(geb. 1993)
Lotte Laserstein was a German-Swedish artist and a prominent representative of German realism.
Lotte was a student at the prestigious Berlin Academy of Fine Arts and became an accomplished realist painter, receiving a gold medal from the Academy for her work. Her first exhibition took place in 1930 at a Berlin gallery. Laserstein worked partly in figurative painting, had apprentices, and illustrated anatomy texts to earn money. She also painted portraits of cosmopolitan, emancipated women as well as self-portraits.
The National Socialist regime forced the artist to leave Germany in 1937 and emigrate to Sweden. Her mother died in a concentration camp. Lotte Laserstein lived in Stockholm until the end of her life, creating over five decades of work, in addition to expressive self-portraits, many moving images of other immigrants, rural landscapes and urban scenes in Sweden.
Lotte Laserstein became a member of the Swedish Academy of Fine Arts and earned a reputation as a popular and respected portraitist. She has approximately 10,000 works in her oeuvre.
Ben Willikens (Eberhard-Günter Willikens) is a German artist. He is known for his rigorous spatial concepts in grey. Since 1985, he has also designed stage sets for various German opera houses.
Ottorino Garosio is an Italian expressionist painter and draftsman.
He was born and lived all his life in the small Italian town of Weston, and his work is entirely dedicated to his native land. Many of Garosio's works are about the everyday life of ordinary people: farmers digging the land, old people in heavy coats walking down the street or chatting in cafes, women doing the laundry, young people with guitars riding the bus to rest.