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During my stay in Iceland, I crossed the five-kilometer-wide continental divide between North America and Eurasia, where the two tectonic plates are drifting apart. This experience deeply moved me. That night, I dreamed of dinosaurs that once lived in this area of Iceland. In fact, there were never any dinosaurs in Iceland. This sculpture attempts to capture one of the dreamed dinosaurs. I use a surreal aesthetic to challenge conventional concepts… of the body.
Dreams are often the starting point for my artistic work. Dreams are the connection to the invisible, subterranean worlds.
I make my own paints.
Materials: elm wood, larch wood, oil paint, charcoal.
Vinko Nino Jaeger uses media such as wood carving, abstract drawing, painting, photography, and writing. He studied contextual painting and object sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, graduating with distinction. He employs an abstract and surreal aesthetic to disrupt conventional concepts of the body. His working techniques focus on craftsmanship; he uses natural materials and creates his own paints according to his own recipes. He also frequently incorporates fire into his work. Dreams are often the starting point for his artistic practice. The dream is the connection to invisible, subterranean worlds. In transforming the dreamed, a spontaneous, abstract gesture is important to him—with half-open, half-closed eyes.