actually lost in dots .....
I am a painter and violinteacher in Berlin. My works have been exhibited for over 25 years and are represented in private and public collections.
Painting and my violin have accompanied me since early childhood.
My original basic form is colorfields, that find expression in a variety of forms, often self-invented techniques and with different media, mostly in series. This perhaps corresponds to the musical form 'theme with variations'.
The selection of works presented here is divided into three categories:
dots (2022- )
stripes (2013-2015)
colorfields (2005-2012)
The tension between freedom and its limitation is my main theme . How much structure does freedom need in order to be able to develop to its maximum .....this is an important question for me. Especially Classisal Music with its many specifications and Abstract Painting in which everything is possible ...this theme can be found in my paintings, mostly in the use of the line as a limiting element, or-actually- in my 'dots' as the only structure-forming marks .
It seams that in my latest series, a mixture of painting and drawing, the idea of colorfields sometimes moves into the background ... I'm okay with it.
In general, the dots series brings an unexpected additional benefit to my art... that is the meditative flow during the constant repetition of dots. I get bored very quickly with traditional meditation, but these abstract pointillist paintings require a high degree of mindfulness and presence.
So, if some people think, that the dots are a strict corset ... the freedom here lies in painting them, nothing more and nothing less. It's about the process, not the result. I would be happy if some of this deceleration spilled over to one or another viewer.
Recently, I found an artist on the Internet, Joachim Szymczak (geb.1952), who summarises his abstract paintings made of dots by the term "meditative pointilism".
Although following a slightly different approach, I find my current works very aptly described by this term, too.
Barnett Newman, Paul Klee, Yayoi Kusama, moderne Textilkunst, aboriginal art