The idea of Carte Blanche is to provide a platform for contemporary art now. Local and International creatives and artists will be given the opportunity to show their works in a virtual gallery online and a gallery space at the Aurora premises.
June 2025
Mirijam Heiler
DUO / Mirijam Heiler was born in 1991 in Bressanone, Italy. She lives and works in Bolzano, Italy. Heiler studied Fine Arts at the State Academy of Fine Arts Karlsruhe, as well as theology at the Albert Ludwigs University Freiburg, Germany. The artists work is not about amplifying the noise of the world but prefers showing the quiet, the reduced. Order, repetition and restraint take centre stage. The paintings are mostly monochrome, characterised by non-colours and pastel tones such as grey, blue or grey, blue or rosé. Instead of telling a lot, Heiler deliberately leaves blank spaces. She is interested in what becomes visible when you take things away. Unagitated her works are a conscious rejection of excess, of loudness, of obtrusiveness. The visual language remains consistently reduced, no illustration, no narrative. Repetitions and recurring elements play a central role, as in Poem Pine Needles. The pine needles become signs like a mixture of letters and ideograms. A recurring theme in Heilers works is that of dwelling in the form of houses, tents or fragile structures. It is less about architecture and more about questions of retreat, order, temporary security. Her artworks open up spaces for concentration and like to be quiet attempt to respond to the complexity of the present. The exhibition entitled DUO for the 13th Carte Blanche edition shows works from the last few years. The title recalls the double presence of several artworks throughout the exhibition in different sizes and plays with simplest of repetitions itself.
„The most important thing is not to stop asking questions.“
The work shown at the Aurora
They are sold directly by the artist to the customer with a certificate of authenticity and invoice.
About
FUNDUS
Julia Bornefeld
A Chandelier of bronze-coloured cent coins , photography in a vintage suitcase, silver dust, ink on cotton canvas, rubber, metal, leather and much more - these are some of the materials we find in Julia Bornefeld's works.
Fundus, the #12 edition of Carte Blanche, is a kind of retrospective but also a current insight into the work of the multi-talented and very active contemporary artist Julia Bornefeld. Julia Bornefeld is a multidisciplinary artist who works in various areas of the visual arts. She works with light, sound, sculpture and painting on a wide variety of materials and surfaces.
The exhibition title FUNDUS for the 12th Carte Blanche exhibitions comes from the term fundus, which has different meanings in different contexts, but all of which have a certain depth and complexity. Originally from Latin, fundus means something like ground or basis. In art, however, the term is often used to describe ideas, themes or motifs that serve as a basis for creative work. A fundus can be invaluable to artists as it allows them to draw on existing concepts and reinterpret them.
Julia Bornefeld is showing works from her artistic oeuvre, the oldest in this exhibition is from 1987 with bitumen, acrylic paint and canvas with partly burnt pieces of cotton. There will also be works on display that were specially designed for the premises of the Hotel Aurora in 2024 and 2025.
There will be life-size sculptures, drawings and objects on display that deal with the artist's ongoing processes of creative production. In this sense, the Fundus is not only a storehouse of knowledge, but also a dynamic space in which creativity and innovation can unfold. Furthermore, the Fundus can also be understood as a metaphor for the collective memory of a society. The cultural, historical and social experiences stored in a fundus characterize individual and collective consciousness.
Julia Bornefeld's works challenge the viewer to question the perception of the object and its symbolism. A certain alienation of the objects leads to a desire to touch and explore. The haptics of the artworks could not be more different. It is precisely this variety that is exciting and appealing. The sense of touch is challenged in the three-dimensional works, a kind of columns, Derma I, 2016 and also with Pneu , 2016.
Awakening a wide range of human senses beyond the sense of sight is one of the aims that Julia Bornefeld pursues with her artworks. The work Paradigma, created in 2015, and Melas, created in 2015, show the industrial and technical side of the artist's oeuvre. Bornefeld's interest in removing materials from their original purpose and presenting them in seemingly wondrous patterns is obvious. An elevation to three-dimensionality through the steel frame allows the work to be described as a wall sculpture and plays with the fusion of image and sculpture.
With Cage of Vanity, 2010, Julia Bornefeld wants to use the oversized golden wooden frame as a sign of appreciation for the digital pigment print it contains. A culturally influenced expectation on the part of the visitor that points to quality and historicity.
With the sculpture Argento, 2023 made of aluminium and aluminium mesh, a fragile-looking, partly transparent ‘cloud’ is created that enables a completely new use of aluminium mesh through integrated, colour-changing light sources. Sphere, 2025, the site-specific installation for the Hotel Aurora made of the same material, floats impressively from the ceiling of the gallery space and allows visitors to immerse themselves in their own world of light.
Morphic fields_ argento, 2022, are large-format canvases with ink and silver dust. They reveal cosmic formations and transport the visitor to another dimension. Works that look like stardust, some of which reveal a kind of explosion but also a melting form.
Lateral thinker and free spirit paired with the highest standards of quality and precision. Elaborate technical expertise and innovative artistic approaches only marginally describe the nature of the artist and the exhibited works. These are works that touch, that break with tradition and are aesthetically pleasing at the same time.
Event Photos
Coming Soon
THE IDEA
The aim is to curate the Hotel’s art specifically - we want there to be good stories and a lasting wellbeing for the guests as well as try to make them have a unique and distinctive experience. The interplay of art design and the Hotel Aurora’s architecture is what characterizes this special place in South Tyrol. The historic hotel in Merano is marked by art treasures and designer pieces that one can find throughout the hotel as well as in every room and this is what makes the Aurora so outstanding. Carte Blanche will host about 6 art exhibitions per year and is keen on giving artists the opportunity to also create site specific works for the hotel that will be shown permanently. The shown art works as well as art editions of works on display will be available at the Hotels Aurora’s own art corner.
THE CURATOR
The upcoming exhibitions will be curated by the freelance curator Eva von Ingram Harpf. Curator Eva von Ingram Harpf, 1987, after graduating from Bocconi University in Milan with a thesis in Art Banking worked at Johann König Gallery in Berlin, as well as Ghetta Gallery, Ortisei and holds a Master´s degree in Contemporary Art from Sothebys London. Since 2012 she works as an independent curator and art adviser and is based in Bolzano, Südtirol, Italy. She is a member of the board of ar/ge Kunst Bozen and founder of y-contemporary platform.