ENTRY DESCRIPTION
This image is part of my series "the Layers of Perception". This series is a tribute to my favorite author Joseph Campbell and his masks of god, reflecting about the veils of perception. Literally using a mask, I try to uncover the secrets behind all stardust. Or at least to evoke sublime beauty. Plants serve as object of contemplation, as portals to eternity.
Inspired by Japanese aesthetics and the grain structure of historical photo technics I use vellum to observe the disassociativ behaviour of petals and leaves: Impressive shadows and haptic details complement each other simultanously within the composition, shape and silhoutte, details and blur, density and depth…
The titles are taken from asteroids’ names: they are literally stardust with view of earthrise, each one of them has a different perspective in terms of time and space, they all rotate around and are illuminated by the sun – just like us.
AUTHOR
I am a photographic artist from Germany.
Inspired by the abundance of the world’s rainforests and coral reefs, I aim to
shine a light on the wonder of life.
Art is my way of detangling my thoughts, like Joseph Campbell once wrote. It is my living laboratory where I test all my ideas and can experiment and discover in a playful way. I look for the exceptional in the ordinary and I try to make my subjective view of reality visible.
I paint mostly with light. A Photolucida critical mass finalist, I create mulit-award winning photo based artworks in a wide range. From lens-based work to photograms, from digitally collaging to manufacturing cyanotypes.
I totally agree with Glenn Gloud, when he states:
The purpose of art is the lifelong construction of a state of wonder. I want to share joy and inspiration. I try to create moments of nowness and oneness. Aestetic arrest.
And I believe deeply in the transformative power of art that touches the innermost of the beholder and reminds us of the infinity within us. I want to nourish that spiritual place inside the heart, evoking that deep connection with nature and the wish to protect and preserve it for future generations. I resonate deeply with Rachel Carson’s statement: Wonder and humility do not exist side by side with a lust for destruction.
Born in 1974, I studied arts history and design in Munich and had a career as an art director on a global scale for a number of years. Currently I reside with my husband and our two boys south of Munich.
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