Colourful Abstraction

Colourful Abstraction

Thorbjørn Bechmann / Antje Blumenstein / Katrin Bremermann / Joanna Buchowska / Martin Bünger / Matthias Kanter

 

At the end of the year, we are presenting a group exhibition that brings together artists working on the theme of colour and abstraction. The artistic materials and forms of expression are very diverse.

Danish painter Thorbjørn Bechmann explores the tension between chance and control in his work. His pieces are created through the interplay of freely moving paint, which makes its way across the canvas, and the artist’s constant intuitive interventions. Bechmann creates soft gradients that resemble delicate veils of colour. The process of layering many colours creates surfaces full of tension. The large-format works have an impressive luminosity and are reminiscent of dazzling, harmonious plays of light.

In recent years, colour, light and spatiality have become central aspects of Antje Blumenstein‘s work. The Berlin-based artist often uses special materials such as neon tubes or fluorescent acrylic glass panels, which she layers and/or mills lines into to create fascinating geometric colour spaces that generate an intensely colourful interplay of surface and space through transparency and densification. The colour itself is transformed into a three-dimensional form. They encourage the viewer to move constantly and change their perspective.

For Berlin artist Katrin Bremermann, the free play with geometric shapes and the exploration of positive and negative forms, the weighting of surfaces and lines on the sheet or canvas, is always a central aspect. Her paintings are mostly dominated by a strong primary colour and often appear like ciphers or symbols, blueprints or patterns.

Joanna Buchowska‘s colourful and extremely (also in the literal sense) multi-layered works are created from paper, magazine or newspaper clippings. Concrete elements can flow into the picture, losing their original motif and taking on a completely different function within the collaged image network. Recently, spatiality and representationalism in her pictorial worlds have increasingly taken a back seat in favour of a freer, abstract composition.

Martin Bünger‘s painting moves between intuition and composition, between spontaneous gesture and precise structure. His works unfold a quiet intensity that captivates the viewer less through narrative motifs than through the immediate presence of colour, surface and rhythm. In his abstract works, painting becomes a process of searching and creation – each layer responds to the previous one, each densification to a pause.

In his exploration of the history of painting, Matthias Kanter focuses on colour as a carrier of meaning and as a space-creating element in the pictorial space. The exploration of subtle colour tones and the conveyance of emotions through colour alone has become his central theme. His works require the viewer to open up emotionally and to accurately sense the individual colour soloists, which only together form a concert.

Vernissage:

Friday November 21, 2025
6 – 9 pm

Exhibition duration:
Nov 21, 2025 – February 7, 2026 (winter break December 21, 2025 – January 06, 2026

 

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