Sinh:
1972
Cư trú:
Neuss, Germany
Quốc tịch:
German
Quỹ:
APT Global One
Theo dõi nghệ sĩ này
KẾT NỐI TỚI CẦU NỐI NGHỆ THUẬT
BÁO CHÍ & XUẤT BẢN
The Museum of Friesland collects contemporary perspectives on landscapes, the environment and space on an ongoing basis. This presentation showcases new acquisitions that reflect our relationship with the landscape. They include literal or figurative interpretations, staged or raw natural scenes, romantic cliches or simply just observations on all of these. The presentation features a selection of works by Celine van den Boorn, Ksenia Galiaeva, Sven Kroner, Inka & Niclas, Ulf Puder, Sybren Renema, Lovisa Ringborg and Witho Worms.
Read More
TIỂU SỬ
Sven Kroner (b. 1973, Kaufbeuren, Germany) studied at the Art
Academy in Düsseldorf in Professor Dieter Krieg's class. Recent
exhibitions include: Galerie Anne de Villepoix, Paris; Blue Moon
Sinking from the Weight of the Load, Marc Straus Gallery, New York;
Past Present Future, Sies + Höke Gallery, Düsseldorf; Harvest, LVR
Römermuseum Xanten / Kunstverein Xanten, Germany; The Air Was Magic
When We Played, Galerie Fons Welters, Amsterdam; Like a Hurricane,
Gemeente Museum Helmond, The Netherlands; and Hidden Path, Yvon
Lambert Gallery, New York. Group exhibitions: Haltlose Gründe,
Kunsthalle Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany; Landschaft in schwaben
heute, Schwäbische Galerie im Kloster Oberschönefeld,
Gessertshausen, Germany; Kanaalwerken, Gemeentemuseum Helmond, The
Netherlands; Le peintre de la vie moderne, Galerie Jochen Hempel,
Leipzig.
Sven Kroner’s paintings are inspired by his own childhood in
the mountains and forests of southern Germany. His large-scale
landscapes, depicting lush woods or vast expanses, have been
compared to the works of Romantic painters Caspar David Friedrich,
John Constable, and J.M.W. Turner, but they differ in their focus
on human existence and its effects. When people make appearances in
the landscape, they are often shown from a distance in groups in a
manner reminiscent of Flemish landscape paintings, but more often
their presence is merely implied, through a porch light, an
abandoned railway track, or a piece of trash floating in a
lake.
German, lives and works in Düsseldorf, Germany
For additional information about this artist, visit Mutual Art