Since the 1970s, photo and media artist Jürgen Klauke has consistently undermined standardized gender identities and behavior patterns through the use of his own body in his work. His most recent series describes the paranoid condition of today's world, translating it into an "Aesthetic Paranoia" that ranges from the minimalist to the excessive and occasionally surreal.
Since the 1970s, photo and media artist Jürgen Klauke has consistently undermined standardized gender identities and behavior patterns through the use of his own body in his work. His most recent series describes the paranoid condition of today's world, translating it into an "Aesthetic Paranoia" that ranges from the minimalist to the excessive and occasionally surreal.