Langer views creativity as a vessel that makes a conscious life more accessible.

Her artistic practice is shaped by a lifelong search for meaning—moving through atheism, agnosticism, Buddhism, shamanism, and indigenous spirituality. Along the way, she absorbed diverse visual languages, materials, and ways of making. This evolving journey ultimately led her back to her spiritual roots in Torah and Jerusalem, where her work now draws from both sacred tradition and personal transformation. Her process blends symbolic forms, folk aesthetics, and storytelling—creating pieces that reflect inner searching as well as collective belonging.

Langer is always asking, always creating encounters designed to awaken practical consciousness and effect practical change in the world. Through symbolic forms, folk aesthetics, and participatory engagement, her art offers a space for viewers to reflect, connect, and act.