The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: Nikolaus List - Analphabetismus Nr. 7, Daniel Kehlmann

Nikolaus List - Analphabetismus Nr. 7

Daniel Kehlmann

Beguilingly colorful, balancing opulence with restraint, Nikolaus List's (b. Frankfurt am Main, 1965; lives and works in Berlin) pictures scrutinize the relation between nature and art. Observations of natural scenes around Berlin blend with the artificiality of baroque gardens or early videogames. As List studies the operation of human perception, the painted space alternates between the depth of one-point perspective and a schematized flatness. The rhythmically organized compositions suspend the hierarchical distinction between foreground and background, an effect that is heightened by the often dissonant selection of colors and lends List's art a " decidedly anti-sublime and anti-minimal" quality. A fallen tree, luminous rampantly growing and coiled branches become a metaphor for our relationships, our existence, for becoming and passing away, renewal and time. Nikolaus List studied with Thomas Bayrle, Peter Kogler, and Christa Nä her at the Academy of Fine Arts-- Stä delschule in Frankfurt. He has taught painting at the Weiß ensee School of Art and Design and the Berlin Art Institute.

Book Details

  • Publisher: DCV
  • Publish Date: Apr 1st, 2023
  • Pages: 160
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 11.30in - 8.80in - 0.80in - 2.11lb
  • EAN: 9783969121160
  • Categories: Individual Artists - Monographs

About the Author

Daniel Kehlmann was born in Munich in 1975, lives as a freelance writer in Vienna and Berlin. His first novel Beerholms Vorstellung was published in 1997. Kehlmann's reviews and essays appear in numerous magazines and newspapers, including "Der Spiegel", "Guardian", "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung", "Sü ddeutsche Zeitung", "Literaturen" and "Volltext". His novel Ich und Kaminski was an international success, his novel Die Vermessung der Welt, translated into forty languages to date, became one of the most successful German novels of the post-war period and was made into a film in 2012.