top of page
My Inspiration

James Turrell
"Wedgework V" 1974
James Turrell explores light as a material and uses architectural space to shape perception. His installations immerse the viewer in pure fields of color, transforming the act of seeing into an experience of presence, time, and sensory awareness.
James Turrell explores light as a material and uses architectural space to shape perception. His installations immerse the viewer in pure fields of color, transforming the act of seeing into an experience of presence, time, and sensory awareness.

Olafur Eliasson
"Room for one colour" 1997
Olafur Eliasson creates large-scale installations that investigate perception, atmosphere, and natural phenomena. Working with light, color, temperature, and movement, he invites viewers to reflect on how reality is constructed through sensory experience.
Olafur Eliasson creates large-scale installations that investigate perception, atmosphere, and natural phenomena. Working with light, color, temperature, and movement, he invites viewers to reflect on how reality is constructed through sensory experience.

Alan Parkinson
"Architects of Air"
Alan Parkinson designs monumental inflatable environments known as luminaria. His works combine architecture, light, and color to create playful, immersive spaces that encourage exploration and wonder.
Alan Parkinson designs monumental inflatable environments known as luminaria. His works combine architecture, light, and color to create playful, immersive spaces that encourage exploration and wonder.

Wassily Kandinsky
"Composition II" 1923
Wassily Kandinsky is a pioneer of abstract painting, translating inner emotion, spirituality, and musical rhythm into color and form. His compositions express the idea that art can communicate directly without representing the visible world.
Wassily Kandinsky is a pioneer of abstract painting, translating inner emotion, spirituality, and musical rhythm into color and form. His compositions express the idea that art can communicate directly without representing the visible world.

Adelbert von Chamisso
"The wonderful history of Peter Schlemihl", the man who lost his shadow, 1899 (book)
Adelbert von Chamisso is known for his literary work that blends fantasy, allegory, and psychological themes. His writing examines identity, morality, and human transformation, often through symbolic storytelling.
Adelbert von Chamisso is known for his literary work that blends fantasy, allegory, and psychological themes. His writing examines identity, morality, and human transformation, often through symbolic storytelling.

Marina Abramovic
"The Artist Is Present" 2010
Marina Abramović is a leading figure in performance art, using her own body as both subject and medium. Her work centers on presence, endurance, vulnerability, and the relationship between artist and audience.
Marina Abramović is a leading figure in performance art, using her own body as both subject and medium. Her work centers on presence, endurance, vulnerability, and the relationship between artist and audience.

Jonathan Monk
"Exhibit Model Four" 2019
Jonathan Monk works with appropriation, reference, and re-interpretation, often revisiting canonical artworks from art history. His practice reflects on originality, authorship, and the looping nature of cultural memory.
Jonathan Monk works with appropriation, reference, and re-interpretation, often revisiting canonical artworks from art history. His practice reflects on originality, authorship, and the looping nature of cultural memory.

Larry Bell
״Pink and blue laminated glass״
Larry Bell is associated with the Light and Space movement, focusing on the material properties of glass, reflection, and transparency. His sculptures explore how light interacts with surfaces, altering perception and spatial depth.
Larry Bell is associated with the Light and Space movement, focusing on the material properties of glass, reflection, and transparency. His sculptures explore how light interacts with surfaces, altering perception and spatial depth.

Marcel Duchamp & Man Ray
"Dust Breeding" 1920
(Duchamp's Large Glass with Dust Motes)
Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray shaped the foundations of conceptual and avant-garde art. They challenged traditional aesthetics through readymades, experimentations with photography, and ideas that placed concept above object.
Photographer Man Ray
(The photograph was taken with a two-hour-long exposure that beautifully captures the complex texture and diversity of materials that lay atop the glass surface)
(Duchamp's Large Glass with Dust Motes)
Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray shaped the foundations of conceptual and avant-garde art. They challenged traditional aesthetics through readymades, experimentations with photography, and ideas that placed concept above object.
Photographer Man Ray
(The photograph was taken with a two-hour-long exposure that beautifully captures the complex texture and diversity of materials that lay atop the glass surface)

Vincent van Gogh
"The Night Café
oil on canvas" 1888
Vincent van Gogh expressed inner emotion through intense color, expressive brushwork, and dynamic composition. His paintings reveal a deep psychological and emotional sensitivity, transforming ordinary scenes into powerful inner landscapes.
oil on canvas" 1888
Vincent van Gogh expressed inner emotion through intense color, expressive brushwork, and dynamic composition. His paintings reveal a deep psychological and emotional sensitivity, transforming ordinary scenes into powerful inner landscapes.

Kazimir Malevich
"Black Square" 1913
Kazimir Malevich introduced Suprematism, reducing art to pure geometric form and pure feeling. His radical abstraction aimed to liberate painting from representation and place the viewer in direct contact with the essence of visual energy.
Kazimir Malevich introduced Suprematism, reducing art to pure geometric form and pure feeling. His radical abstraction aimed to liberate painting from representation and place the viewer in direct contact with the essence of visual energy.

René Magritte
"Legend of the Centuries" 1950
René Magritte reimagined ordinary objects through surreal juxtapositions that expose the instability of meaning and reality. His paintings are precise, poetic, and thought-provoking, inviting viewers to question how images shape understanding.
René Magritte reimagined ordinary objects through surreal juxtapositions that expose the instability of meaning and reality. His paintings are precise, poetic, and thought-provoking, inviting viewers to question how images shape understanding.

Albrecht Dürer
"Melencolia I" 1514
engraving, 24.45 x 19.37 cm
Albrecht Dürer is a master of Northern Renaissance printmaking, combining anatomical accuracy, symbolism, and scientific curiosity. His engravings reveal a deep interest in proportion, geometry, and the complexity of human thought.
engraving, 24.45 x 19.37 cm
Albrecht Dürer is a master of Northern Renaissance printmaking, combining anatomical accuracy, symbolism, and scientific curiosity. His engravings reveal a deep interest in proportion, geometry, and the complexity of human thought.

Mikhail Bulgakov
"The Master and Margarita" 1967 (book)
Mikhail Bulgakov is known for visionary literature that blends satire, fantasy, philosophy, and political critique. His narratives examine morality, power, and the metaphysical dimensions of human experience.
Mikhail Bulgakov is known for visionary literature that blends satire, fantasy, philosophy, and political critique. His narratives examine morality, power, and the metaphysical dimensions of human experience.

Otto Piene
"Lightroom with Mönchengladbach Wall" 1963–2013
Otto Piene, co-founder of the ZERO movement, worked with light, fire, smoke, and kinetic elements to expand the boundaries of painting and sculpture. His practice links art and technology, creating luminous poetic environments.
Otto Piene, co-founder of the ZERO movement, worked with light, fire, smoke, and kinetic elements to expand the boundaries of painting and sculpture. His practice links art and technology, creating luminous poetic environments.

Jeremy Couillard
"Escape From Lavender Island"
Jeremy Couillard creates immersive digital environments that blend animation, gaming aesthetics, and speculative worlds. His work often functions like a portal, transporting the viewer into parallel universes where the boundaries between reality, simulation, and fantasy dissolve. Through vibrant color and narrative fragments, Couillard raises questions about contemporary digital culture, virtual identity, and the psychological dimension of escape.
Jeremy Couillard creates immersive digital environments that blend animation, gaming aesthetics, and speculative worlds. His work often functions like a portal, transporting the viewer into parallel universes where the boundaries between reality, simulation, and fantasy dissolve. Through vibrant color and narrative fragments, Couillard raises questions about contemporary digital culture, virtual identity, and the psychological dimension of escape.

Alex Da Corte
"Rubber Pencil Devil" 2018
Alex Da Corte works across video, sculpture, and installation, building highly saturated theatrical scenes that transform familiar objects into surreal and poetic experiences. His visual language borrows from pop culture, cinema, advertising, and childhood memory, yet reassembles these elements into strange and emotionally charged tableaux. Da Corte’s practice challenges the ordinary through exaggeration, humor, and aesthetic precision, revealing how desire and meaning are constructed.
Alex Da Corte works across video, sculpture, and installation, building highly saturated theatrical scenes that transform familiar objects into surreal and poetic experiences. His visual language borrows from pop culture, cinema, advertising, and childhood memory, yet reassembles these elements into strange and emotionally charged tableaux. Da Corte’s practice challenges the ordinary through exaggeration, humor, and aesthetic precision, revealing how desire and meaning are constructed.

Spencer Finch
Spencer Finch investigates the complexity of perception by translating physical light phenomena into subtle visual installations. His works often measure and recreate specific moments such as a particular sunset or the color of the sky at a precise hour in order to examine how memory and observation interact. Finch’s practice sits between science and poetry: a rigorous approach to light and data paired with a deeply human interest in how we experience and remember the world.
bottom of page