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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Artwork framed.
Dimensions :
23.6x35.4in
About this artwork
The work illustrates the dynamic between deconstruction and reconstruction of the self.
The metaphor of "killing your ego" is a recurring motif in numerous philosophical and psychological traditions. It describes not an act of physical destruction, but a process of liberation from overdue self-structures.
At the higher level, the new ego is not created from metal, not from tension,
not out of a need to ward something off.
It arises from the white… space, from the silence,
out of nothingness, which is not empty, but ready.
"This is where the transformation begins:
The self does not grow out of the weapon,
but from their decay."
Marco Bollenbach emerged from the graffiti subculture of the late 1980s and found his first means of artistic expression in the spray can. His keen sense of form, light, and detail became apparent early on, leading him to photorealistic techniques and lending his work a vibrant precision. As a former co-founder of the artist trio "Die Dixons," he had a decisive influence on Berlin's urban art scene. With projects like "TheHaus" and the first Berlin Mural Festival, he combined street art, spatial art, and social dialogue in a new way. Today, his large-format murals can be seen worldwide—mirrors of urban energy, technical perfection, and emotional depth. Through classical painting, taught by his grandfather, Bollenbach developed the style of "REimpressionALism"—a synthesis of realism and impressionism. A common thread runs symbolically through his work: a symbol of movement, transience, and the common thread of life.