Fritz Klingbeil

Fritz Klingbeil’s work lives through the charm of constantly newly found orders. This is where freedom and playful freedom unfold, which are by no means arbitrary, but consistently follow a constructive logic. Like building blocks, the artistic elements are connected and broken again, are they multiplied or have an effect individually. They seem scalable in… Continue reading Fritz Klingbeil

Anatol Herzfeld

As a student of the Düsseldorf artist Joseph Beuys, Anatol followed his teacher’s artistic ideas closely. In particular, the concept of the expanded concept of art is also found in a special reflection in Anatol. Talking, telling stories and simply working with your bare hands are a focus of Anatol’s work. In doing so, he… Continue reading Anatol Herzfeld

Carlo Ciarli

The Italian sculptor Carlo Ciarli is researching light. Yellow is therefore a key color in his sculptures and objects, which are mostly laid out in very strict geometry and stereometry: as slightly tilted pyramids, as cuboids or boxes, in triangular form.

Emil Filla

Emil Filla’s path to art led from impressionism through expressionism to cubism and ended with landscape painting. Traveling all over Europe, studying the works of old masters such as Giotto, Tintoretto or El Greco, and especially dealing with the works of George Braque, Juan Gris and Pablo Picasso in Paris allowed him to try new… Continue reading Emil Filla

Lothar Fischer

Lothar Fischer, one of the most important German sculptors after the Second World War, loved chaos as the origin of new orders. He was friends with Asger Jorn, co-founder of the COBRA group and Spiritus Rector of the Munich group SPUR, one of the most important groups of rebellious young artists in the early post-war… Continue reading Lothar Fischer

Woldemar Winkler

With her dreams she transforms the source of existence into golden honeysuckle and builds a permanent home for faith and art.

Stefan Kiess

He uses the best photographic means to create almost graphic-non-photographic, constructivist-looking imagery. Stefan Kiess sets new impulses, most recently with his step into the three-dimensional.

Wolfram Scheffel

REMEMBERED SPACES OF REMEMBRANCE Wolfram Scheffel’s pictorial themes have been paraphrasing two classic genres, the landscape and the representation of the city, for several years. (…) They take up famous scenic locations, show sights that have become part of our cultural memory. He is particularly characterized by his close ties to the artistic tradition of… Continue reading Wolfram Scheffel