Mariele Neudecker

Neudecker at the opening of the exhibition Model, Galerie Rudolfinum, Prague, 2015
"2.5 Million Light Years and Doppelgänger", in cast aluminium - unveiled in Saint Helier, Jersey, 28 July 2010 by Treasury Minister, Senator Philip Ozouf.

Mariele Neudecker (born 1965) is a German artist who lives and works in Bristol, England. Neudecker uses a broad range of media including sculpture, installation, film and photography. Her practice investigates the formation and historical dissemination of cultural constructs around the natural world, focusing particularly on landscape representations within the Northern European Romantic tradition and today's notions of the Sublime. Central to the work is the human interest and relationship to landscape and its images used metaphorically for human psychology.

Neudecker has shown widely internationally, notably in Biennales in Japan, Australia and Singapore, also solo shows in Ikon Gallery, Tate St Ives[1] and Tate Britain. In 2010 she presented a solo exhibition at Galerie Barbara Thumm, Berlin, won the Ludwig Gies Preis for her participation at Triennale Fellbach 2010 (Germany), made a new commission for Extraordinary Measures, Belsay Hall, Castle and Gardens, Newcastle upon Tyne, England[2] and was invited to spend three month at the Headlands Center for the Arts, San Francisco, US. She was a guest artist at the physics laboratory CERN in 2017 and 2019.[3]

She was born in Düsseldorf, Germany.

  1. ^ "Mariele Neudecker". Tate St. Ives. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  2. ^ Cumming, Laura (1 May 2010). "Extraordinary Measures at Belsay Hall". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 2019-11-12 – via www.theguardian.com.
  3. ^ "Mariele Neudecker | Arts · at · CERN". 2023-09-22. Archived from the original on 2023-09-22. Retrieved 2024-02-29.

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