
Eva Pedroza (born in Buenos Aires, Argentina) is a Berlin-based multidisciplinary artist working at the intersection of visual art and film. She studied at the Universidad Nacional de las Artes in Buenos Aires and at the Berlin University of the Arts. Her practice includes animation, drawing, ceramics, and painting. She explores the paradoxes of subject and object, and the contradictory yet symbiotic relationships between humans and non-human beings, culture and nature. Storytelling shapes her work, which is often influenced by the spontaneous processes and unexpected material effects inherent to her chosen media.
Her work has been exhibited in Berlin at Galerie Historischer Keller (2024), Transmediale Vorspiel (2022), Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien (2020), Literaturhaus Berlin (2018), and Haus der Kulturen der Welt (2016), among others.
From 2013 to 2017, she was a scholarship holder of the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation and received various grants, including support from the Fonds Dezentrale Kulturarbeit Spandau, the Neukölln Department of Culture, and the Culture Moves Europe program (Goethe-Institut / EU). She is currently a fellow of the EXIST Women program at the Berlin University of the Arts (UdK).
Her collaborative animated film "Tako Tsubo" premiered at the Berlinale (2024) and has been shown in more than 75 international film festivals, receiving awards at the Ann Arbor Film Festival (USA), Tricky Women / Tricky Realities (AT), and the Kurzfilmfestival Köln (DE), among others. It won the Short Tiger Award from the German Federal Film Board (FFA) and was nominated for the German Short Film Award.

Eva Pedroza (born in Buenos Aires, Argentina) is a Berlin-based multidisciplinary artist working at the intersection of visual art and film. She studied at the Universidad Nacional de las Artes in Buenos Aires and at the Berlin University of the Arts. Her practice includes animation, drawing, ceramics, and painting. She explores the paradoxes of subject and object, and the contradictory yet symbiotic relationships between humans and non-human beings, culture and nature. Storytelling shapes her work, which is often influenced by the spontaneous processes and unexpected material effects inherent to her chosen media.
Her work has been exhibited in Berlin at Galerie Historischer Keller (2024), Transmediale Vorspiel (2022), Kunstraum Kreuzberg/Bethanien (2020), Literaturhaus Berlin (2018), and Haus der Kulturen der Welt (2016), among others.
From 2013 to 2017, she was a scholarship holder of the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation and received various grants, including support from the Fonds Dezentrale Kulturarbeit Spandau, the Neukölln Department of Culture, and the Culture Moves Europe program (Goethe-Institut / EU). She is currently a fellow of the EXIST Women program at the Berlin University of the Arts (UdK).
Her collaborative animated film "Tako Tsubo" premiered at the Berlinale (2024) and has been shown in more than 75 international film festivals, receiving awards at the Ann Arbor Film Festival (USA), Tricky Women / Tricky Realities (AT), and the Kurzfilmfestival Köln (DE), among others. It won the Short Tiger Award from the German Federal Film Board (FFA) and was nominated for the German Short Film Award.