Past Residents
Past Resident2015: Galerie Max Weber Six Friedrich, Jens and Katia Rid, Erwin and Gisela von Steiner Foundation
Nina Annabelle Märkl
Nina Annabelle Märkl’s drawings and installations reflect the structures of human rituals in everyday life. Her works questions how things merge inseparably with our inner and outer selves and become entwined in a permeable way. What are the ways in which the tools we use as prostheses take control? What happens if we lose autonomy? What are the structures of reciprocal actions of manipulation between the inside and outside world? And how can the microcosmic worlds we create be shown and reflected? Märkl refers in her works historic models of reflecting the greater world by the means of art such as the 19th century diorama or the panorama or the cabinet of curiosity. In her works these models become at the same time models for the reflection of inner worlds.
Nina Annabelle Märkl (born 1979 in Dachau, Germany) lives and works in Munich. She graduated in 2009 from the Academy of Fine Art in Munich where she now teaches drawing. Märkl is represented by the Gallery Max Weber Six Friedrich, Munich where she has had two recent solo shows Museum of Happiness, 2013 and Casting Shadows, 2011. In 2010 her first monograph Drawing Attention was published, and in the same year she won a New Position at the 43rd Art Cologne. Recent group shows include don’t walk the line at Kunstverein Pforzheim together with the sculptor Reinhard Voss, the art of drawing, Altes Rathaus Ingelheim, 2013; Death – 22 artworks, Deutsche Gesellschaft für christliche Kunst, München, 2013; Pen and paper, Kuenstlerhaus Dortmund, 2010; and Shivering tunes, Kunstverein Oberhausen, 2010.
Events & Exhibitions
Salon: Isabelle Dyckerhoff and Nina Annabelle Märkl
February 24, 2015
Past Resident2014: Foundation for a Civil Society
Ivan Ivanovski
Through the media of drawing, film and video, Ivan Ivanovski makes a projection of selfhood situated in the current concrete societal and social moment. Ivanovski conveys a self that constantly re-interrogates the existential conditions within the consumerism, capitalism, deranged values, fears, inhibitions.
Ivan Ivanovski (Born 1983, Skopje, Macedonia) has a BA in sculpture from the Faculty of Fine Arts in Skopje, Macedonia and an AP in Directing, FAMU in Czech Republic. His work has been included in numerous international exhibitions and festivals. He is currently working on a new animated short XO, supported by Macedonian Film Fund.
Past Resident2014: SAHA Association
Emre Hüner
Working with drawing, video, sculpture and installations, Emre Hüner’s practice focuses on constructed narratives and eclectic assemblages which explore the subjects of utopia, archeology, ideas of progress and the future through re-imagination of the spatial and architectural entities, organic and artificial forms.
Emre Hüner (born in 1977, Istanbul, Turkey) lives and works in Istanbul and Amsterdam. Recent solo exhibitions include Aeolian, Rodeo, Istanbul; MAM Project 019, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo, 2013; SALT 6, Utah Museum of Fine Arts, Salt Lake City, 2012; Adverse Stability, Extra City, Antwerp, 2010. His work has been included a groups exhibitions including Approximately Infnite Universe, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, San Diego and Signs Taken in Wonder, MAK Austrian Museum of Applied Arts / Contemporary Art, Vienna, both in 2013; Manifesta 9, European Biennale of Contemporary Art, Genk, 2012; Out of Here, Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven and Paradise Lost, Istanbul Modern, Istanbul both in 2011; The Future of Tradition, Haus der Kunst, Munich, 2010; Younger Than Jesus, New Museum, New York, 2009; and the10th Istanbul Biennial, Istanbul, 2007. Hüner has participated in residencies at Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, Amsterdam as well as Apexart, New York and Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Center, Istanbul. He holds a BFA from Academia di Belle Arti di Brera, Milano.
Residents from Turkey
Civan Özkanoğlu
Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, Alice and Lawrence Weiner, New York City Council District 34, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council, New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, Hartfield Foundation, Danna and Ed Ruscha
2020