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JUNE

ARTIST RESIDENCY + EXHIBITION

LiTE-HAUS hosts a monthly intensive artist residency program inviting artists from all over the world to work in the project space and exhibit in the galerie. Our June residency program in includes an artist from Japan, and two from the USA. Berlin-based artists join the artists for the exhibition at the end of the residency.

RESIDENCY: June 4 - 25, 2026 (04.06 - 25.06.26)

VERNISSAGE: June 25 6pm-9pm (25.06 18-21 Uhr)
EXHIBITION: June 25 - 28, 2026 (25.06 - 28.06.26)

HOURS: Thurs 6pm-9pm Fri 1pm-6pm & Sat 11am-3pm & Sun 11am-2pm

EXHIBITING ARTISTS

Yuliia Hordiienko + Marianna Ackerman 

Elvira Flamm + Carolyn Brann + Andrea Hentze

Masako Nunokawa + Camila Von Appen + Ivana Mancic

Alejandro Loureiro Lorenzo + Stephanie Orudiakumo

Andrii Kovtun + Melina Amandowitz + Koki van Trotten

ABOUT RESIDENCY ARTISTS

Stephanie Orudiakumo from New York creates portraits using a single, continuous line — one stroke from beginning to end. Her drawings look simple at first glance, but the longer you look, the more personality and emotion you see in each figure. She’s interested in how much can be expressed with the smallest possible gesture. Her work feels calm, intentional, and full of movement, almost like watching someone think out loud with a pencil. During her residency, Stephanie is developing new line‑based drawings that explore identity, expression, and the beauty of keeping things minimal.

 

Alejandro Loureiro Lorenzo from New York works with photography, but not in the usual way. Instead of focusing on one perfect image, he’s interested in how photos move through the world — how they’re shared, repeated, stored, or forgotten. He combines his own photographs with old or found images and often rearranges them into installations or sequences that change how we read them. His work asks simple but powerful questions: What happens to a picture after it’s taken? How does it shape memory or meaning? During his time at LiTE‑HAUS, Alejandro is creating new photographs and experimenting with ways to turn them into physical, spatial works that visitors can walk through or experience in new ways.

 

Masako Nunokawa from Hokkaido is a mixed‑media artist whose work blends traditional Japanese materials with a contemporary, spiritual sensibility. She often uses gold leaf, washi paper, fabric, and acrylic paint to create pieces that feel meditative and atmospheric. Her colors and textures are inspired by ideas of prayer, transformation, and inner stillness. Masako’s work invites viewers to slow down and notice subtle shifts in light, surface, and emotion. Outside of her art practice, she has experience in design and research, which adds structure and clarity to her creative process. At LiTE‑HAUS, she continues exploring themes of quietness, energy, and the connection between the physical and the spiritual.
 

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