Modern and Contemporary art — A1138: Galerie Michael Schultz Part II
Armin Boehm is a German artist who lives and works in Berlin.
In his works, Boehm explores the connections between the urban and natural environments of modern man. He creates a fantastic urban space filled with cyborgs, politicians and flowers. In the collage technique the artist combines fragments of color, fabric, paper or metal substances from which his paintings grow. He mixes elements of pop culture and art history, architecture and literature, contemporary politics and fantasy.
Georg Dinz is a contemporary Austrian artist. After studying at the Vienna University of Applied Arts, Dienz lives and works as a room and stage designer in the Viennese punk scene. Shortly after the fall of the Wall, Dienz moves to Berlin, where he takes part in various art projects in the wild post-reunification period. Today he concentrates on free painting in his studio in the former Berlin artist district of Prenzlauer Berg. Georg Dienz's works are stylistically characterized by a flat and clear application of paint and can be described as "reduced realism".
Georg Dinz is a contemporary Austrian artist. After studying at the Vienna University of Applied Arts, Dienz lives and works as a room and stage designer in the Viennese punk scene. Shortly after the fall of the Wall, Dienz moves to Berlin, where he takes part in various art projects in the wild post-reunification period. Today he concentrates on free painting in his studio in the former Berlin artist district of Prenzlauer Berg. Georg Dienz's works are stylistically characterized by a flat and clear application of paint and can be described as "reduced realism".
Bernd Kirschner is acontemporary german artist. He studied painting at the Staatliche Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Stuttgart. He lives and works in Berlin and Konstanz. Bernd Kirschner deals in his paintings, which play with figurative and abstract elements, with collective memories and experiences, dreams and subjective perception. His imaginative landscapes invite the viewer to immerse himself mentally in order to decode the deeper symbolism behind the motifs. The mystery of water often becomes the theme. The surfaces of his canvases reveal transcendent, merging color transitions. Bernd Kirschner expresses in his paintings the irrepressible power of nature, which can have not only a calming, but also a worrying effect on people. Recent solo exhibitions of the artist include "Oracles" at the Bank Austria Kunstforum in Vienna ( 2019 ) and "Morphic Fields" at the Kunsthalle Messmer ( 2017 ) in Riegel.
Cornelia Schleime is a German painter, performer, filmmaker and author. She studied painting and graphic arts at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts before becoming a member of the underground art scene. She was awarded the Hannah Höch Lifetime Achievement Award from the State of Berlin in 2016.
Schleime's painting style is inspired by artists that were a strong influence in her classical studies such as Bacon and Balthus, Monet, Rembrandt, and Van Gogh.
Schleime has focused since the 1990s on figures and large-format portraits. Sources of inspiration are glossy magazines, reproductions of all kinds, but also personal photographs or snapshots found at flea markets. Through the intuitive act of drawing or painting, she turns those she depicts into something creative of her own, projecting them in new roles, symbolically emphasising the poses encountered or highlighting aspects with a touch of fantasy and irony.
Cornelia Schleime is a German painter, performer, filmmaker and author. She studied painting and graphic arts at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts before becoming a member of the underground art scene. She was awarded the Hannah Höch Lifetime Achievement Award from the State of Berlin in 2016.
Schleime's painting style is inspired by artists that were a strong influence in her classical studies such as Bacon and Balthus, Monet, Rembrandt, and Van Gogh.
Schleime has focused since the 1990s on figures and large-format portraits. Sources of inspiration are glossy magazines, reproductions of all kinds, but also personal photographs or snapshots found at flea markets. Through the intuitive act of drawing or painting, she turns those she depicts into something creative of her own, projecting them in new roles, symbolically emphasising the poses encountered or highlighting aspects with a touch of fantasy and irony.