Art
For as long as I can remember my parents have always dragged me out into magical nature. Even though I grew up in Vienna, I wouldn’t really call myself a city girl. We spent hours in the ‘outside’. I loved getting in contact with the natural elements, getting covered in grass and dirt while exploring all the sights, all the little houses and caves it has to offer, just to try to get even deeper into this magical world. And maybe from time to time, there was a fairy or goblin watching...
The tranquillity when you enter the woods on a foggy autumn day is just sensational. All the scents you get, passing by all the species in an old natural realm... It surrounds you and hugs you with its gentle cottony touch. It tucks you in, so you can go even deeper inside, feeling protected and connected. I couldn’t live without being in nature. It nurtures me, heals me, and soothes me. After all these years walking around with my eyes & heart wide open, still, there is no day without seeing something so beautifully captivating and breathtaking. With my art & photography I try to tell these stories, these encounters, conversations, try to give you a glimpse of my view of the many worlds. It’s a relationship I try to capture not only via the camera but also through exhibiting installations & sculptures both indoors and outdoors, along with creating art books, where one must be very close to getting in contact to see and feel. If we really see, feel, and understand we can experience a stronger relationship towards our natural world.
So hopefully my art inspires you to go a little deeper outwards & inwards!
Tranquillity – Life & Death of Nature
Delicate seeds, safely enclosed by handmade epoxy resin bubbles, float around cacti skeletons – trying to land safely and start their new journey.
Exhibition – Chelsea Fringe Festival Vienna, 2014
Remembrance
The abandoned gold mine in Rodalquilar | Spain was revived by light circles – in remembrance of the golden era.
Land Art – Elasa Group Project
Soothing – Time Heals All Wounds
Gathered rye stalks, carefully arranged in the stump of a very much beloved but recently cut down house tree.
Land Art – Elasa Group Project, 2015
Photography
Do you like what you see?