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Medium :
Acrylic, Collage on Paper , Cardboard under plexiglas
Framing :
Framed
Dimensions :
9.1x9.1in
About this artwork
In 1967, when I was still a little boy, my grandmother from Germany sent a letter to my uncle in Tokyo (Japan) every week, telling him about her life and daily routine.
Over time, I accumulated several hundred letters, which I've since used in my collages, sometimes even overpainting them. The blue blotting paper dates back to 1898 and belonged to my grandfather, who was living in Latvia with my grandmother at the time. The main theme of the image… is the wasp's nest. A wonderful form that redefines the concept of "home." My grandmother was a refugee for a long time during World War II and without a true home for quite a while, until she finally found an inner home in southern Germany. I believe that "home" resides in the heart—and so there's a parallel here between the round nest and the center of a person's being (the heart), which can find an inner home anywhere in the world.
Nils Hoffmann works as a painter with roots in graphic design and extensive experience in landscape painting, abstract art, mixed media, and collage. His works integrate natural found objects—wood, roots, seeds, leaves, or thorns—as well as man-made objects such as rusted iron or old prints, etc., using diverse techniques such as painting, collage, layering, or monotype. His artworks are mostly dense, process-oriented compositions that express both intuition and his devotion to the respective subject matter, conveying with a mysterious intensity a deep connection to nature—and Mother Earth—and to the existential power of the elements.