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In this wall sculpture, I have composed a striking tension between order and organic boundlessness on a square format. A neon-colored turquoise background with a geometric texture initially forms a clear structure, which, however, increasingly dissolves into the organic.
From this surface emerge neon-green, mushroom-like forms made of silicone. Their tentacles, approximately 15 cm long, vary in size and deliberately break the edge of the image,… thus reaching into the real space. The smooth, almost corporeal materiality intensifies their ambivalent effect, oscillating between attraction and irritation. Each individual form was sculpted by me from high-quality, malleable silicone. As a result, they vary in color intensity.
This creates a dynamic composition that impressively questions the boundary between constructed pictorial space and vibrant, proliferating form.
The sprawling cosmos of Dortmund artist Barbara Koch zooms viewers into a magical world of her own. Koch uses media such as painting, sculpture, and installations and trained at renowned art schools such as the University of Applied Sciences in Dortmund and the Accademia di Belle Arti in Milan. Her distinctive style, characterized by a professional and conscious approach to her chosen visual language, focuses on the classic casting of abstract-figurative formations, incorporating initial drawings, models, and ultimately silicone elements into the creative process. The biomorphic formations, often made of silicone, seem to exude a toxic beauty. The works are typically multi-partite, evoking associations with swarms, lichens, and fungi, as well as imaginative magnifications of microcosmic phenomena and flourishing, intact underwater worlds.