From 1979 until 1986 she studied fine arts at the Düsseldorf academy in Professor Klaus Rinke's[1] class.
The titles of her pictures correspond to the places across the world where she has found her ingredients, like Flagstaff, Arizona or Bryce Canyon in Utah.
The structures, forms and colours of those paintings mirror the quality of the landscape where they are created on site.
She is the first artist worldwide to use particles of meteorites (nickel, iron and chondrules) which she purchases from research facilities.
Her art work can be found at many public museums and private collections, such as the North Rhine-Westphalian State Chancellery at Düsseldorf, the Düsseldorf museum of arts,[4] the Ernst & Young collection, also Düsseldorf, at Deutsche Bank, Cologne, GLS bank, Bochum, Dennis Hopper's private collection at Venice, Los Angeles, California, Langen Foundation's collection[5] at Neuss, Center for Art and Environment, Nevada Museum of Art Reno, Nevada[6] or the Vollstedt private collection, the Museum of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff, and the Collection of Marvin and Kitty Killgore Southwest Meteorite Lab, Payson Arizona.