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Art Photography for Hotels and Interior-Projects in Spring

  • Mar 15, 2024
  • 3 min read

Updated: Apr 17

There is this one hour in spring, usually early in the morning, when the light falls flat and shapes surfaces differently than in winter. Lines appear clearer, materials reveal new nuances, and spaces exist in a context that has not been seen for months. In those moments, I ask myself: What does this space really communicate? Not about furniture. About the attitude that shapes it.



Frühling, Bilder als Inneneinrichtung
Interiorpicture AI generated, picture on the wall: M. Parvanova-Brett

What interior design in 2025 is negotiating and what that means for hotels


Why do so many spaces feel empty, even when everything has been done right?

The idea of warm minimalism dominates many professional discussions: clear structures, natural materials, reduced forms, but with a sense of warmth. I understand the approach. And at the same time, I see why many spaces that follow it still feel empty. Warmth is not a material. It emerges from decisions that are visible within a space.


What truly interests me in this current development is something else: hotels and boutique accommodations are increasingly understood as identity-defining spaces and no longer as purely functional places to stay. I notice this in conversations with architects and interior designers. More and more often I hear: “We want people to immediately understand where they are, not through a logo, but through the atmosphere.”

This is exactly where my work begins.



Decoration changes, but atmosphere remains

Why art photography is not an accessory and how it truly changes spatial design

A space that is only decorated seasonally never develops its own language. I see this often when photographic art is treated like an accessory. It becomes interchangeable as soon as the season changes.

Art photography for interior design, consciously selected and precisely placed, creates something different: a visual atmosphere that exists independently of trends and seasons and becomes especially visible in spring light.


I work with black and white when line, material, and light are at the center and the photography is meant to accompany architecture. The goal is not to overpower it. I work with color where a space needs a clear impulse: more depth, more energy, a stronger presence. Art photography here is a clear and deliberately used decision.



Spring as a moment to think more fundamentally

Why this moment is more than a seasonal impulse

Spring light changes spaces. Shadows move differently, materials react more sensitively, and proportions appear new. What worked in winter suddenly feels too heavy or too light. I experience this every year, also in my own work: images I created in autumn reveal different qualities in spring light. The stillness in an image becomes more visible. The tension between light and dark shifts. This is an impulse.


And that is exactly why I ask myself why so few use this moment to think more fundamentally in overall concepts, but instead simply redecorate. This is not the moment to chase the next accessory.


For hotels, boutique accommodations, and interior projects, I therefore develop individual series that create a consistent visual language throughout the entire space, from the lobby to the last corridor. A place that understands itself shows this knowledge confidently through images in every room.



What does this mean for your project?

Art photography from Munich for boutique hotels and interior projects, personally guided

If, this spring, you are looking for more than decoration, if a space is meant to develop its own coherent atmosphere, then now is the right moment. Not because of the season. But because spaces that truly work are the result of conscious decisions.


I personally guide projects from Munich, for Munich and beyond, whether it is art photography for boutique hotels, fine art for interior design projects, or a limited series for a single property: from selection to visualization to final placement. My goal is that art and architecture work together and that a space or an entire property can develop its own personality and character.



Limited editions. Hand-signed. Produced on acrylic glass, aluminum, or as fine art prints. Each work comes with a certificate of authenticity.


Contact me now Let yourself be inspired!

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