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Freelance graphic designer, artist and radio host based in Berlin.






ClientProjectYearCategory
BerlinaleBerlinale Talents 20262026Identity
/Eros DJs2025Poster, Social Media
SolidSolid2025Logo
Matters of ActivityFragmented Futures2025Poster
BerlinaleBerlinale Talents 20252024Identity
OkraOkra – Can2024Tape
Willi-Graf GymnasiumSpuren der Widerstand2024Workshop
Dream Journal30 Jahre Dream Journal2024Poster, Social Media
Berlinale Berlinale Talents 20242023Identity
Ami GarmonPatience and Hunger2023Poster
Matters of Activity2019—2022 Jahresbericht2023Publication
Freie Universität BerlinBeauty and the State2023Poster
Humboldt Universität BerlinInstitut für Europäische Ethnologie2022Identity
Matters of ActivityScaling Matters2022Publication, Poster
Ostkreuzschule für FotografieJahrgang Fünfzehn2022Identity
Ostkreuzschule für FotografieJahrgang Fünfzehn2022Catalogue
Ami GarmonPatience and Hunger 2021Tape
Ami Garmonamigarmon.com 2021Website
Imad Gebrayelimadgebrayel.com 2021Website
Master Institute of Visual CulturesMaster Catalogue 2018 2018Catalogue
Master Institute of Visual CulturesMaster Catalogue 2017 2017Catalogue




PlatformProjectYearCategory PersonalStudy on Rigatoni2026Painting
PersonalBig Spaghetti2026Short Film
PersonalBurracomania Shirts2026Serigraphy
PersonalBurracomania2025Illustration, Serigraphy
Hallo:RadioLa notte che Pinelli2022Podcast
Hallo:RadioMateriale Resistente2021Podcast
PersonalThe Great Beyond2018Film
PersonalPina – tanzt, tanzt, tanzt, tanz2018Poster
PersonalHeimat2017Film
PersonalArea +312017Short Film
PersonalGabber Generations2017Publication
The One MinutesOuting2016Short Film
Area +312017

Single channel
5:30 minutes

Voiceover: Luisa Traumann
Music editing: Anton Maiof

Music: “The Ex-Priest” – Ketsueki Sākuru (Giallo Disco Records)  
Area +31 – an allusion to Area 51 and the area code of the Netherlands – is a visual essay created from the archive material of the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision in Hilversum (NL), as part of the Open Set Lab program. It speculates on the change in the average body size of the Dutch population over the last two centuries and aims to convince the viewer that this shift is highly noticeable and anything but normal. 

We all have prejudices that unconsciously guide us: Our brains are built to be on the lookout for suspicious things, we don't like to believe that ambiguous events are simply random or determined by pure chance. But perhaps we're right: why are Dutch people so tall? 

Presented during the talk Debunking Archives, part of the Open Set Lab Symposium Fluid Memory. 



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