Picture "Discover" (2019) (Unique piece)

Picture "Discover" (2019) (Unique piece)
Quick info
unique piece | signed | oil on nettle | unframed | size 60 x 50 cm
Detailed description
Picture "Discover" (2019) (Unique piece)
Oil on nettle, 2019, signed. Unframed. Size stretched on stretcher frame 60 x 50 cm.
Producer: ars mundi Edition Max Büchner GmbH, Bödekerstraße 13, 30161 Hanover, Germany Email: info@arsmundi.de

About Dietmar Brixy
Art out of a pumping station: In 2001, the painter and sculptor Dietmar Brixy bought a former sewage pumping station in Mannheim, Germany, which was built in 1903, and converted it into a flat, studio and exhibition hall. Brixy needs the space with the huge building halls because many of his paintings measure several metres.
His works impress due to their strong colours, which he sometimes applies impasto in thick layers, and other times, almost transparently, creating a relief-like structure. Brixy does not paint figuratively, he claims that, despite all their optical abstraction, his paintings always trace nature.
Dietmar Brixy, born in 1961 in Mannheim, studied at the State Academy of Fine Arts in Karlsruhe and has been working very successfully as a freelance artist since 1991.
Term for paintings and sculptures that are detached from representational depiction, which spread across the entire western world and parts of the eastern world from around 1910 onwards in ever new stylistic variations. The Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky, born in 1866, is considered the founder of abstract art. Other important artists of abstract art are K.S. Malewitsch, Piet Mondrian, and others.
A one-of-a-kind or unique piece is a work of art personally created by the artist. It exists only once due to the type of production (oil painting, watercolour, drawing, lost-wax sculpture etc.).
In addition to the classic unique pieces, there are also the so-called "serial unique pieces". They present a series of works with the same colour, motif and technique, manually prepared by the same artist. The serial unique pieces are rooted in "serial art", a genre of modern art that aims to create an aesthetic effect through series, repetitions, and variations of the same objects or themes or a system of constant and variable elements or principles.
The historical starting point is considered to be Claude Monet's "Les Meules" (1890/1891), where, for the first time, a series was created that went beyond a mere group of works. The other artists, who addressed to the serial art, include Claude Monet, Piet Mondrian and above all Gerhard Richter.