alps
Gerhard Richter is a German visual artist. Richter has produced abstract as well as photorealistic paintings, and also photographs and glass pieces. He is widely regarded as one of the most important contemporary German artists and several of his works have set record prices at auction.
Gerhard Richter is a German visual artist. Richter has produced abstract as well as photorealistic paintings, and also photographs and glass pieces. He is widely regarded as one of the most important contemporary German artists and several of his works have set record prices at auction.
Georg Macco was a German painter of the late 19th and the first third of the 20th centuries. He is known as a landscape painter and illustrator, a representative of the Düsseldorf school of expressionism.
Georg Macco was educated at the Düsseldorf Academy of Arts, then continued his studies in Munich. His work was inspired by his educational travels, including trips to the Alps, Norway, Svalbard and Italy. His works created during his travels to the East (Constantinople, Athens, Palestine, Lebanon, Egypt and Arabia) became his most popular. The artist used oil paints, gouache and sometimes watercolor, distinguished by his mastery of the play of light, color and detail. He painted mainly landscapes, interiors of buildings, and views of large cities.
Georg Arnold-Graboné was a painter of German impressionism and an art teacher.
Arnold-Graboné became well known for his unique style of Palette knife painting. His technique used the texture of thickly applied paint to create an actual three-dimensional representation of a landscape. In Graboné's works, the colors are remarkable for their brilliance, distinguishing his landscapes from those of other pallet-knife painters. The brilliance is a result of Graboné's color-separation technique in knife-painting. His favorite subjects were of the Alps of Bavaria and South Tirole, the Isle of Capri, the English Garden in Munich, the lake region surrounding Starnberg, and fishing boats on the North Sea. His unusual signature is incised into the wet paint with the opposite end of the brush, almost invariably on the bottom left hand of his oil paintings (and on the bottom right for watercolors).