Sabine Franke-Koch

The paintings and sculptures by FRANEK are full of messages from distant and very close worlds, which are populated in archetypal punctuation by people and animals, things and hybrid beings. The signs in her pictures are “always a confrontation with people and their cultural development”, are “a search for traces of one’s own origin” 1.

Vladimir Yankilevsky

Vladimir Borisovich Yankilevsky was a Russian artist known mostly for his participation in the Soviet Nonconformist Art movement of the 1960s through the 1980s. Perhaps his most famous works are his triptychs, works that are difficult to classify, occupying a unique middle ground between painting, and sculpture, similar in some ways to Rauschenberg’s combines.

Heinz Gappmayr

Gappmayr’s work emerged in the 1960s at the interface between art and language. “What interests me are the border areas between fine art and literature, the interfaces between concept, word and object”,

Sigrid Nienstedt

Sigrid Nienstedt uses holiday brochures or postcards as templates for her strange painting of empty beaches, lonely ships and nocturnal city silhouettes.

Kurt Buchwald

When we become aware of the works shown by the photo artist Kurt Buchwald, we always have to think about the other side of his work. Recently, it was the tenth anniversary of the beginning of his “Photography forbidden!” Campaign, which has now been carried out worldwide. On the one hand, by means of this… Continue reading Kurt Buchwald