This room in Berlin is called ‘Comic Room’. A characteristic touch is that every corner and angle is outlined with a thin, hand-drawn, black line – whether on the ceiling, on the bed, or around a plug. The result is a dollhouse-like, comic book room with papaya green walls, a sunny yellow rug, a lilac bed and a pink cupboard. Graphics and decorations by the artist complete the design.
This room is called “Beneath the Red Horse”! An inhabitable Mediterranean landscape was created in the artist’s typical style. Intensive colours and three dimensions make this a surreal installation with surprising effects!
The window and the comforter is real, and so are the pictures hanging by the window but the way they made the rest of the things (including the beds etc), they look so cartoonish (not saying they are fake) to the point that it becomes hard for a person to tell whether it’s real or just a picture directly out of cartoons
Never has the artist felt as comfortable and secure as when he stayed with his grandparents in the country as a child – in their, to his three-year old’s eyes, “gigantic” oak bed. In “Mammel’s Dream” (room’s name) he recreates this experience with an oversized bed