Past Residents

Residents Map

Michelle-Marie Letelier

Michelle-Marie Letelier is interested in exploitation of minerals, working across topographic changes of a landscape, juxtaposed with the speculation of resources within the current economic framework. She spent her early life in Chuquicamata, the biggest open-pit copper mine in the world, in the Atacama Desert. This served as a starting point in her practice, documenting the town’s burial process through video and photography. Since settling in Berlin, Letelier has focused on copper and coal: minerals which have also become objects themselves in her drawings, paintings, objects and installations. Letelier’s work carries heavy socio-political overtones, especially in times of unveiled globalization, the increasing scarcity of raw materials and the crisis of the neoliberal model.

Michelle-Marie Letelier (born 1977, Rancagua, Chile) obtained her BFA at the Universidad Católica de Chile. Her recent solo exhibitions include Die Feinfühlige Zone, Die Ecke Gallery, Santiago and Doomed Scape,Perlini Arte Gallery, Padua. Her group exhibitions include Magic Block, Stiftelsen 3.14, Bergen and To Seize Matter and Leave a Landscape, X Video and Media Arts Biennial, Museum of Contemporary Art, Santiago. Her videos have been exhibited in several screenings and festivals across the world. In 2005, Letelier participated in the Mercosur Biennial and in 2012 she was awarded the first edition of ORA International Art Prize. Letelier lives and works in Berlin.

Past Resident
2014: Gene Na, Dr. Henning Pfaffhausen

Richard Schur

Richard Schur’s paintings reveal surprising harmonies in the interplay of colors – from natural to chemical, from subtle to raw – in what prove up close to be very painterly surfaces. The viewers are transported, whether by skiff, schooner or galleon, to actively serene visual spaces suffused with the light of those various places.

Richard Schur (born 1971, Munich) graduated as Meisterschüler at the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich where he later taught as Assistant Professor for painting from 2002 through 2008. He has received several awards including the Bayerischer Kunstförderpreis by the Bavarian State Ministry of Sciences, Research and the Arts. In recent years, he has exhibited in galleries and at art fairs in London, Paris, Madrid, Lisbon, Copenhagen, Amsterdam and Brussels. In the U.S., Schur has participated in group shows in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Among others, his museum exhibitions include the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich and the Duolun Museum of Modern Art, Shanghai.

Manor Grunewald

Manor Grunewald is first and foremost as a painter, although he is also active in the fields of sculpture, installation and prints. His work is characterised by the constant analysis of the development of the pictorial in our daily environment. He finds and collects the sources of his images everywhere in daily life: in newspapers, advertising, books, comics, digital media and even illustrations of biological microcosms and macrocosms. His image archive serves as a source of inspiration, and his found pictorial material is often altered, partially on purpose and in some cases arbitrarily, by copying, enlarging or collaging. The artist thus creates new pictorial information, which is largely free of cognitively controlled processes and which reveal the unfamiliar, allowing this to become the content of his painting.

Manor Grunewald’s works have been exhibited across Europe and in the United States. In 2011, he was nominated for the Young Belgian Painters Prize at BOZAR. Recently, he has completed solo projects at Arco Madrid, Volta New York and Volta 9, Basel. Grunewald has presented recent solo exhibitions at Galerie Fortlaan 17, Ghent and Chaplini Gallery, Cologne. He will take part in a group exhibition with Evan Gruzis and Christian Vetter at Super Dakota Gallery, Brussels in April 2014.