Daniel Bolliger's Wildcards
Here are the wildcards from Daniel Bolliger, curator of photoSCHWEIZ for many years.
More pictures by Nina Pacherová, Sunny Attias and Tianyu Wang can be seen at photoSCHWEIZ in February 2025.
Daniel Bolliger
Daniel Bolliger has lived for many years in New York, Los Angeles and London and has worked internationally for decades as a photographer, post-production specialist and creative director in the fields of advertising and art.
Today Daniel Bolliger lives in Zurich and works as a creative director and motion designer at Imaculix AG in the areas of film, animation and cinema.
"I am interested in progressive works. Classically realized as photography, but also in exciting variations at the interface to new media and technologies. It is important that the works have depth - and a message. And that they are visually exciting. As profane as it may sound, a good picture is still a good picture".
Nina Pacherová
Nina Pacherová is a progressive, sensitive and profound artist and photographer. In her work, she explores the challenges of modern childhood and family life, including the ubiquitous spread of technology and the influence of social media.
Her photography is characterized by a strong interest in multimedia overlaps. With a playful, experimental and innovative approach, she explores the boundaries of the medium, creating extraordinary, novel works.
Sunny Attias
Sunny Attia's work is like something from another planet - authentically different, with a pinch of profundity and a lot of humor. As an artist working in the broader field of photography, his work encompasses CGI imaging, sculptural photography and filmmaking.
His works are based on the exploration of materiality, space and semiotics and move effortlessly between physical and digital worlds.
© Tianyu Wang
Tianyu Wang's works are both humorous and oppressive, characterized by haunting and powerful images. Living in Paris, she devotes her art to the themes of bodily experiences and phenomena of consciousness.
Starting from the uncomfortable emotions of everyday life, her works unfold into surreal and fantastic worlds, sometimes even into the grotesque. Her focus is on invisible violence and the oppression of women in the family context.