Abendland I Epilog
Harald Reiner Gratz
We cordially invite you and your friends to the opening with the artist on Saturday, October 21st at 8 p.m.!
Three years ago we showed the prologue to Harald Gratz’s fantastic series “Abendland”. It has since grown, developed and been shown in four museums. Now we present the conclusion, or if you will, the epilogue. The West is not a ship, but a cultural island. It is submerged but does not sink. Antiquity, Christianity, the Middle Ages, Enlightenment - washed up, washed away.
With the waves of modernity came red, brown and green broth. New layers. Every now and then a piece of land peeks out, with ghosts crouching on top. Then the next wave. Other islands are in sight, getting closer with every tide. When Harald Gratz describes the West, he is a gifted and knowledgeable narrator who uses painting rather than words. He shapes them into parables, metaphors, mental cinema. Gratz studied at the Halle Castle and the Dresden Academy in the 1980s, and later lived in Rome and New York. Modernity and post-modernity determine his artistic language: the Fauves, the Expressionists, David Hockney. His peinture is opulent, sometimes lively, often vibrant; the colors lie sparkling in precious layers on the canvases. He masters the old masters virtuoso and lets it shine again and again. As a rule, he avoids it, like a brilliant artist who makes spectacular falls dressed as a clown.