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Holzkirchen: colorful art in the green center

2022-11-26T13:50:18.326Z


Holzkirchen: colorful art in the green center Created: 11/26/2022, 2:40 p.m Agnes Wieser (right) shows a cross-section of her work in the Green Center in Holzkirchen. For the first time, the BBV tax consultancy gives visual arts space to develop. The picture shows Wieser in conversation with the heads of the law firm, Hubertus Maier and Friederike von Heydebrand. © Thomas Plettenberg Education


Holzkirchen: colorful art in the green center

Created: 11/26/2022, 2:40 p.m

Agnes Wieser (right) shows a cross-section of her work in the Green Center in Holzkirchen.

For the first time, the BBV tax consultancy gives visual arts space to develop.

The picture shows Wieser in conversation with the heads of the law firm, Hubertus Maier and Friederike von Heydebrand.

© Thomas Plettenberg

Education and services related to agriculture have an address in the Green Center in Holzkirchen.

Now art is also moving in there for the first time: Agnes Wieser from Weyarn is showing her paintings there.

Holzkirchen

– In their welcome address, the heads of the law firm, Friederike von Heydebrand and Hubertus Maier, emphasized that they would never have dreamed of hosting a vernissage before Ivonne Lück from Office Management gave the impetus and took over the organization.

The time had come on Thursday: for the first time, invitations were invited to the vernissage in the Green Center, more precisely by BBV Steuerberatung, which is giving the visual arts space to develop for the first time since moving in in 2014.

Weyarn artist Agnes Wieser will start things off.

It shows 27 works.

Even as a child, Wieser had the urge to be artistically active.

She graduated from the University of Applied Sciences for Design in Munich, enjoyed training at the Kolbermoor Art Academy with the internationally renowned painter Professor Markus Lüpertz, has a lively exhibition schedule, paints cars and sailing boats and is now firmly established in the art of the district.

In that year, the native of Weyarn dared to focus exclusively on painting professionally.

She describes the path she has taken as a "brutally exciting journey".

The selection of works is also exciting: five pictures from her "cow series" greet the visitor down in the hallway, the two large-format works "on my way" I and II, which are worked out in the painting style typical of the 32-year-old, draw the viewer literally upwards, where the lion's share of the picture show can be seen.

"With my pictures, I focus on people or on being human," explains Wieser.

“It is important to me that positive feelings are triggered and that the images speak to the viewer in a pleasant way.

Using a colorful palette of colors and hidden details, I rely on unusual combinations that cannot be found in everyday life.” The works “Vino rosso”, “Blaue Hour” or “Point 12” are examples of such images of people.

Mosaic scenes - mysterious and enigmatic

"Some layers overlap, foreground and background blur, and motifs are not always fully developed," says the innovative artist.

“In the process, mosaic-like scenes are created that are not always fully understood at first glance, but invite you to discover them.

The pictures don't have to reveal everything.” And that is precisely what gives Wieser's art, which is much more than a mere depiction of reality and is directed not only outwards but also inwards, something mysterious and enigmatic.

"Often what we see in it tells us something about our own thoughts and feelings and that's what's exciting for me.

If looking at a picture triggers one's own observation or a certain feeling, that's what's important to me," says Wieser.

Among many others, the works "Elizabeth Taylor" from the series "Famous People" catch the eye, the large-format portraits "a woman" and "a man", the massive animal portraits "Dove" and "Rabe" and above all "Forest River" , an enchanting landscape in the style of the great David Hockney.

A visit to the exhibition is recommended to get a comprehensive picture of Agnes Wieser's art.

It is open Monday to Thursday from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., and on Friday from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.

Reinhold Schmidt

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2022-11-26

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