born: Ankara, Turkey
resides: Istanbul, Turkey
travel: Izmir, Afyon, Edirne, Antalya, Mugla, Aydin, Bursa [Turkey]; former East Berlin, former West Berlin, Berlin, Bremen, Hamburg, Stuttgart, Freiburg, Kassel, Munich, Frankfurt, Essen, Cologne, Bochum, Munster, Schwaebisch Gmünd [Germany]; Moscow [Russia]; Tel Aviv, Jerusalem [Israel]; Paris [France]; London [England]; Amsterdam [Holland]; Geneva [Switzerland]; Vienna [Austria]; Cracow, Warsaw [Poland]; Brno, Prag [Czech Republic]; Budapest [Hungary]; New York, Chicago, Washington DC, Boston, San Francisco, Seattle, New Orleans, Las Vegas, Denver, Los Angeles, Aspen [USA]; Toronto [Canada], Buenos Aries [Argentina]
resided: Ankara [12 months: ages 0-1, '67], New York [24 months: ages 23-25, '91-'93], Boston [six months: age: 35, '02]

education:
MFA, Communications Design, Pratt Institute [Fulbright Scholar], NYC, USA
BFA, Graphic Design, Mimar Sinan University, Istanbul, Turkey

employment:
Adjunct Assistant Professor, Bilgi University, Istanbul, Turkey
Adjunct Assistant Professor, Mimar Sinan University, Istanbul, Turkey
Visiting Assistant Professor, Pratt Institute, NYC, USA
self-employed, Esen Karol Design Ltd.
Young & Rubicam, NYC, USA
Young & Rubicam Reklamevi, Istanbul, Turkey

Turkish being my native language I speak three languages. I love German because one can build incredibly long sentences. I love English because one can build incredibly short sentences. I love Turkish because I rarely make any grammar mistakes.

I think in a weird language which combines concepts from all three.

I write badly anyway:
In any given social structure everbody has at least one thing in common.
A social structure is determined by the positions of each and every individual, who construct it.
Each social structure has an outside and an inside.
Outside[rs] and Inside[rs] make each other be.
A more populated outside wouldn't transform inside into outside.
It all depends where one looks from.

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