Since the beginning of her career, Johanna Seelemann has asked herself how to make a difference as a designer and critically look at local materials and processes.
After an exchange programme at the University of the Arts in Iceland (2016), where she completed a bachelor's degree, Seelemann learned about the different realities of the Nordic nation and its dramatic landscape, a contrast to her homeland with its volcanoes, geysers, hot springs and lava fields. She not only experienced a scarcity of resources but had the opportunity to perceive nature more respectfully and as a source of inspiration. Furthermore, the change of scenery provided a greater and broader understanding of the locality, the available material and the production processes, some critical points that become the essence of her work.
The German designer developed her fascination for concepts such as substitution, aesthetic evolution, adaptation, transformation, resilience and nature-centred technologies during her master's programme in contextual design at the Design Academy in Eindhoven (2019).
Exploring the origins of our everyday environment's mundane objects and materials, Seelemann is known for a broad spectrum of projects, such as 'Terra Incognita', 'Hortulanus' and 'Banana Story,' and her investigations have become critical references for today's design market. And even as she explores nuanced topics, her results are always formulated as optimistic suggestions and proposals that help us imagine alternative future scenarios.
Seelemann's work has been exhibited previously at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, MAKK Museum Cologne, Design Museum Helsinki, Tønder Art Museum Denmark, among others and currently at Milan Design Week 2022.