Kröller Müller Museum
RAUHFASER
Lilian Kreutzberger (1984) takes visitors in RAUHFASER to a near future where digitization is inextricably woven into our daily lives. In her latest installations, she envisions a future in which buildings, street furniture, and objects are covered with a constantly changing "electronic skin": screens that ceaselessly feed us with images. Kreutzberger allows form, image, and function to flow into one another. What if every surface, be it the fridge in the kitchen or a tile in the streets, is covered with a digital surface? Something as intimate and private as therapy could be given to you on a surface of any private or public object. Visitors are invited to immerse themselves in a sensory experience that is both disorienting and deeply familiar.
Kreutzberger combines handmade objects with the latest technologies in monumental artworks hung on the wall, sculptures with LED screens forming a spatial EMDR therapy installation, ceramics and various forms of artworks with incorporated digital screens. She seduces the eye while simultaneously questioning what we see. With a flat surface that appears three-dimensional and “marble” that is nothing more than a printed skin on plaster, she makes us doubt our own perception.




























