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.

Martin Höfer

Martin Höfer’s work concentrates on artistic strategies and mechanisms of perception in the field of public media space. Höfer’s focus is the development of artistic concepts for mass media systems as art itself. Therefore, he focuses on the relation of art and economics, aspects of art and media theory as well as mass communication, advertisement and marketing.

Martin Höfer (born 1982 in Sondershausen (Thuringia), Germany) lives and works in Leipzig, Germany. He graduated with distinction at the Academy of Visual Arts Leipzig in Media Art. Höfer’s work has been commissioned for group exhibitions including the Dispute Between Word and Picture, Cairo, Egypt, 2006; Hiwar Fanni, Amman, Jordan, 2007; On (plein) Air, Dresden, Germany, 2009; Youth Cult, Berlin, Germany, 2010; Best buy me, Leipzig, Germany, 2010; Kunst im Tower, Linz, Austria, 2010; Capital unemployed, National Art Gallery Vilnius, Lithuania, 2011, Victory on behalf of art (Porsche Carrera Cup, 30 motor races in Germany, Austria, Netherlands, Belgium, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, 2012/13), DLF 1874: Die Biografie der Bilder, Leipzig, Germany, 2012, The Supershow, Leipzig, Germany, 2013; 1st NSK Folk Art Biennale, Leipzig, Germany, 2014.

Aleksi Linnamaa

Aleksi Linnamaa is an interdisciplinary artist whose conceptual practice considers the mechanisms of perception and narration. He primarily works with photographic techniques as well as in sculpture and painting. Linnamaa’s moving image work often includes architecture as a tool for storytelling. In his latest video work Parallel, the architecture of a controversial mining site in Finland is literally mediated through a ruin of an old farmhouse. Linnamaa’s artistic research draws from the ephemeral nature of the manmade.

Aleksi Linnamaa (born 1983 in Tampere, Finland) received an MFA from the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts. His work has been the subject of several national and international exhibitions including Startpoint, Prize for Emerging Artists; Dox, Center for Contemporary Art, Prague; City of Dreams, Mänttä Art Festival XIX, Mänttä; and Expanded Photography, Gallery Forum Box, Helsinki. Linnamaa’s works are in the collections of the Finnish State Art Collection.