Art

Fairytale-like interactions of children and wolves, birds, and bears in distressed cities filled with decaying buildings and urban detritus.

Eitel leaves a viewer aware of their own understanding of such physical and psychological experiences.

 This manipulation of context plays a great role in Eitel’s artistic process. His method begins with lifting a visual element from a photograph of an urban space, often imagery of solitary journeys, homelessness or a quiet moment amongst a crowd. Photos operate as preliminary sketches for the Berlin-based artist, and the final image often materialises as an ambiguously collated selection of figures and motifs. Eitel confuses a viewer’s understandings of place and narrative, translating found imagery into a reduced, fictional framework of block colour and sparse surroundings.
Art

Eitel questions the meaning a viewer can predict to interpret in his work, which relates to his sensitive beliefs towards the artistic exploitation of misery in society

By presenting these images in ambiguous settings, his paintings offer more objective studies of modern life scenarios, Eitel leaves a viewer aware of their own understanding of such physical and psychological experiences.