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21.10.2024 - 04.07.2025

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  • Thomas Arnolds
  • Cornelia Baltes
  • Hans Bischoffshausen
  • Brandy Brandstätter
  • Ulu Braun
  • Edward Burtynsky
  • Sandi Červek
  • Caroline Wells Chandler
  • Lutz Driessen
  • Irena Eden & Stijn Lernout
  • Cédric Eisenring
  • Jan Paul Evers
  • Lino Fiorito
  • Christian Freudenberger
  • Antonio Girbés
  • Bruno Gironcoli
  • Gernot Gleiss
  • Dorothee Golz
  • Jochem Hendricks
  • Andy Holtin
  • Pedro Jardim de Mattos
  • Robert Kunec
  • Alina Kunitsyna
  • Hans Kupelwieser
  • Ulrich Lamsfuß
  • Tina Lechner
  • Gerhard Lojen
  • Constantin Luser
  • Joel Meyerowitz
  • Sissa Micheli
  • Olga Pedan
  • Ulrich Pester
  • Damir Radović
  • Thomas Rentmeister
  • Evan Roth
  • Robert Schad
  • Jon Shelton
  • Hayley Aviva Silverman
  • Tracey Snelling
  • Nina Rike Springer
  • Vincent Tavenne
  • Oman Valentin
  • Ina Weber
© Constantin Luser © Constantin Luser Constantin Luser, Moby Dick, 2010
, Mixed media on aluminium dibond, 150 x 305 cm
Kollitsch Collection

The eye of the observer seeks familiar contours and tries to find its way through the labyrinth of interwoven ideas. In doing so, the observer embarks on a journey through real and fantasy worlds that merge in imaginary landscapes. Figurative elements and symbols such as the anchor on the left side of the picture underline the association with Melville's work of the same name.

— Magdalena Koschat 

© Constantin Luser © Constantin Luser Constantin Luser, Drahtkopf, 2014
, Brass wire, varnished, 53 x 36 x 30 cm
Kollitsch Collection

In his wire sculptures, Constantin Luser translates linear thought into the three-dimensional. The delicate, parallel lines that the artist puts down on the picture base in his drawings, with a light touch and several pens used simultaneously, are also present in his three-dimensional works. Fragile, delicate brass wires are juxtaposed to form an airy sketch of space, made from parallel or reflecting lines. Insubstantial outlines are suspended in space, with additional dynamic impulses provided by thermal influences. Through the shadow they cast on the wall, they once again revert to a two-dimensional image.

— Magdalena Koschat 

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