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Discovering medicine through art

Spinal Anesthesia - big

This abstract sculpture captures the essence of spinal anesthesia.
Corten steel represents the human back and its transience, while stainless steel visualizes the invasiveness of the needle and the medical intervention.
The powerful, precisely targeted puncture renders general anesthesia unnecessary
and opens the door to surgery - a subtle balance between vulnerability, precision, and control.

88 x 5 x 13 cm

Spinal Anesthesia - small (tabletop)

22,5 x 1 x 4 cm

Caesarean section

The Caesarean section at its most critical moment.

In corten steel, the body and its mortality take shape.
Stainless steel marks the medical intervention: a sterile incision in the abdomen of the pregnant woman.

The confrontation between these two materials reflects the paradox of an invasive, almost brutal act that

simultaneously makes new and vulnerable life possible.

66 x 32 x 20 cm

Catarct

The cataract surgery is frozen at its most critical moment.
The eye and its transience and aging are rendered in corten steel.
The additional material of bronze emphasizes the variability of the iris,

while stainless steel highlights the extreme precision of eye surgery.

31 x 58 x 4 cm

Tako Tsubo

Takotsubo syndrome most commonly occurs in women — an acute, stress-related weakening of the heart muscle

that often feels like a “broken heart.”

The name refers to a Japanese octopus trap (takotsubo), whose shape resembles that of the dangerously affected heart.

The corten steel does not literally depict the diseased heart; instead, it is suggested through the crossing of the thumb

and index finger — a contemporary gesture symbolizing love.

Stainless steel translates the sharp ECG line, serving as a sign of emotional impact and existence itself.

54 x 64 x 50 cm

ENT


In corten steel, a stylized head emerges, embodying the human form and its impermanence.
Stainless steel scalpels point precisely towards the ear, nose, and throat.
The discipline of ear, nose, and throat medicine is encapsulated — a precise orientation within a complex whole.

42 x 24 x 6 cm

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