Who doesn't know them: towers of dishes. Unfinished
household chores, old dishes, pots and cutlery piled up in the sink and often
next to it. There's never enough room for them.
This everyday observation is the starting point for the small series of dishes
with pots and cutlery, struggling for balance and at the same time urging to
get things done. Colorful, ironic, and in the manner of old paintings, these
tools and mounds of daily eating are staged against a dark background and
sparse lighting. Detached from the context of daily annoyance, the porcelain
presents itself in daring stacks and disconcerting towers, to which one can
hardly believe the balance and expects that everything will topple over in the next
moment. A typifying staging in the face of the sophistication of banal risks
that we create ourselves day after day. (limited edition of 7 + 2APs)