Ula Einstein is a Swiss born multi-disciplinary exhibiting artist based in New York City. She is known for her innovative use of media and self-invented techniques. Her drawings with fire, air, blade-cuts, and thread on paper, objects and ongoing Installations will be included in 5 upcoming exhibitions in 2010 in New York, New Jersey, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, and Switzerland.
Einstein is open to commission work, and interactive collaborative projects with the public.
STATEMENT
"I’m engaged with building and alchemy. Alternating between the play of chance and control, composing and improvising, I push the limits of materials and tools as a metaphor.
Exploring materials and methods with a very hands-on and lo-fi approach, I embrace an economy of means to create an expansive whole. From micro to macro, there is fluctuating from particle to whole and back again.
I employ materials and tools using their innate characteristics, and in ways which detour and extend from their original purpose.I draw with fire, knives, thread and hot glue. My ongoing site specific installations are often rooted in the exploration of physicality and immateriality.
My work is also further stretched by paradox: empty/full, conceal/reveal, shadow/light, pain/beauty, fracture/whole, static/movement, visible/invisible, ordinary/sacred.
The imagery produced through the forms is abstracted from a wide array of sources as diverse as molecular structure, cells, book pages, lace, spheres, text, hieroglyphics, webs, fossils, impressions, architecture, synthetic design, and cave paintings.
The repetitive ritualistic work is a partial response to our culture of speed, multi-fragments, visual stimuli, and endless distractions where I have a hard time focusing while holding the infinite complexity.These drawings are my way of contemplating and paring down accumulations. While things are changing every second, I remember our interconnectivity and am prompted to respond with an array of gestures, intimate and large, controlled and elastic, reflecting on our vastness."