Age, Biography and Wiki
Andreas Greiner was born on 1979, is a German artist. Discover Andreas Greiner's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 45 years old?
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He is a member of famous artist with the age 45 years old group.
Andreas Greiner Height, Weight & Measurements
At 45 years old, Andreas Greiner height not available right now. We will update Andreas Greiner's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Andreas Greiner Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Andreas Greiner worth at the age of 45 years old? Andreas Greiner’s income source is mostly from being a successful artist. He is from . We have estimated Andreas Greiner's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Andreas Greiner Social Network
Timeline
Andreas Greiner (born 1979) is a German artist, based in Berlin.
He works with a wide range of different media including sculpture, installation, photography, video and techniques such as Electron microscopy, algorithmic image creation and 3D printing.
Frequently he works with biological and natural growth processes to create art works.
His approach addresses humanity’s relationship with its living and non-living environment and the nature–culture dichotomy.
Throughout his career Greiner has cooperated with experts such as microbiologists, art historians, computer programmers, architects and artists, e.g. Ivy Lee Fiebig, Alexandra Spiegel and the composers Tyler Friedman and Páll Ragnar Pálsson.
He is part of two artist collectives: A/A (with Armin Keplinger) and Das Numen (with Julian Charrière, Markus Hoffmann and Felix Kiessling).
Since 2022 Andreas Greiner is a professor of media art at Muthesius Kunsthochschule, Kiel.
Greiner was born in Aachen, Germany.
In Florence and San Francisco he initially studied figurative drawing and sculpture to improve his understanding of the human figure and anatomy.
Afterwards he studied medicine for three years in Budapest and Dresden.
Returning to art at Berlin University of the Arts he enrolled first in multi-media art and later joined the Institute for Spatial Experiments.
Greiner’s work is informed by the natural sciences, technology and the humanities.
A central focus of his work is the human–nature relationship and the Anthropocene, as currently discussed in academia and in mainstream media.
In the past he has demonstrated the plastic and sculptural qualities of an explosion (Entladung with Fabian Knecht, 2012–2013), of social interactions and of Electron microscopies of unicellular organisms (Hybrid Matter).
Greiner has also framed animals as living sculptures.
For example in Der freie Grundriss (2014) he placed a pupated fly Maggot named Ludwig inside the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin (Festival of Future Nows).
Once it hatched it became a ‘flying sculpture’.
Its status as an art work was confirmed by the artistic director of the Neue Nationalgalerie by signing a contract with Greiner.
Another living sculpture conceptualized by Greiner was a hybrid Broiler chicken from an industrial fattening plant northeast of Berlin, whom he named Heinrich (2015–2016).
Greiner brought him to a suburban petting zoo in October 2015 where he died a few months later.
His status as a ‘living sculpture’ was also confirmed with a contract between the petting zoo and Greiner.
Study (Portrait) of the Singularity of the Animal (2015 – ongoing) is the title of a series of works exploring the genre of portraiture, altered (unnatural) nature and non-human life beyond human senses.
Traditionally this genre has been used to express a human subject’s individuality, character and beauty.
By portraying and naming a set of algae Greiner highlights the individuality, character and specific aesthetics of these microorganisms (8 Heads High, Altered Morphologies).
The portraits are made using a scanning Electron microscope, making them appear three-dimensional and less abstract from everyday visual experience.
Other works using the Electron microscope portray mutated cells, such as cancer cells and synthetically created bacterial cells.
These contrasting types of mutations provoke the question of what is natural and where humans intervene in growing processes.
In his work Jungle Memory, started in 2017, Greiner seeks to archive endangered forests worldwide in a vast digital database by photographically documenting them, like on the Island of Vilm or the Hambach Forest in Germany, the primeval Bialowieza Forest in Poland, the Red Forest in Chernobyl or the burnt down parts of the Plumas National Forest in California.
By incorporating living beings as subjects in his work, Greiner questions the idea of art as man-made.
Microorganisms make the outcome of the artwork unpredictable and this loss of control opposes the traditionally executive role of the artist.
A characteristic of Greiner’s work is the cultivation of bioluminescent algae and other bioluminescent creatures.
When the water in which the organisms live is disturbed they produce bright blue specks.
In a darkened exhibition space this effect has been produced mechanically by Greiner using musical instruments or gyroscopes to disturb the water's surface.
Sound waves have also been used to initiate bioluminescence in works accompanied by abstract musical pieces.
(see works The Molecular Ordering of Computational Plants, Multitudes, Dreamcatcher, 16 sqm).
Greiner also highlights sculptural qualities of phenomena which are not usually associated with sculpture.
Traditionally sculpture is a static medium formed from inanimate matter and Greiner seeks to expand this.
Together with the psychologist Gertrude Endejan-Gremse and local citizens, waldfuermorgen e.V. was founded in January 2020.
It is a non-profit association that reacts to the massive tree die out in the Harz region, Germany.
The project is creating a participatory forest, in which children and families plant trees on the upper outskirts of the city of Goslar, covering around three hectares of land.