Art Karlsruhe

16.Feb - 19.Feb 2017

with, among others, Constantin Schroeder, Alfred Haberpointner, Leszek Skurski and Josef Hirthammer

Constantin Schroeder

Constantin Schroeder's figurative paintings are impressive, moving images with a profound sense of depth. His pictorial protagonists are fascinating characters that never let us go. Internalizing the present with all its complexities, he uses a very reduced color palette. Mostly executed in large formats, the scenes captivate the viewer with their characteristic narratives. Schroeder reaches deep into the archive of the human psyche. His works reveal an enigmatic iconography, which includes young heroes posing interpersonal mysteries. The artist, who lives and works in Berlin and studied theology, philosophy, and art history, also illuminates the darker sides of life in an extraordinary, hyper-realistic style. These are powerful images that captivate us with their enigmatic pictorial content. Schroeder leaves some parts of the image white, which allows the viewer to develop his or her own interpretation and understanding of the image through open associations.


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Alfred Haberpointner

Salzburg-born sculptor Alfred Haberpointner creates wooden sculptures that oscillate between an abstract, geometric form and a figurative image. With his work series spanning over the last two decades, Haberpointner proves how he has innovatively dealt with wooden materials and freed himself from the roots of craft-based, naturalistic wooden sculpture. In his "chopped images," he gives the wooden material an intense presence through systematic, rhythmic sections, which emerge through close observation and exploration of the textured surfaces and result in a dance between light and shadow. He is concerned with form in his works, particularly in the treatment of wood in all possible nuances and shadings. In each of his artworks, one can see the traces of the work process: Haberpointner subjects his reliefs and sculptures to a powerful, mechanical work process that leaves traces on the works. Through beating, chopping, and burning, textures emerge that give the works a relief-like surface, which lacks any mathematical precision and exudes a special aura. Alfred Haberpointner is represented in major art collections, such as the Würth Collection.


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Leszek Skurski

"Condensation is the starting point of my painting."

- Leszek Skurski


This guiding principle forms the foundation upon which Leszek Skurski builds his visual worlds. His journey began at the Academy of Fine Arts in Gdańsk, where, at the age of just 22, he was honored with the Polish State Prize for Painting. Over the decades, he has perfected a signature style that moves between the fleeting and the enduring, and today is recognized as Neo-Impressionism. His works are the result of heightened attentiveness and a persistent commitment to decisions that, once placed on the canvas, must stand on their own.

In these compositions, white becomes the true protagonist. It is not an empty background, but a pulsating, expansive surface that lays bare every movement and mark without protection. What remains in this space has passed the test of reduction. Skurski’s figures, often caught in waiting or transition, do not embody mere actions but a quiet, existential presence. By letting the faces recede in favor of posture, the viewer’s gaze is freed to perceive a being that transcends the individual.

It is this deliberate omission of detail that conjures a calm in which time loses its usual pace. Fleeting moments of daily life, memories of what has been seen, and deep sensations merge here until they coalesce into a single, concentrated situation. A space emerges in which the everyday loses its casualness and acquires a timeless validity. What remains is the essential, a silent and powerful assertion of the moment that resonates far beyond the edges of the canvas.


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Josef Hirthammer

Josef Hirthammer has been working as a visual artist for over 40 years. His œuvre is extremely complex and defies categorization. The broad artistic range is reflected in the different design mediums, such as painting, drawing, photography, digital painting, sculpture, and installations. In terms of content, Josef Hirthammer focuses on portraits as well as ecological and philosophical themes, which he approaches through his work series. He is an outspoken nature enthusiast who transforms his encounters with nature into art objects. He is primarily interested in the producing, generating, creative, and active nature, which becomes effective from itself and which in the philosophical tradition has been equated with the source of all finite things. The artist, who lives and works in Fürth, views nature as a macro- and microcosm of its own with a unique aesthetic. This way of thinking provides him with inspiration for his works of art.


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