
2025
The textile works sound calling down and sequence raveled out of sound engage with contaminated landscapes as living archives and resistant bodies, exploring how time inscribes itself in matter — not as linear progress, but as sedimented memory: fragile, fragmented, and non-linear. The starting point is the brown discoloration of the Spree and adjacent waters in Lusatia — a consequence of rising groundwater following the closure of open-cast lignite mines. The released iron oxide mud is a relic of profound extractivist interventions in land and bodies. Over several months, the artist dyed textiles directly in the waters and filtration systems. The fabrics function as breathing archives — they store traces, change, and resist legibility. The landscape itself becomes a witness: memory here is not fixed but remains in motion — fragmented, embodied, and intimate.
sound calling down, 2025
381 Ă— 128 cm
river sediments, cotton fabrics, latex



Dyeing process in a water filtration facility, Schwarze Pumpe, 2025


sequence raveled out of sound (I), 2025
River sediments, silk, cotton
127 x 152 cm



sequence raveled out of sound (II), 2025
River sediments, silk, cotton, tulle fabric
123 x 161 cm



photos: Michael Depasquale, Carolin Seeliger

sound calling down, 2025
381 Ă— 128 cm; river sediments, cotton fabrics, latex
sound calling down, 2025
sequence raveled out of sound, 2025
The textile works sound calling down and sequence raveled out of sound engage with contaminated landscapes as living archives and resistant bodies, exploring how time inscribes itself in matter - not as linear progress, but as sedimented memory: fragile, fragmented, and non-linear. The starting point is the brown discoloration of the Spree and adjacent waters in Lusatia - a consequence of rising groundwater following the closure of open-cast lignite mines. The released iron oxide mud is a relic of profound extractivist interventions in land and bodies. Over several months, the artist dyed textiles directly in the waters and filtration systems. The fabrics function as breathing archives - they store traces, change, and resist legibility. The landscape itself becomes a witness: memory here is not fixed but remains in motion - fragmented, embodied, and intimate.

Dyeing process in a water filtration facility, Schwarze Pumpe, 2025

sequence raveled out of sound (I), 2025
river sediments, silk, cotton; 127 x 152 cm

sequence raveled out of sound (II), 2025
123 x 161 cm; river sediments, cotton, silk, tull fabric



Photos: Michael Depasquale, Carolin Seeliger