Stefan Balkenhol was born in 1957 in Fritzlar, Germany. He now lives and works in Meisenthal, France. Attending the Hamburg School of Fine Arts from 1976-1982, Balkenhol was exposed to the minimalist and conceptual trends popular at that time, with tutors including Nam June Paik and Sigmar Polke. His experience here profoundly affected his subsequent artistic practice. Sensing an absence in these two schools of thought, Balkenhol sought out the human figure and began a campaign to reintroduce it into contemporary art, declaring: ‘I must reinvent the figure to resume an interrupted tradition.’ Balkenhol is recognised not only for the technical prowess with which he carves each of his wooden sculptures, but for his continual devotion to exploring the role of the figure within contemporary art. His figures emanate timelessness: simple, plain-coloured clothing and the poses of everyday man. Balkenhol has developed a significant repertoire of public commissions with installations in front of the Blackfriars Bridge in London, at the entrance of the Hamburg Zoo, at the Städelsches Kunstinstitut in Frankfurt, Kassel and Leipzig, Germany. He has exhibited all over the world and his works can be found in collections from Chicago to Venice.