ARTISTS A-M

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Yehuda Altmann


Yehuda Altmann's photographs depict places without people. The patina of history lies tangibly on the unmistakable photographic surface of the pictures.

 
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Mojé Assefjah

The abstract paintings of the Iranian artist, Mojé Assefjah, impress with the lightness of their colors and the weightlessness of their forms; the movement of the brush appears to be playful and swift.

 
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Gabriele Basch

The motifs Gabriele Basch uses in her paintings are neither created with realism in mind, nor are they derived from pure imagination. Instead, they are filtered out from a large collection of snapshots.

 
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Fides Becker

The artistic works of Fides Becker make her truly unique in the contemporary art scene. Her paintings satirize the image of women as they go about their daily routines in public and private.

 
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Anne Berning

Berlin painter Anne Berning makes art history the subject of her work. Since the early 1990s, she has been creating oversized, painted, art book spines.

 
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Davide Cantoni

Cantoni's work is based on images published in the New York Times.In most cases these are politically controversial photos such as the picture of the child soldiers in the Congo.

 
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Lucia Dellefant

Time and again the projects of Lucia Dellefant (b. 1965 in Munich) focus on the issue of identity. Her works are best regarded as “frames” for situations of reflected experience that challenge the viewer’s own position with regard to reflection stimuli, ultimately providing him with the impetus to act individually.

 
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Gabríela Fríðriksdóttir

With her drawings, sculptures, musical experimentation and videos, the Icelandic artist Gabriela Friðriksdóttir, who represented her country at the Venice Biennale in 2005 with a complex video installation, creates a cosmos that tends towards surrealism, populated by hybrid, mystical and sexually charged beings.

 
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Christian Frosch

Munich artist Christian Frosch hasn't painted a conventional picture in many years. Departing from the subject and a potential statement, he focuses on the painting processes and utensils.

 
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Heinrich Gartentor

Heinrich Gartentor (b. 1965 in Schafmatt, Switzerland) began his series dedicated to desks in the mid 1990s. “Ziemlich normales Wuchern” was the first publicly exhibited work from the series.

 
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Helmut Geier

The term "palimpsest", which refers to the process of scraping off a written surface and writing over an older manuscript, paraphrases the painting style used by Munich-based artist Helmut Geier.

 
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Nathalie Grenzhaeuser

The photographs of Nathalie Grenzhaeuser depict a world that is based on reality and yet fantastic. Deserts, industrial landscapes void of humans, abandoned urban and rural spaces are common subjects in which she sounds out the relationship between humans and nature.

 
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Caroline von Grone

Caroline von Grone’s pictures are the result of precise observation and sophisticated composition.In terms of her technical perfection and the themes she deals with, Caroline von Grone is positioned in the long tradition of Christian inspired painting.

 
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Stefan Heide

In this art exhibition, painter Stefan Heide focuses on the continuously evolving images of people. Heide's creative interpretations are based on the identity of the individual in relationship to other human beings.

 
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Stefan Hirsig

A key aspect of the canvases and objects of the Berlin painter Stefan Hirsig is his reoccurring references to architecture. Such references often appear in his sketches and final works as obvious allusions or encrypted forms.

 
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Petra Karadimas

Petra Karadimas's work exists somewhere between painting and photography. Her images depict people in public spaces: on the street, in parks, or at the beach - individuals going about their daily lives.