“This reduction of the animal, which has a theoretical as well as economic history, is part of the same process as that by which men have been reduced to isolated productive and consuming units. Indeed, during this period an approach to animals often prefigured an approach to man.”
John Berger, Why Look at Animals? (1977)
An evergreen tree was found in the Mühlholz area of the floodplain park in Leipzig; believed to be completely devoid of evergreens. This piece is part of an ongoing, site-specific installation series in collaboration with Elizabeth Gerdeman.
Site-specific installations on a riverfront property and a trendy neighborhood, both situated in Leipzig, Germany in collaboration with Elizabeth Gerdeman.
*1974 in Leipzig, Germany
since 2015 Meisterschüler, Class Intermedia, Academy of Fine Arts Leipzig
2009 Diploma of Fine Arts, Burg Giebichenstein – University of Art and Design Halle, Germany
2003-2009 Burg Giebichenstein University of Art and Design Halle with Professor Andrea Zaumseil
1993-1995 Apprenticeship, Stonemason and Sculptor Training
2016
„FYVP (For Your Viewing Pleasure)“, Rehab, Columbus, OH, USA
„We Have No Problem With Sindelfingen, Because We Are Invited“, Galerie der Stadt Sindelfingen, Sindelfingen, Germany
„drifting socially – slipping aesthetically“, Bükü, Leipzig, Germany
„Dog Planet: Free Dogs of the ‘90s“, Bureau for Cultural Translations, Leipzig, Germany
„Underconstruction“, University of Fine Arts Leipzig, Germany