maler

Christian Friedrich Mali was a German painter of the second half of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries of Dutch origin. He is known as an animalist, landscape painter and genre painter of the Munich school.
Mali focused more on landscapes early in his career, favoring the landscapes of Garmisch-Partenkirchen and the Swabian Alps. After traveling to Italy, he pursued architectural painting. He later moved to Paris, where he became interested in animalistic painting, creating genre images depicting domestic animals.


Jörg Immendorff was a German painter and sculptor, stage designer and decorator, and a member of the New Wild movement.
Immendorff painted in cycles that often lasted for years and were political in nature. His series of sixteen large paintings, Café Deutschland (1977-1984), is well known. In these colorful paintings, numerous disco lovers symbolize the conflict between East and West Germany.
Immendorff prepared several stage productions and designed sets for the operas Elektra and The Rider's Voyage. 25 of Immendorf's paintings were selected in 2006 for the illustrated Bible.


Walter Stöhrer is a German painter and graphic artist, a representative of gesture-figure painting.
He studied painting at the Academy of Arts in Karlsruhe and was a member of the Academy of Arts in Berlin.




































































