Nude art Contemporary art


Herbert Ritts Jr. was an American fashion photographer and director known for his photographs of celebrities, models, and other cultural figures throughout the 1980s and 1990s. His work concentrated on black and white photography and portraits, often in the style of classical Greek sculpture, which emphasized the human shape.


Harold Ambellan is an American painter and sculptor.
He studied sculpture and fine art in Buffalo before moving to New York City. The human figure is central to Harold Ambellan's work. He created monumental figures and drew extensively, leaving thousands of drawings. Ambellan was one of the participants in Roosevelt's Federal Art Project, which hired hundreds of artists during the Great Depression who collectively created more than 100,000 paintings and over 18,000 sculptures.
Ambellan remained committed to figuration in both his sculpture and painting. He was elected president of the Sculptors Guild of America in 1941, and that same year his work was exhibited in group shows at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia.
In 1944, Ambellan participated in the liberation of Normandy as part of the U.S. Navy, then taught three-dimensional art at the Workshop School in New York City. In 1954, for political reasons, Ambellan moved to France and remained there for the rest of his life, working and exhibiting throughout Europe.


Ugo Attardi was an Italian painter, sculptor and writer. Attardi moved from Genoa to Rome in the early 1950s, where he formed the group Forma 1 together with other artists. His sculpture of Ulysses is now permanently installed in Battery Park in New York


Edgar Augustin was a German painter and sculptor.
Augustin studied sculpture in Münster with Karl Ehlers, then was a pupil of the master Gustav Zeitz in Hamburg. His oeuvre includes partly abstract figurative representations in bronze, wood and plaster as well as paintings, drawings and graphics. Some of Edgar Augustine's sculptures are located in public spaces in Hamburg and other cities.
Edgar Augustin was a member of the Free Academy of Arts in Hamburg and the Special Association of Artists in Germany. In the second half of the 20th century, Augustin was one of the pioneers of figurative wood sculpture and is considered its most important representative.


Ernst Rudolf Baerwind was a German painter. Baerwind studied at the art academies in Munich, Berlin and Paris. Baerwind's work was initially based on early German Expressionism. After a surrealist phase, he was influenced in Paris by the painting of the École de Paris and by Informel and then found his way to the International Style.


William H. Bailey was an American figurative painter and university professor at the Yale School of Art. Bailey is best known for his nudes and still lifes with eggs, vases, bottles and bowls in a breathy, deceptively quiet atmosphere laden with mystery.


Lucie Bennett is a British artist and graphic artist known for her provocative depictions of female silhouettes.
Many of Lucie Bennett's works are inspired by the similarities she has discovered between plant forms and the ornate structures of the human body's internal organs. The artist uses simple, elegantly applied lines and blocks of color to create distinctive works of art.


Volker Böhringer was a German painter and graphic artist.
He was a significant representative of the "New Objectivity. In his paintings and graphics Böhringer turned to socially critical representational themes, the theme of his early works being industrial landscapes. Böhringer refused to join the League of German Artists (VBKD), so he was forbidden to exhibit his work. Despite his secluded life, he received critical acclaim, and his work was shown in major public exhibitions of German modern art at the Art Museum Basel in 1937 and in Zurich in 1949. In the 1950s he increasingly turned to religious themes in his paintings.


Lisa Brice is a South African painter and visual artist from Cape Town. She lives in London and cites some of her influences as her experiences growing up in South Africa during a time of political upheaval, and from time spent living and working in Trinidad.
Her work is held in collections around the world, including the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, Johannesburg Art Gallery, The Whitworth, the High Commission of South Africa, London and the private collection of Sindika Dokolo.


Luis Caballero Holguín was a Colombian painter, watercolourist, pastellist and lithographer. Caballero is known for depicting masculine figures, which often include both erotic and violent imagery. He is viewed as one of the most important figures in Colombian art.


Harry Callahan was an American photographer and artist who is best known for his innovative and experimental work in the mid-20th century. He was began his artistic career as a painter before turning to photography.
Callahan's photographic work was characterized by his interest in abstraction, pattern, and form. He often photographed everyday objects and scenes, such as street signs, buildings, and landscapes, and used his camera to explore the beauty and complexity of the world around him.
Callahan was also known for his work as a teacher, and he taught photography at the Rhode Island School of Design for many years. His students included notable photographers such as Aaron Siskind and Ray K. Metzker, and he was known for his rigorous and challenging approach to teaching.
Callahan's legacy as an artist and photographer continues to influence contemporary photography and art. His innovative techniques and distinctive style continue to inspire new generations of artists, and his work is recognized as a significant contribution to the history of photography.


Jean-Pierre Cassigneul is a French artist known for his stylized paintings of women in fashionable clothing and elegant interiors. He was studied at the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris.
Cassigneul's paintings often feature women with long necks, almond-shaped eyes, and vividly colored clothing set against simple yet elegant backgrounds. He has been influenced by the work of Henri Matisse, Pierre Bonnard, and Edouard Vuillard, as well as Japanese woodblock prints.
Cassigneul's work has been exhibited in galleries and museums around the world, including the Tokyo Museum of Modern Art, the National Museum of Fine Arts in Buenos Aires, and the Museum of Modern Art in Paris. His paintings are also held in the collections of many prestigious institutions, including the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris and the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
In addition to his paintings, Cassigneul has also worked in other media, including lithography and book illustration. He has created illustrations for works by Gustave Flaubert, Paul Verlaine, and Charles Baudelaire, among others.
Cassigneul continues to work and exhibit his art today, and is considered one of the leading figures of the contemporary French art scene.


Jonas Čeponis was a Lithuanian painter and representative of the Fauvism movement.
Čeponis graduated from the Lithuanian Art Institute and the Vilnius Institute of Engineering Construction, and was a professor at the Lithuanian Art Institute. Influenced by Fauvism, the artist mainly painted expressive landscapes of Lithuanian villages and Vilnius. His paintings are characterized by decorative, contrasting color combinations. Čeponis also painted portraits, still lifes, figurative compositions and nudes.




Nicolai Cikovsky (Russian: Никола́й Цико́вский) — Russian, later American artist of the XX century. Most of the evidence about the artist is associated with his participation in the creative group Hampton Bays, based on Long Island, New York and which included David Burliuk, John Graham, Milton Avery, brothers Raphael and Moses Sawyer.


Lucien Clergue is a French photographer of black and white photography, the first photographer elected a member of the French Academy of Fine Arts.
Lucien Clergue is one of the most famous photographers in France and founder of the annual Arles Festival, which has become the main event in the world of artistic photography, attended by up to 100,000 people. His famous photographic works - modernist black and white studies of female nudes, harlequins, dead animals, gypsies and bullfighting - are considered exemplary of the photographer-artist. Clergue is also known for his friendship with Pablo Picasso, which lasted some 30 years, until the artist's death.


Sir William Menzies Coldstream (CBE) was an English realist painter and teacher. His type of realism was based on careful measurement by the following method: standing in front of the subject being depicted and holding the brush vertically at arm's length. Coldstream painted still lifes, landscapes, portraits, and nudes of women.


Will Cotton is an American painter. His work primarily features landscapes composed of sweets, often inhabited by human subjects. Will Cotton lives and works in New York City.
In 1996, Cotton began to develop an iconography in which the landscape itself became an object of desire. The paintings often feature scenery made up entirely of pastries, candy and melting ice cream. He creates elaborate maquettes of these settings from real baked goods made in his Manhattan studio as a visual source for the final works. Since about 2002, nude or nearly nude pinup-style models have occasionally populated these candy-land scenes. As in the past, the works project a tactile indulgence in fanciful glut. The female characters are icons of indulgence and languor, reflecting the feel of the landscape itself.


Imogen Cunningham was an American photographer known for her botanical photography, nudes, and industrial landscapes. Cunningham was a member of the California-based Group f/64, known for its dedication to the sharp-focus rendition of simple subjects.


Alfred Dade is an Albanian painter and sculptor working in Germany.
Dade studied at the Art Academy in Rome with Prof. Marchese and at the Art Academy in Düsseldorf with Prof. Markus Lüpertz. Since 1999 he has been working as a freelance artist in Mülheim/Ruhr, creating sculptures in wood.


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".


Josef Dobrowsky was an Austrian painter and member of the Zinkerbacher Artist Colony that lived and worked together at Lake Wolfgang until its dissolution after Austria was annexed by Germany, known as the Anschluss, in 1938.


Vladimir Efimovich Dubosarskii (russian: Владимир Ефимович Дубосарский) is a Russian artist. From 1994 to 2014 he worked in an art duo with Aleksandr Vinogradov (russian: Александр Виноградов).
He studied at the Moscow Art College in memory of 1905, then at the Moscow State Art Institute named after V. I. Surikov. Since 1994, a member of the MOSKh, corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Arts.


Jeanne Dunning is an American photographer whose work is centered around corporeality and human physicality in abstract forms. Dunning earned her Bachelor of Arts from Oberlin College and her Masters of Fine Arts from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. From there, she opened her first exhibit at the Feature Gallery in Chicago in 1987. In the early 1990s, Dunning created a series of photographs for an exhibit titled "Directions" which was meant to blur the lines of fact and fiction.The exhibit was displayed at the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington. Dunning's work is included in the permanent collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, the Museum of Contemporary Photography and the Museum of Modern Art, New York.


Martin Eder is a German artist.
From 1986 until 1992, he studied at the Augsburg University of Applied Sciences, and from 1993 until 1995 continued his studies at the Academy of Fine Arts Nuremberg, attending the University of Kassel in 1995 and 1996. From 1996 until 1999 he studied under Eberhard Bosslet at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts and was a master student under Professor Bosslet from 1991 until 2001. Eder lives and works in Berlin. He plays in his own experimental rock band under the name Richard Ruin et Les Demoniaques.


Ivan Semyonovich Efimov (Russian: Иван Семёнович Ефимов) was a Russian and Soviet artist of the first half of the twentieth century. He is known as an animal painter, graphic artist, sculptor, illustrator and reformer of the puppet theater.
Ivan Efimov worked in different genres and techniques, but all his work, including decorative and applied art, was focused on animalistic themes. He created works for the Moscow subway, train stations, sanatoriums and many other places and became famous for his technique of through volume relief in sculpture. The master also illustrated more than 20 books.
Efimov also created erotic works - about a thousand sheets with various thematic series, but the public learned about them only after the collapse of the USSR.




Heinrich Faltermeier was a German sculptor. After an apprenticeship as a goldsmith and years of travel, including to Spain, Faltermeier studied from 1936 to 1943 at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich. He worked in accordance with the Nazi concept of art and created war memorials. From 1938 to 1944, with the exception of 1941, he was represented at all major German art exhibitions. Faltermeier's preferred working materials as a sculptor were bronze, marble and wood.


Esteban Fekete was a Hungarian, German, and Argentine painter. He worked and experimented in different techniques - color woodcuts, oil paintings on canvas, wood or organelite. In his paintings we see the world of people, animals and their environment.


Maria Paula Figueiroa Rego was a Portuguese-British visual artist known particularly for her paintings and prints based on storybooks. Rego's style evolved from abstract towards representational, and she favoured pastels over oils for much of her career. Her work often reflects feminism, coloured by folk-themes from her native Portugal.


Salvatore Fiume is an Italian artist known for his diverse talents including painting, sculpture, ceramics and graphic design.
Salvatore Fiume's artistic style has evolved throughout his career, reflecting various influences. Fiume's paintings are characterised by vivid colours, dynamic brushwork and a sense of emotional intensity. He was also a skilled sculptor and created many sculptures in different materials.


Fritz Fleer is a German painter and sculptor. He studied at the Hamburg University of Fine Arts in the class of Edwin Paul Scharf.
As independent artist, Fritz Fleer has been creating works for urban planning since the 1950s; in Hamburg he was commissioned for 17 sculptures by the municipal housing company SAGA.


Thomas Gatzemeier is a German artist, art dealer and writer.
Gatzemeier studied painting and drawing at the University of Graphic and Book Arts in Leipzig, after graduating he worked as a freelance artist. After conflicts with the authorities and a ban on exhibitions, he left the GDR in 1986. Until 2020 he lived and worked mainly in Karlsruhe before moving to Leipzig, where he runs the gallery Soll und Haben. Gatzemeier's painting without reference to any style always revolves around the female body and is nature-oriented. In particular, the artist loves to paint brightly colored butterflies and insects in general.
Gatzemeier has been exhibiting in galleries, art associations and museums since 1987. Numerous works are in renowned collections at home and abroad.
Gatzemeier has published a novel and several short stories, he has also written several art books.


Robert Lvovich Genin (Russian: Роберт Львович Генин) was a Jewish-born artist of the first half of the twentieth century who worked in several countries, including the Russian Empire, Germany, France, Germany, Switzerland, and the USSR. He is known as a painter and graphic artist.
Robert Genin worked in a variety of genres including landscapes, portraits, genre compositions and nudes. He also did lithography, woodcuts and etching. His style evolved from Jugendstil and Symbolism in the early 1900s to Expressionism after the First World War. He later came to a kind of lyrical primitivism. The artist worked in both easel and monumental painting and was influenced by various artists.


Francis Giacobetti is a French photographer and filmmaker.
In 1984 he began a series of celebrity photographs that included Federico Fellini, Stephen Hawking, Françoise Sagan, Philippe Starck, Yehudi Menuhin and others, over 200 in all. Known for being on the border between photography and painting, between craft and art, Francis Giacobetti has puzzled and delighted art masters with his series (Zebras, Iris, Anthem, numerous Bacon portraits). Like many photographers, he celebrates the beauty and perfection of the human body.
Giacobetti is also the director of the film Emmanuelle l'Antivierge (1975).


Rolf Gith is a German painter, draughtsman and designer. He studied painting at the University of Fine Arts in Hamburg. He was involved in teaching at various institutions of higher education. Git is a member of the Association of German Artists.
Rolf Git worked in different genres: he was fond of nudes, painted portraits of the people around him as well as numerous self-portraits. Since 1996 colour and light have been central themes in his work.


Dieter Glasmacher is a socio-political German visual artist in the field of painting, art action, animated film and early street art.
Influenced by classical modernism, especially Dadaism, and contemporary art movements such as the works of Jean Dubuffet, Art brut, the expressive painting of the COBRA group and Pop Art, Glasmacher has developed a very independent position and a lively, original visual world over many creative years. Television, cinema, advertising, graffiti and other forms of street art also have a formative influence on his visual worlds, as do the "secret traces" of public space, words and scribbles such as those found in urinals, at bus stops or on the walls of houses. His main theme is his "consternation of current social oppression and deformation."


Emilio Greco was an Italian realist sculptor, draftsman, writer and poet.
At the age of 13, Greco was apprenticed to a mason and later studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Palermo. His first solo exhibition took place in 1946. Emilio Greco created monumental figurative works in bronze and marble, park sculptures, primarily nude female figures and portraits. His sculptures are characterized by refined, elongated forms in the tradition of Italian mannerism. Notable among them is the monument to the character Pinocchio (Pinocchio and the Fairy) for the town of Collodi.
Greco also designed one of the bronze doors of the cathedral in Orvieto and the monument to Pope John XXIII in St. Peter's Basilica. In 1974, a Greco Garden dedicated to his works was opened at the Open Air Museum in Hakone, Japan.


Aldona Maria Gustas is a German poet, illustrator, and graphic designer of Lithuanian origin.
In 1972, Gustas co-founded an art forum in West Berlin, the Berliner Malerpoeten, a group of artists who simultaneously wrote and illustrated their works.


Wenjue He is a famous Chinese painter whose work is inspired by films. In the internationally acclaimed series, the viewer is presented with abstract emotions that are achieved with quick strokes that create a mystical aura. Themes from various films in Wenjue He's works include war, politics, human nature, eroticism and culture. They depict social events and historical changes, which are the most important criteria for the artist when choosing his films.




Gus Heinze is an American photorealist painter. During the 1950s and 1960s he worked as a freelance commercial artist on Madison Avenue. In 1970 he began his career as a photorealist painter in Bondville, Vermont; many of his paintings from this period depict parts of automobiles and motorcycles in close-up. In 1978 Heinze began exploring more diverse subjects. He increasingly moved toward storefront-window and city scenes, in a style that he calls "abstract realism," where the subject is real but the point of view and composition give the painting an abstract quality. In addition to his urban subjects, Heinze has also painted dilapidated farm equipment such as tractors and water pumps, and old trains and locomotive engines. He has also done series of paintings depicting rocky cliffsides, vineyard grapes, and streams; much of his subject matter is characterized by complex reflections off glass or water, intricate foliage, and deep background blacks with saturated colors in the foreground.


Bill Henson is an Australian photographer. He is known for his moody and atmospheric photographs of the human form, as well as landscapes and architectural interiors.
Henson began his career as a photographer in the 1970s and gained recognition in the 1980s for his moody and enigmatic images of teenagers. His work often explores themes of sexuality, desire, and the subconscious.
Throughout his career, Henson has continued to produce striking photographic works that push the boundaries of conventional portraiture and landscape photography. He has exhibited widely both in Australia and internationally and his work is included in the collections of many major museums, including the National Gallery of Australia, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney, and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York.
Henson has also been the recipient of numerous awards and honors for his photography, including the Centenary Medal from the Australian government in 2001 and the Officer of the Order of Australia in 2019.




Josef Herman was a Polish-British graphic artist, impressionist, and member of the Royal Academy of Arts. Herman's own style was bold and distinctive, with strong forms and minimal detail. He became famous for his depictions of miners, fishermen, and farmers, painting the modest, quiet beauty of the British working class in the postwar period. Herman also painted still life and nudes. His works are mostly in ink, watercolor, and pastel in dark, somber tones.


Karl Horst Hödicke is a German artist, a pioneer of German Neo-Expressionism and new figuration, and one of the most important representatives of German post-war painting.
After moving to Berlin in 1957, Hödicke encountered the eventful history of Berlin - the construction of the Berlin Wall, the Cold War, and reunification - and reflected it in his paintings.


Peter Hohberger is a German actor, painter, and modernist sculptor.
He is considered one of the sculptors of the "New School" artistic movement that developed in France after 1945. Hohberger's exquisite sculptures of female nudes are a success and are found in many collections around the world.


Karin Hollweg is a German artist and collector.
Karin and her husband Uwe Hollweg live in Bremen and have been collecting art for over 20 years, with a collection of over 750 works. The foundation they created is dedicated to the promotion of contemporary art.


Carl Horn was a German artist of the first half of the 20th century. He is known as a painter and graphic artist who specialized in nudes, landscapes and portraits.
Horn created many exlibris in the Art Nouveau style early in his career. He painted city and seascapes, genre scenes and portraits using watercolor and oil. His work was characterized by lyrical realism and a sensitive, harmonious and richly colored palette. Horn was also the director of the Nordic Academy of Art in Bremen.


Horst P. Horst, a German-American fashion photographer, is renowned for his significant contributions to the art and fashion industry. Born in 1906, Horst's career spanned several decades, during which he became famous for his distinct style that skillfully blends elements of surrealism, classicism, and avant-garde artistry. His work, characterized by meticulous preparation and an innovative use of lighting, frequently avoided the use of filters and shadows, focusing instead on the subject with an almost architectural precision.
Horst P. Horst's legacy in fashion photography is underscored by his famous portraits, including the iconic 1942 image of Marlene Dietrich, and his exploration of the high society lifestyle through his collaborations with Vogue editor Diana Vreeland. These projects featured portraits of illustrious figures from the realms of royalty, art, fashion, and high society, such as Andy Warhol, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, and Yves Saint Laurent, showcasing Horst's ability to navigate the glamorous and intimate worlds of his subjects.
His work extended beyond portraiture to include interior design photography, as seen in his documentation of notable interiors for magazines like House & Garden and Vogue. Horst's photographs often served as a bridge, introducing the public to the works of contemporary artists and designers through his editorial and commercial assignments.
Throughout his career, Horst received critical acclaim, with major retrospectives of his work being held at prestigious venues such as the International Center of Photography in New York, the Louvre in Paris, and the National Gallery in London. These exhibitions highlighted his contributions to fashion, portraiture, and art photography, cementing his status as one of the most influential photographers of the 20th century.
For those interested in the evolution of fashion photography and the intersection of art and culture, Horst P. Horst's work remains a significant point of study and admiration. Collectors and experts in art and antiques are encouraged to explore his extensive portfolio, which continues to inspire and influence the fields of photography and fashion design.
If you wish to stay informed about upcoming sales and auction events related to Horst P. Horst, consider signing up for updates. This subscription will ensure you're at the forefront of the market for his enduring and captivating works.


Dorothy Iannone is an American artist who lived and worked in Germany for a long time. Most of Iannone's paintings, texts and films are about erotic love. Freedom, free love, uninhibited sexuality are the central theme of the artist's images.
Yannone's depictions of the human body are largely based on Greek and Oriental motifs, Japanese prints, and the fine art of Tibetan and Indian religions.


Alain Jacquet is a French self-taught artist, a representative of the American Pop Art movement. In his series of works "Camouflages" the artist often contrasts masterpieces of art history, famous paintings of the past to advertising idols of his time. "Botticelli's Camouflage" (Birth of Venus) is one of his famous works.
Among other things, Jacquet used the techniques of silkscreen printing, photomechanical transfer and screen printing.


Jean Jansem (Armenian: Ժանսեմ; French: Jean Jansem), real surname Hovhannes Semerdjian (Armenian: Հովհաննես Սեմերջյան; French: Hovhannes Semerdjian) was a French artist of Armenian origin. He studied at the Paris Academy of Decorative Arts.
From the very beginning, Jean Jansem has chosen the outcasts, the unfortunate, and the victims of the Armenian genocide as his inspiration. Zhansem is a consistent bearer of national historical memory, which he brought to the visual ranks throughout his life.


John C. Kacere was an American artist. Originally an abstract expressionist, Kacere adopted a photorealist style in 1963. Nearly all of his photorealist paintings depict the midsection of the female body. He is considered one of the original photorealists, although he rejected the term.


Willi Kissmer is a German painter, sculptor, graphic artist and rock musician. He began his artistic career as a musician and traveled extensively around the world, but turned to painting in 1980.
Kismer is known for his technically exquisite prints, oil and acrylic paintings, which mostly depict female nude or semi-nude bodies. His paintings, prints and reproductions have been exhibited internationally.


Muriel Köhler-Docmac, née Tamschick, alias Muche, is a German artist, designer and scenographer living and working in Stuttgart.
She studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich and at the University of Design Karlsruhe, specializing in scenography, then at the Eberhardt-Ludwig Gymnasium in Stuttgart. Muriel Köhler-Dokcmac's background includes the design of commercial spaces and work in stage design, styling, artwork for various music videos and commercials at home and abroad. She also created the interior design of the Munich Theater Academy.
The artist works in a variety of techniques: she paints, spray paints, creates collages and glues materials onto surfaces. She uses perforated sheets, self-cut stencils or even a shower mat to apply her meshes. References to street art, graffiti and comics are also visible in her works, as well as elements of caricature, illustration and pop art. Muche has participated in numerous exhibitions at home and abroad with her paintings.


Ferenc Kóka is a Hungarian painter.
Kóka graduated from the Budapest Academy of Fine Arts. From 1969 he was one of the first residents of the new artist colony of Szentendre and lived there with his wife until his death in 1997. In 1992, together with Attila Czai, he reorganized the Szentendre Fine Arts Association with the aim of protecting the values of the Hungarian artistic past, preserving an important heritage and supporting original creative and theoretical-artistic endeavors.
Ferenc Koka was the recipient of the highest Hungarian state award, the Mihály Munkácsi Prize.


Volker Köpp was a German painter.
He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Dresden and initially worked as a prop master in the theater. Köpp takes on all the classical thematic areas of painting: nudes and portraits, group portraits, still lifes, houses and streets, landscapes are depicted powerfully and sensually, with strong colors or with a muted palette.


Herma Körding is a German painter and drawer.
She studied painting at the National Academy of Fine Arts in Karlsruhe, then in Paris at the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts and the Académie Joulian, and also attended the Düsseldorf Academy of Art. Herma Körding fought for the right of women artists to have their own exhibition spaces and for many years was the only female member of the "Malkasten" association of artists. Herma Körding painted still lifes, landscapes and portraits.


Alfred Kornberger was an Austrian painter and graphic artist. He studied painting with Professor Robin Christian Andersen at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna.
Stylistically, he dealt with the different facets of classical modernism and was inspired by Pablo Picasso's late work as well as by the depictions of surrealist artists. In his early years he devoted himself to various themes from the world of industry as well as topographical depictions. Later he turned almost exclusively to the depiction of the female nude.
Alfred Kornberger's work is part of the great Austrian tradition of body-oriented art, which ranges from Egon Schiele to Alfred Hrdlicka. His central theme, the female nude, is not only a projection of sensual desire but also an expression of psychological states.


Axel Krause is a German painter and graphic artist who works with acrylics and oils, typical of the artists of the New Leipzig School. In his paintings the viewer sees interiors, landscapes and atmospheric scenes and subjects with elements of mystery and surrealism.