A1175: Towards Abstraction
Klaus Fußmann is a contemporary German painter. He studied from 1957 to 1961 at the Folkwang University of the Arts in Essen and from 1962 to 1966 at the Berlin University of the Arts. From 1974 to 2005, he was a professor at the Berlin University of the Arts. His work has won several awards, such as the Villa Romana prize in 1972 and the Art Award of Darmstadt in 1979. Major presentations of his work include exhibitions at the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin, 1972; the Mathildenhöhe in Darmstadt, 1982; the Kunsthalle Emden, 1988; the Kunsthalle Bremen, 1992; and the Museum Ostwall in Dortmund, 2003. In 2005 Fußmann completed a monumental ceiling painting in the Mirror Hall of the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg.
Erwin Bechtold is a German abstract painter and sculptor. He spent some time in Paris, where he had the opportunity to work with Fernand Léger.
Erwin Bechtold was the founder of the artist's group Ibiza 59, whose members sought to create art free of subjective expression. Bechtold's paintings from this period were characterised by minimal geometric forms and the use of a monochromatic colour palette.
Later in his career, Bechtold began experimenting with sculpture, creating large-scale works that explored the relationship between form and space.
Margitta Abels is a German artist known for her abstract paintings and mixed media works.
Margitta Abels has received numerous awards and honors for her work.
Abels' work is characterized by its use of color and texture to create complex and layered compositions. She often works with a variety of materials including acrylic paint, charcoal, and collage elements, and her work often incorporates textural elements such as sand and fabric.
Margitta Abels is a German artist known for her abstract paintings and mixed media works.
Margitta Abels has received numerous awards and honors for her work.
Abels' work is characterized by its use of color and texture to create complex and layered compositions. She often works with a variety of materials including acrylic paint, charcoal, and collage elements, and her work often incorporates textural elements such as sand and fabric.
Sergey Yevgenievich Svyatchenko (Ukr. Сергій Євгенович Святченко) is a Danish artist, architect and photographer of Ukrainian origin. He is a representative of the New Wave.
Sergey Svyatchenko has worked on a number of commercial projects, including collaborations with fashion brands such as Hugo Boss and Comme des Garçons.
In his work, Svyatchenko combines elements of photography, painting and collage to create layered and textured compositions. He often uses found materials such as vintage photographs, postcards and magazines and his work is characterised by the use of bold colours, strong graphic forms and surreal juxtapositions.
Sergey Svyatchenko is also a writer and curator. He has published several books on art and photography and has curated exhibitions of contemporary art in Denmark and Ukraine. He is the founder of the Ukrainian Art Foundation, which aims to promote Ukrainian art and culture internationally.
Sergey Yevgenievich Svyatchenko (Ukr. Сергій Євгенович Святченко) is a Danish artist, architect and photographer of Ukrainian origin. He is a representative of the New Wave.
Sergey Svyatchenko has worked on a number of commercial projects, including collaborations with fashion brands such as Hugo Boss and Comme des Garçons.
In his work, Svyatchenko combines elements of photography, painting and collage to create layered and textured compositions. He often uses found materials such as vintage photographs, postcards and magazines and his work is characterised by the use of bold colours, strong graphic forms and surreal juxtapositions.
Sergey Svyatchenko is also a writer and curator. He has published several books on art and photography and has curated exhibitions of contemporary art in Denmark and Ukraine. He is the founder of the Ukrainian Art Foundation, which aims to promote Ukrainian art and culture internationally.
Margitta Abels is a German artist known for her abstract paintings and mixed media works.
Margitta Abels has received numerous awards and honors for her work.
Abels' work is characterized by its use of color and texture to create complex and layered compositions. She often works with a variety of materials including acrylic paint, charcoal, and collage elements, and her work often incorporates textural elements such as sand and fabric.
Sergey Yevgenievich Svyatchenko (Ukr. Сергій Євгенович Святченко) is a Danish artist, architect and photographer of Ukrainian origin. He is a representative of the New Wave.
Sergey Svyatchenko has worked on a number of commercial projects, including collaborations with fashion brands such as Hugo Boss and Comme des Garçons.
In his work, Svyatchenko combines elements of photography, painting and collage to create layered and textured compositions. He often uses found materials such as vintage photographs, postcards and magazines and his work is characterised by the use of bold colours, strong graphic forms and surreal juxtapositions.
Sergey Svyatchenko is also a writer and curator. He has published several books on art and photography and has curated exhibitions of contemporary art in Denmark and Ukraine. He is the founder of the Ukrainian Art Foundation, which aims to promote Ukrainian art and culture internationally.
Ernst Vijlbrief is a Dutch visual artist and board member of several artists' associations, including Beroepsvereniging van Beeldende Kunstenaars.
Ernst Vijlbrief worked in various techniques, he also created calligraphic improvisations on paper.
His painting style in the 1950s was expressionist, in line with Cobra's style. Around 1968 he made a series of figurative drawings. In 1970 he created the sculpture The Captain, an allusion to Edy de Wilde as director of the Stedelijk Museum, which was shown at Galerie Kristiaan in Amsterdam.
Antonius van der Pas was a German artist of Dutch origin.
Antonius van der Pas was trained as a commercial artist and worked, amongst other things, in the print shop of the Düsseldorf Henkel Company. After the Second World War he entered the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf where he studied with Wilhelm Schmurr, Werner Heuser and Otto Coester.
In 1949 Antonius van der Paz went to Paris to study, where he met Georges Braque, Pierre Bonnard and Pablo Picasso, influential artists of the time. In 1950 he went to Spain to study, and from 1952-1953 he spent a long time in Granada.
In the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s he travelled extensively around the world, taking part in numerous exhibitions.
Hans Platschek was a German artist, art critic and writer.
Hans Platschek gained recognition as an artist of Tachism or Informel. But by the time the abstract, automatic art of Informel had gained international recognition, he had already shown an interest in the new figuration. He was fiercely critical of pop art as 'consumer art'.
Placzek's essays, which only on the surface appear to be polemical, made him a household name among the art interested public outside Germany from the 1960s onwards. Even today many connoisseurs consider his texts to be of great freshness and clarity.
Christian Sery is a contemporary German artist of Austrian origin.
Christian Sery studied painting at the University of Art and Industrial Design in Linz from 1978 to 1984.
His varied work deals with space and the position or representation of his works in it. In doing so, he uses a variety of materials and means of expression.
In 2003, Christian Seri was appointed professor of interdisciplinary and experimental painting at the University of Fine Arts in Dresden. From 2005 to 2012, he was Rector of the Academy of Fine Arts in Dresden.
Karl Otto Götz was a German artist, filmmaker, draughtsman, printmaker, writer and professor of art at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. He was one of the oldest living and active artists older than 100 years of age and is best remembered for his explosive and complex abstract forms. His powerful, surrealist-inspired works earned him international recognition in exhibitions like documenta II in 1959. Götz never confined himself to one specific style or artistic field. He also explored generated abstract forms through television art. Götz is one of the most important members of the German Art Informel movement.
Manfred Dinnes is a German painter, sculptor, writer and art gallery director. He was also cultural editor of Europeonline magazine.
Manfred Dinnes travelled around the world to study other cultures in his youth. In 1973-74 he trained as a church painter-restorer. At the same time he was introduced to the craft of glass painting and glass blowing. Graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in Nuremberg in 1979, where he studied freehand painting with Gerhard Wendland, Ludwig Scharl and Franz Wintzinger.
Since founding Visual-Art Concepts in 2007, Dinnes has created large sculptures from 7 to 8 metres in height.
Sobral Centeno is a Portuguese artist. He is known for his deep and complex abstract works that are characterised by an innovative use of form and texture.
Sobral Centeno's paintings are characterized by bright colours, bold and dynamic compositions, often featuring geometric shapes and patterns.