full_name
biography

WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio
WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio

WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio

WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio
WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio

WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio

WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio

WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio

WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio

WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio
WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio

WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio

WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio

WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE
As a kid I was obsessed with photographing flowers in my grandparents’ garden. I carefully keep thousands and thousands of those images in my archive. I applied to ECAL with a photograph of a rose I took when I was eight. Around the same time, through grandparent’s gifts, I learned the pleasure of money. Sometimes they would give me one big banknote — 1000 rubles — which I would always deliberately change into a hundred of the smallest ones, 10 rubles. Holding that thick stack of bills in my hands, I believed I learned what being “rich” felt like.
Years later, I came across an absurd object — a money bouquet.
I made three bouquets by folding 324 Russian 10-ruble banknotes. One side of each banknote is UV-printed with photographs of flowers I took as a child in my grandparents’ garden. Around each bouquets, I wrapped images of warfare.
While working on this project, I remembered the song Where Have All the Flowers Gone? — a song about the endless and senseless cycle of war. The title of the work pays tribute to it.
——
3 money bouquets composed of 108 Russian 10-ruble banknotes each, wrapped in paper with laser printed image. Displayed on silver painted PVC tube stands.
Each printed banknote serves as my business card. Ask one if you see me irl :)
——
Thanks to @elishevaokh @finn_hepler & Benjamin Plantier
——
Project executed for the materialized photography course mentored by @mazaccio

tests with sofia // pascal in his garden for keep it up, son! // taxi driver in gva airport // emmanuele for keep it up, son! (from camera screen) // leo at home // woman at the ferry from athens to aegina // mother with two kids at the ferry, lugano lake // kids in arolla

tests with sofia // pascal in his garden for keep it up, son! // taxi driver in gva airport // emmanuele for keep it up, son! (from camera screen) // leo at home // woman at the ferry from athens to aegina // mother with two kids at the ferry, lugano lake // kids in arolla

tests with sofia // pascal in his garden for keep it up, son! // taxi driver in gva airport // emmanuele for keep it up, son! (from camera screen) // leo at home // woman at the ferry from athens to aegina // mother with two kids at the ferry, lugano lake // kids in arolla

tests with sofia // pascal in his garden for keep it up, son! // taxi driver in gva airport // emmanuele for keep it up, son! (from camera screen) // leo at home // woman at the ferry from athens to aegina // mother with two kids at the ferry, lugano lake // kids in arolla

tests with sofia // pascal in his garden for keep it up, son! // taxi driver in gva airport // emmanuele for keep it up, son! (from camera screen) // leo at home // woman at the ferry from athens to aegina // mother with two kids at the ferry, lugano lake // kids in arolla

tests with sofia // pascal in his garden for keep it up, son! // taxi driver in gva airport // emmanuele for keep it up, son! (from camera screen) // leo at home // woman at the ferry from athens to aegina // mother with two kids at the ferry, lugano lake // kids in arolla

tests with sofia // pascal in his garden for keep it up, son! // taxi driver in gva airport // emmanuele for keep it up, son! (from camera screen) // leo at home // woman at the ferry from athens to aegina // mother with two kids at the ferry, lugano lake // kids in arolla

tests with sofia // pascal in his garden for keep it up, son! // taxi driver in gva airport // emmanuele for keep it up, son! (from camera screen) // leo at home // woman at the ferry from athens to aegina // mother with two kids at the ferry, lugano lake // kids in arolla

some research I’ve done on combining kirigami cutting patterns with found and stock pics

some research I’ve done on combining kirigami cutting patterns with found and stock pics

some research I’ve done on combining kirigami cutting patterns with found and stock pics

some research I’ve done on combining kirigami cutting patterns with found and stock pics

some research I’ve done on combining kirigami cutting patterns with found and stock pics

some research I’ve done on combining kirigami cutting patterns with found and stock pics

some research I’ve done on combining kirigami cutting patterns with found and stock pics

some research I’ve done on combining kirigami cutting patterns with found and stock pics

some research I’ve done on combining kirigami cutting patterns with found and stock pics
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