Ulli Kampelmann

Ulli Kampelmann

Ulli Kampelmann
Born Halle (Saale), East Germany
Nationality German & American
Occupation Art, Education
Spouse(s) Steven Van Stone
Children Corvin

Ulli Kampelmann is a professional artist and educator from Germany, currently based in Florida.

Early life

Ulli is the fifth of six children born to Wilhelm Heinrich Kampelmann and Elsa (née Pilz) in Halle (Saale), Sachsen Anhalt, East Germany.

She was drawn to teaching and the arts from an early age.

She attended university in Halle where she earned her Master of Education degree and then continued her study in Educational Philosophy at Technische Universität Berlin.

In 1975 she successfully escaped to West Berlin in the trunk of a friend’s car.

Artistic career

A section of partition wall created for the bistro within the Mercedes Benz Headquarters showroom in Stuttgart

Ulli Kampelmann develops innovative means and ways to bring images from the inner world into being. She gathers wavelengths of color, shape and light and conveys them into an art work to provide a hint toward of a condition, a mood, a story. Some of her art forms use light as an essential element; sometimes time or water. Consistently her works express the feeling to push ahead and think forward. She opened her first art studio in Stuttgart in 1980.

Iconic Turn, a diptych.

Besides her works in private collections, the following is a partial list of where Ulli Kampelmann's artworks can be found:

Some of Ulli Kampelmann's artworks on her exhibition at the Stuttgart International Airport.

Some of her exhibitions:

Glass sconce installed in a private swimming pool room
Indoor water fountain. Kampelmann's used ceramic in her earliest artworks.

Educator

Ulli Kampelmann is a Master of Education Technology and Educational Philosophy with special emphasis on teaching art, German language, mathematics and educating teachers on how to teach. She was invited to give art seminars and to publish educational articles about art and art history in various magazines.

After she opened her studio in the USA, she was commissioned to write a complete visual arts curriculum for schools K-12. This curriculum is currently implemented into a few schools in the USA and Australia. She continued to write educational articles about public art and was commissioned to provide continuing education for architects in the field of public arts projects. Most recently she took up the production of educational films and documentaries.

An underlying theme in many of her works is her sensitivity for human rights, specifically one's freedom of expression and right to a good education.

In May 2014, Ms. Kampelmann conceived of Kampelmann Academy and with the technical skills of her husband Steve Van Stone, the concept was developed to be an online, video-based education site offering aesthetic tutorials to bring about full conceptual understanding of a subject with concurrent facility in application of that subject in life. The online academy will contain curricula from kindergarten through high school as well as some college level courses.

In early 2016, Kampelmann Academy was expanded in order to oversee humanitarian educational projects as well. Kampelmann Academy, Inc, a non-profit, tax-exempt organization was established. Its first order of business was to build a free, online language course called Say Hello! to teach German to the refugees pouring into central Europe.[7] The videos of the language lessons are subtitled in Arabic, English, Farsi, Kurmanji and Sorani for the benefit of the refugees from Syria, Iraq, Kurdistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Palestine and elsewhere.

Author

For schools, she wrote "the Complete Visual Arts Education". (as mentioned above in Educator section)

Ulli was a contributing author for Imago Magazine for six months with her article titled Ulli on Art.[8]

For The Star, the magazine of the Mercedes Benz Club of America, Ulli wrote an article about the first ever long-distance road-trip in an automobile in 1888, which was made by a woman, Bertha Benz, wife of Carl Benz, inventor of the automobile.[9]

She authored a full length screenplay detailing the circumstances surrounding her life in and her three successful escapes from East Germany.[10]

Filmmaker

While in Stuttgart, Ulli Kampelmann was commissioned by the Mercedes Benz company to create large artworks for their headquarters. In order to research ideas for one of the commissions, she was given access to the Mercedes Benz/Daimler AG corporate archives where she came across the little-known details of the invention of the automobile by Carl Benz in 1885 as well as the charming story of the first ever long distance road trip by Carl's wife Bertha. Once Ulli was in the USA she wished to present this story to Americans. She wrote the screenplay for and directed an educational documentary titled The Car is Born - a documentary about Carl and Bertha Benz. She and her husband, a videographer, entered this documentary into a few film festivals and it won a "Best of the Fest" award in 2011.[11][12]

A documentary detailing her own personal experiences growing up in and eventually escaping from East Germany called That Damned Wall, is in post-production.

Kampelmann interviewed former vice-chancellor of Germany Hans-Dietrich Genscher in Bonn in 2010.

References

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