Past Residents

Residents Map

Past Resident
2017: Wallace Arts Trust

André Hemer

André Hemer’s practice pursues a new mode of representation in painting, whereby image and form are transacted back and forth between materialised and de-materialised states. In doing so, Hemer’s paintings literally re-present the contemporary experience of digital media through the traditional painting object, revealing the most basic changes to our phenomenological experience of the contemporary world.

André Hemer’s work has been exhibited at Luis De Jesus Los Angeles; Yavuz Gallery, Singapore; Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London; Tristian Koenig Gallery, Melbourne; Total Museum of Contemporary Art, Seoul; and Münchner Stadtmuseum, Germany. In 2016 he was awarded a New Generation Award by the Arts Foundation of New Zealand, and was the winner of the Wallace Arts Trust Paramount Award. He has been included in major publications such as 100 Painters of Tomorrow, Thames & Hudson, London, and Art and the Internet, Black Dog Publishing, London. In 2016 Hemer was invited to edit the publication Painting Regarding the Present, published by Naives and Visionaries, Berlin. He is based in Vienna, Austria.

Zorka Wollny

The works of Zorka Wollny inhabit a space between art, theatre and contemporary music and are closely connected to the historic and functional context of specific architectural sites. Wollny understands architecture not simply as a material figuration, but rather as a cognitive space dependent on movement, an expression of cultural conditions and a scene of performative interventions. Following a critical interest in cultural codes, gestures and structural modes of behavior, which she observes e.g. in art production and reception and in environments of post-industrial work, she develops choreographic live-performances and concerts. The production of Wollny’s projects is based on a collaborative procedure and is often accompanied by public rehearsals and workshops.

Zorka Wollny (born 1980, Kraków, Poland) lives and works in Berlin. Her works have been shown in several contemporary art institutions in Poland, and she has participated in international exhibitions at Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, 2014; Academy of Arts, Berlin, 2013; Galerie für Zeitgenössische Kunst, Leipzig, 2012; Abteiberg Museum, Mönchengladbach, Germany, 2012; Turner Contemporary, Margate, 2011; Museum of Contemporary Art, Belgrade, 2011; Carrara International Sculpture Biennale, 2010; Z33, Hasselt, 2010; Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Norwich, 2009; and Royal College of Art, London, 2009. Wollny is a lecturer at Szczecin Art Academy.

Past Resident
2017: Alfred Kordelin Foundation

Anna Nykyri

Anna Nykyri works with moving images in the fields of film industry, contemporary dance and visual arts. She uses film, video and archive footage to create documentary films and cinematic video installations. Her artistic works explore political and corporeal themes, including questions related to gender, power and control. Her cinematic installations strive to become choreographic environments. Nykyri often collaborates with contemporary dancers.

Anna Nykyri (born 1981) is a visual artist and a documentary film director. She received her MFA from the Academy of Fine Arts, Helsinki. Nykyri’s cinematic works have been internationally screened in various museums, galleries and film festivals, including Moscow International Biennale for Young Art; Kiasma – Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki; Parkingallery, Tehran; and Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, Toronto, where Nykyri’s short film Five Fragments of the Extinct Empathy won the Best Short Film Award in 2012. Nykyri has collaborated with several NGO’s, such as Amnesty International, UN Women and Pink Ribbon, Inc.