curator: Doron Polack
    • 2006 “Apropos les Damsels”, Petach Tikva Art Museum . Petach Tikva, Israel. Curator: Gilad Meltzer

    SELECTED ACQUISITIONS

    • 2012 Private collection ST-ART exhibition (for Gesher Theatre)
    • 2011 Private collectors (Hanina’s and “Bread and Roses” exhibitions)
    • 2010 Urban Gallery, Tel Aviv
    • 2009 Bank Leumi Collection
    • 2009 ST-ART Collection, Serge Tiroche

    Gallery