In many grocery stores they will give you some of those thin, sometimes colorful plastic bags to pack your goods. Those bags are kind of a symbol for our huge waste production and the pollution by plastic.
I started to paint beautiful birds exactly on those particular bags: Species that live in Panama are painted on bags I received in Panama and Canadian species on the Canadian bags.
On the colorful, thin, and transparent support media the oil paint – that sometimes tends to appear heavy – seems light. Mediating the impression of those popular aerial inhabitants, and the ephemeral impression also hints at the imminent extinction of many of those birds.
Quetzal (Nr. 27), 2019, 29×53 cm, oil on plastic bag
Masked tytra (Nr.16), 2019, 26×53 cm, oil on plastic bag
Canada warbler (Nr.11), 2019, 30×53 cm, oil on plastic bag
Trogon (Nr.1), 2018, 25×44 cm, oil on plastic bag
Tanager (Nr.13), 2019, 22×45 cm, oil on plastic bag
Toucanet (Nr.17), 2019, 45×54 cm, oil on plastic bag
Hummingbbird (Nr. 8), 2019, 21×44 cm, oil on plastic bag
Hummingbbird (Nr. 10), 2019, 20×38 cm, oil on plastic bag
Canada jay (Nr. 20), 2019, 40×66 cm, oil on plastic bag
Antbird (Nr. 7), 2019, 35×37 cm, oil on plastic bag
Tanager (Nr. 2), 2019, 27×46 cm, oil on plastic bag
Vireo (Nr. 23), 2019, 21×18 cm, oil on plastic bag
Human legacy, Instalation view, Galerie POPOP, 2019
Detail view, Bay-headed tanager (Nr. 13), 2019, oil on plastic bag
Detail view, Summer tanager (Nr. 29), 2019, oil on plastic bag