Echo
Echo reimagines landscape as a mental space. Fragments of sky, earth and water, stripped of context, hover between memory and estrangement. With this series, I open a quiet, universal dialogue on how we connect to the world and what remains when context disappears.
About Artist
Annie Beugel
Annie Beugel (b. 1983) is a visual artist and photographer based in Kiel-Windeweer, the Netherlands. Her work originates from the expansive Groningen landscape of her youth — a world of dikes, sky, and water that has profoundly shaped her way of seeing the landscape. In her practice, she seeks silence, attention, and slowness. Using the landscape as a starting point, she collects fragments of her surroundings: the shifting light, the texture of the earth, the movement of water. She extracts these elements from their context and rearranges them into a new, layered reality. The result is an abstract landscape without fixed scale or reference — open to interpretation, memory, and imagination. Beugel’s work inhabits the space between nature and construction, between seeing and experiencing. She often works in series, favoring monochrome color schemes and collage-like interventions that restructure images. Her visual language is minimal and sensitive — inviting slow looking, wandering, and allowing space for not-knowing. In 2025, her photographic installation Dwaalbos is part of the exhibition Verdwalen — a poetic exploration of getting lost and becoming still in a landscape that is slowly disappearing. Her practice continues to evolve through a dialogue with place, perception, and the boundary between image and experience.
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