Artistic photography that makes eternity and transience atmospherically tangible.
〰️
Artistic photography that makes eternity and transience atmospherically tangible. 〰️
When you are travelling, you experience so many precious moments and discover landscapes and people that will perhaps shape you forever.
But unfortunately they are only memories and these become feelings and hopes to experience something like this again and to dive even deeper.
I capture these authentic feelings of people and landscapes in a special light and with my artistic photography
I want to open up new transcendental perspectives for you, perspectives that I myself felt and perceived when I took the picture.
With my motifs I would like to show you a new sensual perception with which you can encounter the beauty of time in our world and thus give it a place in your life.
My works are meant for people who want to perceive more than the senses allow.
What do collectors say about my art? Click here
TIME FLIES
The beauty of time
The philosophical question in the series “Time Flies” is what remains, or who remains, if one observes society over a longer period using the lens of time. In this hectic world I am searching for people who are in a contemplated state or not. Like in this photo, which was taken at the opening of the Bread & Butter fair at the Tempelhof Airport in Berlin.
ROMANCE OF ELEMENTS
Landscape photography staged with fire
I discovered this tree during a full moon night in New Zealand. I bought a 20-year-old bus for $1000 and drove 14,000 kilometers (8,700 miles) in four months to work on my Romance of Elements series. In this series I fall back on the 5 elements (air, fire, earth, water and ether/space). Behind the tree the fire shines, which is also contained as an element in the tree, and behind it a moonlight arc, which is rarely to be seen, emerges."
THE BIG WAVE
Mystical Forests in Japan
The pictures of the series “Bamboo” seem as if they had been manipulated. Are the colors real? How much was digitally edited or even analogously repainted?
Neither – in 2016, the fascination for the resistant and fast-growing plant led André Wagner to Japan in order to photograph the delicate colors of the bamboo forest and to capture the nightly contrasts of light.
When it rains, the bamboo trunk absorbs water and thus changes its color; when it dries, the intense hue becomes softer and the sun causes it to shimmer in different tones.
—Miryam Abebe, curator and blogger