-
Artworks
Stephan Breuer
SUPERSTAR I, 2026Artist Statement:
The first question I ever asked myself as an artist was simple: how far can I go with just a phone and a computer? That question has taken me to the Giza Pyramids, to the Louvre during its complete closure to the world, to the Palais Royal, to a volcanic crater at 3,976 meters altitude in Guatemala. Every one of these projects was conceived, coordinated, and completed without a physical studio, without touching a single material until the work was finished. A phone and a computer were the only constants. This is what I call Mind Made Art. The proposition at its core is that digital technologies are not tools for producing digital outputs. They are a new form of architecture in which the mind constructs reality. When I coordinate a 52-meter golden star installation across continents, working with engineers, environmental authorities, indigenous communities, and institutional partners simultaneously, the digital space is not peripheral to the artwork. It is the space where the work first exists, in full structural detail, before the physical world catches up. For most of art history, the distance between vision and manifestation required physical proximity. The artist had to be present, hands in matter, negotiating with resistance. Digital technology collapsed that distance entirely. It created a new dimension where consciousness can operate at the scale of geography, where a thought in Paris can move a crane in Guatemala. I have spent twelve years exploring what that collapse makes possible. My medium is consciousness itself, transmitted through digital architecture. The gold PVD surface, the ultra-light geometric structure, the volcanic coordinates are the final rendering of something that was already complete in the virtual space of the project. The physical installations are not the work. They are the proof that the work existed. This is why the digital dimension is not an extension of my practice. It is where my practice originates. Every monument, every UNESCO site, every institutional partnership began as a signal sent through a phone. The question I asked at the beginning was never really about limitation. It was about discovering that consciousness, transmitted through digital architecture, has no limit at all.
Two Works, One Origin:
SUPERSTAR I exists simultaneously in two worlds, and that duality is not incidental. It is the thesis made visible. Presented here together for the first time: a film born from digital data, and a physical object that carries the coordinates of its monumental counterpart.
The Film:
The film does not document the installation. It inhabits it. The crater of Volcán Acatenango was surveyed by drone and transformed into a precise three-dimensional LiDAR model. This geological data, rendered in Unreal Engine, becomes the architecture of an immersive journey: the volcanic rock transmuted into gold, the crater seen as a planet from space, the star descending to its exact certified coordinates as if gravity itself had always been pulling it there. The work moves between the real and the virtual until the boundary between them dissolves. That dissolution is the point.
The Physical Work:
The gold PVD star presented here measures 104 centi meters, exactly one-fiftieth of the 52-meter installation certified for Volcán Acatenango by CONAP, the Guatemalan authority for protected natural areas. It is a sovereign work at a different scale, sharing the same origin, the same nano metric gold surface diffracting light rather than reflecting it, the same cosmological geometry. Engraved by laser on each of its eight branches: the five GPS coordinates of the installation site, as certified by official document DAGeos-52-2026. These are the exact geographic points where the monumental star will be anchored into volcanic rock at 3,976 meters altitude. The object holds within itself the precise location of its cosmic counterpart.
The eight branches encode the Mayan Calendar Round, the 52-year sacred cycle where solar and ritual time converge. The geometry of the work is not an aesthetic choice. It is a cosmological inheritance.Copyright The Artist