With "Aggregating Matter: Of Dandelions and Architectures" we open the third exhibition in cooperation with the Ursula Hauser Collection at NEST. Starting from ceramics by the German artist Beate Kuhn (1927-2015), the exhibition traces forms of the grown and designed environment. Moreover, it shines a spotlight on an unjustly less prominent figure in art history, placing her works in dialogue with contemporary works by Marta Riniker-Radich (b. 1982, lives in Frankfurt a. M. and Zurich) and Paulo Wirz (b. 1990, lives in Geneva and Zurich), members of the Bachelor Fine Arts team.
With "Aggregating Matter: Of Dandelions and Architectures" we open the third exhibition in cooperation with the Ursula Hauser Collection at NEST. Starting from ceramics by the German artist Beate Kuhn (1927-2015), the exhibition traces forms of the grown and designed environment. Moreover, it shines a spotlight on an unjustly less prominent figure in art history, placing her works in dialogue with contemporary works by Marta Riniker-Radich (b. 1982, lives in Frankfurt a. M. and Zurich) and Paulo Wirz (b. 1990, lives in Geneva and Zurich), members of the Bachelor Fine Arts team.
With "Aggregating Matter: Of Dandelions and Architectures" we open the third exhibition in cooperation with the Ursula Hauser Collection at NEST. Starting from ceramics by the German artist Beate Kuhn (1927-2015), the exhibition traces forms of the grown and designed environment. Moreover, it shines a spotlight on an unjustly less prominent figure in art history, placing her works in dialogue with contemporary works by Marta Riniker-Radich (b. 1982, lives in Frankfurt a. M. and Zurich) and Paulo Wirz (b. 1990, lives in Geneva and Zurich), members of the Bachelor Fine Arts team.
With "Aggregating Matter: Of Dandelions and Architectures" we open the third exhibition in cooperation with the Ursula Hauser Collection at NEST. Starting from ceramics by the German artist Beate Kuhn (1927-2015), the exhibition traces forms of the grown and designed environment. Moreover, it shines a spotlight on an unjustly less prominent figure in art history, placing her works in dialogue with contemporary works by Marta Riniker-Radich (b. 1982, lives in Frankfurt a. M. and Zurich) and Paulo Wirz (b. 1990, lives in Geneva and Zurich), members of the Bachelor Fine Arts team.
With "Aggregating Matter: Of Dandelions and Architectures" we open the third exhibition in cooperation with the Ursula Hauser Collection at NEST. Starting from ceramics by the German artist Beate Kuhn (1927-2015), the exhibition traces forms of the grown and designed environment. Moreover, it shines a spotlight on an unjustly less prominent figure in art history, placing her works in dialogue with contemporary works by Marta Riniker-Radich (b. 1982, lives in Frankfurt a. M. and Zurich) and Paulo Wirz (b. 1990, lives in Geneva and Zurich), members of the Bachelor Fine Arts team.
With "Aggregating Matter: Of Dandelions and Architectures" we open the third exhibition in cooperation with the Ursula Hauser Collection at NEST. Starting from ceramics by the German artist Beate Kuhn (1927-2015), the exhibition traces forms of the grown and designed environment. Moreover, it shines a spotlight on an unjustly less prominent figure in art history, placing her works in dialogue with contemporary works by Marta Riniker-Radich (b. 1982, lives in Frankfurt a. M. and Zurich) and Paulo Wirz (b. 1990, lives in Geneva and Zurich), members of the Bachelor Fine Arts team.
With "Aggregating Matter: Of Dandelions and Architectures" we open the third exhibition in cooperation with the Ursula Hauser Collection at NEST. Starting from ceramics by the German artist Beate Kuhn (1927-2015), the exhibition traces forms of the grown and designed environment. Moreover, it shines a spotlight on an unjustly less prominent figure in art history, placing her works in dialogue with contemporary works by Marta Riniker-Radich (b. 1982, lives in Frankfurt a. M. and Zurich) and Paulo Wirz (b. 1990, lives in Geneva and Zurich), members of the Bachelor Fine Arts team.
With "Aggregating Matter: Of Dandelions and Architectures" we open the third exhibition in cooperation with the Ursula Hauser Collection at NEST. Starting from ceramics by the German artist Beate Kuhn (1927-2015), the exhibition traces forms of the grown and designed environment. Moreover, it shines a spotlight on an unjustly less prominent figure in art history, placing her works in dialogue with contemporary works by Marta Riniker-Radich (b. 1982, lives in Frankfurt a. M. and Zurich) and Paulo Wirz (b. 1990, lives in Geneva and Zurich), members of the Bachelor Fine Arts team.
With "Aggregating Matter: Of Dandelions and Architectures" we open the third exhibition in cooperation with the Ursula Hauser Collection at NEST. Starting from ceramics by the German artist Beate Kuhn (1927-2015), the exhibition traces forms of the grown and designed environment. Moreover, it shines a spotlight on an unjustly less prominent figure in art history, placing her works in dialogue with contemporary works by Marta Riniker-Radich (b. 1982, lives in Frankfurt a. M. and Zurich) and Paulo Wirz (b. 1990, lives in Geneva and Zurich), members of the Bachelor Fine Arts team.