“What fulfills me is seeing art in life.”
The Vision of Art in Life
“What fulfills me is seeing art in life” is a phrase that encapsulates Katharina Stepper’s guiding philosophy. The German-born artist, now based in Milan, approaches her practice with an awareness that art exists everywhere; not only in finished art works but also in fleeting gestures, structural details, and moments of stillness. Her perspective, shaped by a background that bridges architecture and fine art, positions her at a distinctive intersection in contemporary creativity. She sees artistic expression not merely as a profession but as a vital lens through which life itself becomes enriched and understood.
Her education laid the foundation for this multidimensional outlook. Attending the Goetheschule, Free Waldorf School in Pforzheim, she was exposed early to holistic forms of learning that encouraged openness and curiosity. Later, her architectural training at Universität Stuttgart and Politecnico di Milano has given her a deep and profound understanding of construction and composition which forms her unique design method. The diverse contexts of her professional experience across Germany, Italy, and Denmark refined her way of thinking, equipping her with both rational precision and imaginative freedom. They also shaped her ability to think art and architecture complementary as one, giving her practice a layered depth.
Architecture remains a crucial influence. Its principles of form, geometry, and proportion permeate her visual language, anchoring her art in balance and clarity. Composition is not for her a secondary concern but the very foundation upon which meaning is built. The discipline has given her a unique sensitivity to construction and spatial awareness, qualities that are equally vital in her paintings, collages, photographs, and sculptures. Within her work Stepper constructs a dialogue between order and intuition.
Katharina Stepper: Artistic Expression as Human Quest
Stepper often describes her works as both expressions of complex questions and thoughts, inviting viewers to embark on their own journeys of reflection. For her, art exists as a dual space: it is simultaneously personal and universal, introspective and outward-looking. This understanding of art as a dialogue rather than a monologue drives her practice.
The artist believes in an inherent impulse in human for artistic expression. The deeply rooted desire to experience one’s own becoming in an artistic process, be it music, dance, poetry, painting, or sculpture; it is art, allowing the soul to transcend boundaries. Therefore, she decided to explore this human quest more profoundly.
Stepper understands architecture and art as highly creative and artistic disciplines, never seen separately. For her, art is a way to transcend limits, discover hidden aspects of the self, and give form to what cannot be fully articulated in words. This creative independence makes her practice not just an artistic pursuit but also a form of personal exploration. Each artwork becomes a way of thinking aloud, a visible trace of her inner dialogue with form, space, and possibility.
Abstraction as Exploration
Stepper’s aesthetic is defined by clarity and restraint. Her artworks present themselves in precise, reduced forms and balanced colors, creating an impression of quiet strength and meditative depth. What might initially appear understated unfolds upon closer engagement as compositions of profound presence. This is where the architectural discipline meets artistic sensitivity: simplicity becomes not a limitation but a pathway to concentration, inviting viewers into a deeper encounter with form and meaning.
Thematically, her work is driven by an abstraction of reality. She seeks to reveal the infinite within the boundaries of the finite, exploring spaces that resist direct comprehension. These investigations are not literal representations of the world but rather distillations of experiences, feelings, and philosophical questions. The art is less about depiction and more about resonance, creating openings for contemplation. In this sense, her canvases and sculptures are closer to meditative instruments than to narrative works.
Her artistic influences are as varied as her practice. From Giorgio Morandi’s subtle still lifes to Serge Poliakoff’s color fields, from Amedeo Modigliani’s portraits to Eduardo Chillida’s spatial explorations, Stepper finds inspiration across a wide spectrum of visual traditions. She also draws deeply from the structural clarity of modernist architects such as Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier, and Eileen Gray, while extending her sources into music and literature through figures like Arnold Schönberg and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. These diverse touchpoints converge into a language that is both rigorous and poetic, precise yet open-ended.
Katharina Stepper: Experimentation and Future Visions
For Stepper, medium is not a fixed choice but an evolving dialogue. She resists confining herself to one approach, instead embracing variety and experimentation. Painting, collage, printmaking, frottage, grattage, photography, and sculpture all occupy space in her practice, each serving as a different entry point into her themes. She often immerses herself in one medium for a time, only to pivot to another, using the shift to re-examine questions from a fresh angle. This openness ensures that her work retains vitality and resists stagnation.
Recently, she has been increasingly drawn to three-dimensional explorations in wood and metal. These materials allow her to investigate form and space in a tactile, physical way that two-dimensional surfaces cannot fully provide. Working sculpturally offers her a direct confrontation with matter and structure, echoing her architectural background while also pushing her toward new horizons of abstraction. Each sculpture becomes a conversation between material resistance and artistic intent, deepening her engagement with the concept of space.
Looking ahead, Stepper envisions projects that extend beyond the studio. One of her dreams is to establish an intensive workshop or creative retreat away from the distractions of city life, particularly the constant activity of Milan. Such a setting would provide time and space for deep reflection and artistic focus. Equally important to her is the idea of creating opportunities for young people to explore their own creativity early on. By fostering artistic encounters at a formative age, she hopes to inspire others to connect with their inner worlds, echoing the very process of self-discovery that fuels her own practice.




