Small Works

Deep Space: After us, what survives?

In the Deep Space series, I imagine worlds ruled by silence and isolation, entering as an observer long after humans have vanished—when deserted structures and stray materials begin to suggest their own histories. Though distant in time and space, these works reflect emotional realities of the present: loneliness, neglect, and the quiet persistence of what we leave behind.

Drawing from a visual diary of places I live or have lived—architecture in Kinshasa, mushrooms found in the woods near my parents’ home in Germany, and the remnants of everyday life in New York—the series becomes a visual archaeology of the present. It traces the moment when human systems begin to unravel, as  buildings cling to giant fungi like barnacles, or merge with plastic residue in an improvised form of existence long after we, the makers, are gone.

Larger works from this series are available here.

All of these motifs are available in two formats:

  • Archival pigment print on Hahnemühle Photo Rag® Baryta, 100% cotton (acid- and lignin-free) 

    8 × 8 inches / 20.3 × 20.3 cm

    Edition of 3
    
$250 |
    place order

  • Archival pigment print on Hahnemühle Photo Rag® Baryta, 100% cotton (acid- and lignin-free)
    
6 × 6 inches / 15.3 × 15.3 cm
    Monoprint, mounted on wood
    
$425 |
    place order

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Unsung Heroes: The informal economies of Kinshasa