Artiste - Designer
About the Art
"My work becomes a collaborative act between meteorites and my art, between deep time and the present. There is a tension - and a harmony - here: between the rawness of extraterrestrial metal and the precision of geometry; between the chaotic origins of planetary fragments and the order of humans."
Stephan Liechti

My journey began with "Meteorite-Style," a conceptual approach where I hand-drew 100 original ink-and-pencil works inspired by the fusion structures of meteorites. By integrating these with Islamic geometric principles and modern digital techniques, I have developed a library of over 3,000 ornamental patterns derived from authentic extraterrestrial imprints. This evolution has resulted in a collection of contemporary digital art and decorative accessories that bridge the gap between space and studio.
This evolving language is neither pure abstraction nor pure replication. It is a visual and conceptual dialogue: an act of translation from metallurgical fusion in space to artistic expression. The geometric forms are not imposed but rather extracted and revealed from within the material itself.
My work becomes a collaborative act between meteorites and my art, between deep time and the present. There is a tension - and a harmony - here: between the rawness of extraterrestrial metal and the precision of geometry; between the chaotic origins of planetary fragments and the order of humans.
The result is a body of work that speaks to both the scientific wonder of planetary formation and the emotional resonance of materials shaped by time.
In an era where art and science are often seen as separate disciplines, my work stands as a bridge. It invites viewers not only to witness the hidden structure of meteorites, but also to consider “how matter formed before Earth itself existed” can be reborn through the lens of human creativity.
Each piece is a meditation on permanence, transformation, and the quiet beauty of order found in the most ancient materials known to us.
My art of planetary memory, rendered in lines of iron and nickel, geometry and movement. A cosmic archive reawakened - not in a lab, but in my studio.