Works
DIEMUT VON FUNCK: COLOR IS EVERYWHERE
The focus of this exhibition, which includes ten large-format works from 2019 to 2021, is the omnipresent color spectrum of nature, which Diemut von Funck intensifies through targeted interventions in the pictorial space: As a starting point, the colors and with them the shapes and structures form a constant in the image structures, however largely redefined and reinterpreted into quasi-autonomous, abstract-expressive rhythms and patterns.
4 January 2024 – 27 January 2024
On January 4 at 6 pm all are invited to the opening reception at the gallery. The artist is present.
The following works are presented in the show:
DIEMUT VON FUNCK: COLOR IS EVERYWHERE
Dealing with the inherent properties of nature in terms of color and structure is the artistic approach of the Munich photographer Diemut von Funck (born 1952 in Krefeld, trained at the Prague Photo School in Kefermarkt near Linz). Her spectrum of images includes the entire range of physical states of the landscape, depending on the seasons, weather and the prevailing light situation, such as light reflections on the water surface, fog or snow. The artist achieves an increase in the image effect by digitally overlaying related image motifs, working with controlled motion blur during the shooting, or subjecting the natural colors to increased contrast and saturation. It is the change, the dissolution of space and time, the interweaving of surfaces that make another reality appear in abstraction: bringing the invisible out from behind the visible, revealing symbolic structures of nature.
The focus of this exhibition, which includes ten large-format works from 2019 to 2021, is the omnipresent color spectrum of nature, which Diemut von Funck intensifies through targeted interventions in the pictorial space: As a starting point, the colors and with them the shapes and structures form a constant in the image structures, however largely redefined and reinterpreted into quasi-autonomous, abstract-expressive rhythms and patterns. The special weighting of the color creates a haunting effect on the viewer, which is further enhanced by the large format of the works.