The New Yorker Radio Hour
2020
Jon Lee Anderson on Jair Bolsonaro’s efforts to legalize mining on indigenous lands. Full podcast here.
Digital news providers have to decide whether their content about Covid 19 should go behind a paywall, making it available only to paying subscribers or if it rather should be accessible to all…
The New Yorker
Theatre in times of the pandemic: Performers on lockdown turn to their smartphones.
Radio Hour podcast on the Politics of Covid 19. David Remnick speaks with Susan B. Glasser about the bipartisan stimulus bill, the pandemic’s effect on the 2020 Presidential race, and how Trump thinks about public health. Full podcast on The New Yorker Radio Hour Website.
The New York Times
“Discipline looks different in a pandemic…”
What effects does the pandemic have on the environment? What can the Coronavirus and the ongoing climate emergency teach us about the other?
For The New Yorker Radio Hour. The U.S. has the highest rate of incarceration in the world; although the country makes up about five per cent of the global population, it holds nearly a quarter of the world’s prisoners. Full Podcast here.
Coverillustration
Book Review Cover
New Republic Magazine
How millennial socialists make the case for a kinder politics. For New Republic Magazine for a review of two new books on socialism, Current Affairs by Nathan Robinson and Jacobin – The Socialist Manifesto by Bhaskar Sunkara.
For The New Yorker Radio Hour Podcast about Life Under Coronavirus Quarantine. Listen to the Podcast here.
2019
For Radio Hour about the first hearings on gun violence in the USA in eight years.
2018
Radio Hour
Radio Hour about the special counsel’s Trump-Russia investigation.
How do we consume news? Skimming and reading in fragments leaves us less informed. The slow media movement stands for a more selective and focussed way to engage with the news.
Russian hackers behind the
2016 attacks on the D.N.C. were
revealed to have targeted
conservative think tanks.
For The New Yorker Radio Hour about Marlon James’ new book “Black Leopard, Red Wolf”.
Book Review
“He’s 19. She’s 48 and married. When they play doubles tennis, it’s a match.”
We made this illustration for The New Yorker Radio Hour Podcast, where the filmmmaker Dream Hampton talks about the abuse accusations and her new documentary “Surviving R.Kelly”.
Full page comic for The Science Times about the five past mass extinctions that planet Earth has gone through…and the sixth which has already begun.
One animal has survived all mass extinctions: the tardigrade.
Will it also survive us all?
Radio Hour Podcast
For a women’s guide to negotiating and facing unique challenges.
Animation: Christian Koll
For an essay in The New York Times Sunday Review by Boris Fishman about his memoir “Savage Feast: Three Generations, Two Continents and a Dinner Table”
The N.R.A.’s Financial Mess
For Radio Hour Podcast
The Atlantic
“Betterball” – using statistics and science to create better baseball.
Dads taking a paternity leave.
Coverillustration for The Science Times
The 5G hazard that isn’t.
“How one scientist and his inaccurate chart led to unwarranted fears of wireless technology.”
Radio Hour Podcast about the 50 years Moonlanding
Radio Hour Podcast about Children’s Books
David Remnick and five New Yorker
contributors on what it would
take to remove Trump from office.
Coverillustration for The New York Times Book Review about three books on water contamination, fracking and opioids namely “What The Eyes Don’t See” by Mona Hanna-Attisha, “The Poisened City” by Anna Clark and “Dopesick” by Beth Macy.
In 1972, the I.R.A. abducted and “disappeared” Jean McConville,
the mother of ten children, most
of whom were teen-age or younger.
Her case became one of the most
notorious unsolved murders of the
long period of unrest in Northern
Ireland known as the Troubles.
While researching for his new book
“Say Nothing,” Patrick Radden Keefe
stumbled across an overlooked clue.
He’s pretty sure now he knows who
murdered McConville.
The Trump Administration is undermining a critical visa program that protects victims of human trafficking.
A radical new approach to Dementia Care: treating Dementia patients by making the care center create an illusion of a small town.
Will the protests in Hong Kong Bring China to the Breaking Point?
Emma Gonzalez survived the Parkland Shooting and is the leader of the #neveragain movement.
Prepping on a budget.
Astrid Holleeder’s crime family.
The sister of a feared, internationally known criminal describes what it was like to turn him in.
Summer Reading
A successful businessman lost his fortune in a scheme so suspicious that it seemed like a scam. Years later, his daughter confronts the man who took the money.
The New Yorker Radiohour
Leslie Kritzer and Sarah Stiles performing together in Beetlejuice on Broadway.
Congrats to the U.S. women’s soccer team for claiming their fourth World Cup title!
Should politics be kept out of sports?
The Digital Vigilants Who Hack Back.
American companies that fall victim to data breaches want to retaliate against the culprits. But can they so so without breaking the law?
The Perils And Possibilities Of Anger.
After centuries of censure, women reconsider the political power of female rage.
Weltkunst Magazine
Annabelle Magazine
Bauhaus Now Magazine
2019 is the Year of the Bauhaus
Centenary. We contributed these
two illustrations showing sports
at the Bauhaus and festivals at
the Bauhaus to the magazine.
Frame Magazine
2017
for a piece about making films based on books
A Magasinet
Coverillustration and several inside illustrations
Goethe Institut
A panorama for 2018 calendar
Style Mountain Magazine
about mountaineering and finding oneself alone above the clouds
Süddeutsche Magazin
Editions Milan
A bookcover for “Vingt-Quatre Heures Dans L’Incroyable Bibliotheque De M. Lemoncello”
Various illustrations for the Financial Page
Op-Ed
2016
about four unproduced plays by the artist Fortunato Depero in Rovereto, Italy
about utopian communities in the USA
für “Guillaume Tell”, eine Oper von Gioachino Rossini
The International New York Times
2015
on human rights in China
2015-2016
Various Op-Ed illustrations
NYT Notable Opinion Art 2015
For a piece of Martin Amis on a book tour and his observations in Germany,
that describes the Oktoberfesters juxtaposed in a subtle way with the influx of immigrants.
for the opening ceremony of National Sawdust, a new music venue in an old sawmill in Williamsburg, New York
Bloomberg Businessweek
about the future of children’s books
WIRED magazine
DIE ZEIT
Map of Saxony (Germany) showing
recent events of xenophobia and its countermovement.
We were asked by The New York Times to tell a story on our childhoot pet:
When I was about 5 years old I took my cat, Heinrich, with me to kindergarten. I carried him in my arms on the way there, and left him to wait for me outside until school was over. When I came back he was gone. I walked home and hoped he would be there, but he wasn’t. Every night I stood on the doorstep and called out his name — “Heinrich!” — into the dark garden but he never came. It was the first real loss in my life, and I was so sad.
Five years later my father came home with good news: He had found Heinrich! A colleague of his, who lived a few miles away had adopted a stray black and white cat at the time Heinrich got lost. I was so happy to get him back after all those years. But when we arrived at the man’s house, Heinrich didn’t recognize us. He was an old cat quietly enjoying the twilight of his life — so we left him there in his new home.
WIRED
on misinformation about global warming
Variety Magazine
2014
for a story about the upcoming American Film Market in Santa Monica, and the impact of Chinese investors coming
The Washington Post
for a Q&A with the dining columnist
Coverillustration for the
Review Section about US-American
policy towards China
Howler Magazine
repeat pattern
Golf Digest
about accidentally hitting the ball twice when you’re hitting in thick rough on a golf course
for Private Lives section
based on an essay by Peyton Marshall about sparrows expelling the bluebird from its natural living environment
Das Magazin
Coverillustration and 8 inside illustrations
based on stories of people living a double live.
for an article explaining how animals crossed the Atlantic thousands of years ago
Enorm Magazin
Paradiso Magazine
International ZEITmagazin
2013
Bloomberg View
2012
why US government can’t
pay couples to get married
MIT Technology Review
Papercut
Coverillustration for Sunday Review
Coverartwork
NEON
2011
paper collage
Nido
9×12 cm
offset
ZEITmagazin
What is the percentage of women in the gun club, shopping, or in perfumery?
Starting from the debate on a government-regulated rates for women in high management positions, the ZEITmagazin has found out how high is the percentage of women in other fields.
The higher the “women’s quota”, the more magenta in the illustration.