Annette Kelm




Annette Kelm

Work from her oeuvre.

“Annette Kelm’s photographic œuvre offers a unique outlook onto the socio-cultural history of the material world. The artist uses a vast array of motifs as vocabulary to address specific moments in this history, whether it is the commodification of design objects, various forms of political critique or value systems such as money and finance.

Kelm’s exhibitions gather images of floral sculptures, landscapes, portraiture, photographed buildings, and ephemeral objects of all scales. Meticulously picked, the artist’s subjects enter in collision and contrasts where the objective converges with the subjective, the every-day encounters the historical, and the impartial becomes political.

Her practice draws from conventional studio photography techniques: employing a large-format camera and depicting her subjects in front of a backdrop. The arrangements that the artist sets up at her studio are often playful, retain an experimental character or are seemingly captured glimpses of time. Kelm’s distinctive approach to the photographic medium made her a prominent figure of contemporary photography in Germany and worldwide.” – Esther Schipper Gallery

Tania Franco Klein






Tania Franco Klein

Work from Proceed to the Route.

“The map as a representation of the territory, and the internet as a representation of life.
Proceed To The Route takes its name from the popular quote which starts every journey in
Google Maps and which appears a s a reminder every time a wrong turn is done.

The roads and freeways once shaped the paths of progress. Today, those roads are mostly
visited by passengers who rarely know where they are going but flow at a fast pace without
stopping. Having access to the knowledge to go anywhere, and still knowing nothing.
Progress has overpassed us, leaving a state of nothingness and confusion in our
eclectic-overconnected reality in which history runs faster than the seconds on the clock.

It is in the emptiness of the countryside that one can situate an encounter of an old lifestyle
that still waits for its abandonment and containment, reflecting the new growth of a central capitalist system.

The drifters and travelers, all passing through some state of nothingness, that share private
moments in public spaces, are a clear example of the ephemeral, crowded, and at the same
time almost empty, leftovers of contemporary cities.” – Tania Franco Klein

Casey Moore





Casey Moore

Work from Fault Lines.

“This ongoing project explores major fault lines in the earths crust. It began in my home town of Christchurch where earthquakes have become commonplace. There is an uneasy feeling throughout the area which is experiencing regular aftershocks. The city centre is still being rebuilt and large swathes of land around the river lay derelict and unable to be redeveloped. These double exposures seem peaceful and disconnected from reality but the overlapping of the ocean and geology is suggestive of the fragility of the land sitting on these fault lines.” – Casey Moore

Y. Malik Jalal





Y. Malik Jalal

Work from his oeuvre.

“Y. Malik Jalal (b. 1994, Savannah, Georgia) utilizes traditional craft and collage techniques to explore themes of Black history, power and humanity. By merging materials like steel and iron with an index of found photos depicting Black American family life in unexpected and intimate moments, he addresses the transformation of industries and inequalities, referencing both the legacy of metal artisans in the South and pop culture. His work combines African customs with violent American events, incorporating symbols from advertising and Black horror to reflect collective anxiety. Influenced by Islam, Christianity, and Spiritualism, Jalal’s art forms a multifaceted expression of Blackness, drawing from diverse perspectives and critiquing societal norms.” – murmurs

Bas Ketelaars





Bas Ketelaars

Work from Edges of Landscape.

“Edges of Landscape is the result of a (analogue) photographical exploration of natural areas within Europe with a focus on textures and surfaces in nature. The publication combines these photographs with drawings based on landscapes at different scales.” – Bas Ketelaars

Ronni Campana




Ronni Campana

Work from Badly Repaired Cars.

“Campana’s photo book is an artful documentation of cars, trucks, and other vehicles that have undergone DIY improvements in east London. Close up, angular photographs shows cars ingeniously—or depending on your outlook, amateurly—patched up and held together by tape, cardboard, glue, and plastic. The images in the publication are carefully curated according to their color and composition; together forming a bright, bold and lighthearted documentation that celebrates the best in abstract photography of the modern day. Capturing the mundane details of this ubiquitous mode of transport used by so many, Badly Repaired Cars is a surprisingly effectual example of finding graphic beauty in form. In an introduction to the book, Tom Seymour writes: “Campana asks us to celebrate the mechanics and the botch job. The craftsmanship and the temporary repair. The underlying engineering and the ‘Fuck this, it’ll do. Now hop in and let’s get going’”.” – IGNANT

Joanna Wierzbicka



Joanna Wierzbicka

Work from Soft Gut Lining.

“In an age where conspiracy theories and technological paranoia permeate discourse, the boundary between justified concern and irrational fear grows increasingly blurred. These three artists probe this territory by presenting works that embody mechanisms of deception and surveillance.

Joanna Wierzbicka’s soft, flesh-like sculptures present bodies in constant adaptation, hovering between organic and artificial, familiar and alien. These speculative appendages, imagined for survival in hostile environments, give form to our collective anxieties. Like the fictional organisms of conspiracy theories, they suggest a future where adaptation becomes a kind of camouflage. Her holobionts blur the boundaries between self and environment, organism and technology, raising questions about what forms of transformation survival might demand in an ever-shifting world.

Together, these works create a hall of mirrors where paranoia meets confirmation, where the tools of deception become the means of survival. The exhibition asks: in a world where everything can be fabricated, how do we distinguish between legitimate concern and manufactured fear?” – Edita Malina

Ilanit Illouz



Ilanit Illouz

Work from The Memory of Landscape.

“For me, Ilanit Illouz is not an artist but an archaeologist. Like an intrepid excavator, she travels through the landscape, walking the desert in search of what is hidden, undiscovered. In a certain way, her research-driven approach is no different from that of an archaeologist—demonstrating an equal commitment to studying the human past through its material traces, whether that past is ancient or recent. Even her works are “fossilized,” infused with the raw fabric of time—dust, sand, salt, earth, and minerals. Like an archaeologist, Ilanit Illouz goes in search of ancient places: the Mediterranean, the Dead Sea, and the Judean Desert. Lands that remember and commemorate, and others that are now erased.
She asks herself: How can one evoke a place whose landscape has left no trace?

Ilanit Illouz’s work serves to create a memory and a place where none exists. A translation of the untranslatable.
She meditates on personal and collective traumas, paying homage to her mother and to countless others who traveled great distances in search of a better life. In the case of Illouz’s mother, migration took her to Algeria, Marseille, and Kiryat Ata (in northern Israel). Her abstract landscapes thus represent the sociopolitics of territory, borders, geography, and independence. They are decidedly anonymous—a choice I see as intentional and metaphorical—representing simultaneously somewhere and nowhere, or the thin line between personal and universal experience.
Ilanit Illouz’s works are “political landscapes” for the histories and memories they contain, but also for the narratives they seek to foreground. The artist’s unique process is essential here, taking the form of a kind of “intervention”—an act of excavation and delicate gathering of organic materials. I picture Ilanit Illouz bending down to retrieve salt, earth, and sand, and in return leaving a part of herself embedded in the ground. The artist creates a physical mark on the landscape—or perhaps it is more of an exchange? A collaboration, or even a performance? I imagine the land sacrificing itself for Ilanit Illouz in order to be remembered. The idea of “taking” echoes in my mind. Taking photographs, or taking something that does not belong to us—land, a home, or someone’s rights.
Many of Illouz’s destinations are the sites of both contemporary and historical conflicts, often centered on the land itself—which, through the artist’s hand, crystallizes and takes form on the surface of her prints. These are also places implicated in modern battles over natural resources, notably the Dead Sea, whose precious salt is at the center of an international boycott due to illegal exploitation. The Dead Sea is also facing a climate crisis and is shrinking at an alarming rate—about one meter per year. In the last fifteen years, 1,000 sinkholes have appeared—depressions that open in limestone regions. The French word for “sinkhole,” the artist’s mother tongue, is “doline,” the title of her ongoing series.

Extraction and our seemingly insatiable appetite for natural resources mark our landscapes in their own way. More recently, Illouz’s work has taken her to volcanic regions of Italy. Here, the earth remembers the seismic activity of its past and its impact on the scarred landscape and the civilizations that once inhabited it. Volcanoes are both witnesses and traces of the past. The artist describes her interest in history as “autobiographical, geological, mineral, and vegetal.” Thinking of volcanic matter—lava, dust, and stone—brings to mind the myth of Medusa, wronged by men, exiled, and endowed with the terrible power to turn men into stone. To “petrify” them, in a way reminiscent of the fossilization protocol used by Illouz. Medusa represented an otherness that could not be understood and therefore had to be destroyed. After Perseus cut off her head, Pegasus and Chrysaor emerged from her body. A transformation—a new life born from death. Volcanic regions are hostile, and yet life finds a way to survive, sometimes to flourish.
By using organic materials and excavation-like techniques, Ilanit Illouz highlights environmental pressures on geology, landscape, limnology, ecosystems, and Earth’s climate, as well as the effects of the Anthropocene on ancient worlds. By taking very little, she reveals many phenomena; her physical interventions symbolizing both mining and, more broadly, the manipulation of soil, as well as the building of dams. For the artist, the use of salt is particularly meaningful. Its complex history as a commodity of exchange intersects with its role in the historical and technological development of photography. Photography is, at its core, a process born of the industrial and imperial era.
Salt, too, has crossed continents and oceans, shaping political, social, and economic dynamics along the way. It preserves but also degrades—a metaphor for the fragility of our environment and the dynamics of political power. Pioneers Thomas Wedgwood (British, 1771–1805) and Joseph Nicéphore Niépce (French, 1765–1833) developed early salt-printing processes but could not find a way to fix or stabilize their images. William Henry Fox Talbot (British, 1800–1877) made improvements around 1834 using a saline solution. The use of natural resources to capture images was further developed by Niépce around 1822 with the creation of the heliograph. This process involved bitumen of Judea, a light-sensitive material applied to a pewter plate. It produced the earliest known photograph made directly from nature, View from the Window at Le Gras (1826 or 1827).

There is a true alchemy in Illouz’s work, a formal beauty in the physical materiality and artisanal gestures of her practice. It is painstaking work, marked by great meticulousness. After collecting her organic materials, she returns to her studio. Like Wedgwood, Niépce, and Talbot, she creates and applies a solution to the surface of her photographic prints—often repeatedly and over several months. A transformation takes place. The result is otherworldly: a lunar landscape shimmering with millions of diamonds. A Trojan horse concealing its complexity and drawing the viewer in.
Ilanit Illouz emphasizes the cathartic dimension of the whole process—walking, gathering, remembering, washing, erasing, forgetting. To me, her prints are an act of resistance. An alternative archive of history. A new form of life emerging from the roots of the past.” – Fiona Rogers (translation)

Andreas Greiner




Andreas Greiner (co-produced with Daan Lockhorst)

Work from Jungle Memory.

“ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND DEEP LEARNING REEXAMINE LANDSCAPE PAINTING / Custom programmed and trained CycleGAN and computer vision algorithms.

Due to anthropogenic climate change causing higher temperatures, drought and better living conditions for tree pathogens, forests are endangered worldwide. Jungle Memory seeks to archive this ephemeral life form and its specific aesthetics in a vast digital database by photographically documenting forests, like on the Island of Vilm or the Hambach Forest in Germany, the primeval Bialowieza Forest in Poland, the Red Forest in Chernobyl or the burnt down parts of the Plumas National Forest in California. While our image of nature had traditionally been expressed through landscape painting, this project reinterprets the genre for the digital age; nature is not perceived by human senses, but rather through a Deep-Learning Algorithm. Artificial Intelligence can thus be understood as extending the ‘human gaze’ on nature. The technological appropriation of the natural world creates a digital hallucination, questioning the sublime nature-experience heralded in the romantic era.

During the process of applied machine learning, the project took a self-critical turn in analysing its own electric energy consumption. Calculating the carbon dioxide emissions of projects and integrating them in their display (e.g. Change the system, Mars on Earth, 880), is an effort to begin to understand and visualize these rather abstract relationships.” – Andreas Greiner

Bryan Schutmaat




Bryan Schutmaat

Work from Islands of the Blest.

“I’ll come back to you
in the hour of basalt and copper,
back like floodwater pressing its
shoulder against the ribs of the valley.

When I rub bear fat into my boots
a star disappears and the bones in my hand
become a set of gears
bringing electricity to this canyon
of burnt oil and jagged creeks.

When I say your name
the meridian goes bright
as the bit in a blind horse’s mouth.
When I say your name
a bucket of sparks empties into the river
and the night sky is streaked through
with charred snags and shale.

Each night a new ghost
lays out a single crosstie
and a farrier’s hammer
falls through the well shaft of my dream.
I am all steam polish and cable hum,
all snowdrifts clinging
to the north side of the ridge.

I turn coal into motion.
I lie flat on my stomach and drink
from the runoff like a mountain boomer.
I look into a wall of flame
and hear the songs of a trestle.

A buzzard throws down
the ace of spades
and I run a grease bead
across the axle of the moon
and make it spin.

The horizon opens its mouth
and strikes a match against its dry tooth
and I write this letter for you
and sew it into a pantcuff made of smoke
from these islands of the blest.”

Michael McGriff