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Felix Nussbaum (1904-1944)

Nussbaum was murdered at Auschwitz at the age of 39. In his remaining works, his early pastoral scenes develop into performances dominated by menace and sadness that emerged during his exile in France and Belgium. An artist once said:

u201cPeople say, even if I perish, please don’t let my picture die.u201d

In accordance with this wish, his artistic legacy is still visible and accessible today. It is on permanent display in his eponymous museum in his hometown of Osnabru00fcck, designed by Daniel Libeskind and opened in 1998. exile

Born into a family of Jewish factory owners, Nussbaum was given the opportunity to develop as a painter. Stylistically, he was initially based on the work of Vincent van Gogh. She later became engaged to Giorgio de Chirico, Henri Rousseau, and Karl Hofer. After traveling to Rome and Paris, she settled in Ostend and then in Brussels. Nussbaum was arrested by Belgian authorities in 1940 because of her German nationality, and she was interned in southern France. He managed to escape and hide in German-occupied Brussels. Shortly before his release, he was arrested and later murdered at Auschwitz. The exhibition u201cFelix Nussbaum u2013 Artist in Exileu201d will be held to coincide with the laying of the first Stolperstein in Zwolle on April 6, 2014. Stolpersteine u200bu200bis the idea of u200bu200bGerman artist Gu00fcnter Demnig. The stone is placed in front of the door of a civilian deported during World War II. Thousands of these stones have already been installed in Germany and can also be found in countries such as Austria, Hungary and the Czech Republic. The Netherlands also has many of these obstacles, called “STRUIKELSTENEN”

www.ftn-books.com has 2 titles on Nussbaum now available.

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Black Friday weekend & Cyber Monday

About 10 years ago we/ I (in the Nethrelands )did not know about BLACK FRIDAY and its discounts, but since that time BLACK FRIDAY discounts have become established over here too.

The problem is that discounts are only given in the 4 days of the BF weekend, but i will change this al little bit.

+ a discount of 10% will be applicable until December 1st, 2024.

At www.ftn-books.com you will receive not only a 10% discount when you order from Friday 24th of November 00.01 hrs until Monday the 27th 23.59 hrs. a minimum of USD 100,– ( excluding postage).

Order over USD 100,– and use BF2310 to receive this immediate discount during the Black Friday weekend

After i have packed and sent your order you will receive a personal discount code by email which will be valid for ALL your purchases at www.ftn-books.com until the 1st of December 2024

This makes your order during the BF weekend much more attractive. Enjoy your shopping at www.ftn-books.com

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Wim Schumacher (1894-1986)

Wim Schuhmacher (1894-1986) was given the nickname the Master of Gray. He is often mentioned in the same breath as neorealists such as Raoul Hynckes and Carel Willink. His work can also appear otherworldly, but seems lighter in atmosphere, serene, and less ominous. As a self-taught painter, Schuhmacher took pride in his flawless technique, with no visible brush strokes. Using ochres, he enlivened gray tones to subtly evoke a fragile sense of life. The application of this unique silver-grey veil felt like a discovery and triumph, he later explained. It also earned Schuhmacher his nickname the Master of Gray. While he traveled extensively in Southern Europe, he did not seek out flourishing landscapes or picturesque villages bathed in Mediterranean sun. It was in the Italian town of San Gimignano that Schuhmacher perfected his faded world, where the light seems to come from everywhere and nowhere at once. Like other neorealists after World War II, appreciation for Schuhmacher’s work waned in favor of abstract, expressive art. However, when he was asked by the Gemeentemuseum Arnhem in 1960 to participate in the first major exhibition with his fellow predecessors, Schuhmacher declined. The war had driven a wedge between certain “old masters.” He refused to hang in the same exhibition as Pyke Koch, who had been on the “wrong” side.

www.ftn-books.com has multiple publications on Schumacher available.

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Dimitris Tzamouranis (1967)

Dimitris Tzamouranis is a painter in the classic sense of the word. His representational paintings are testament to his outstanding artisanal abilities. He paints on large-format canvases, which he primes traditionally in multiple layers, or on copper plates in small formats. His world of motifs also follows the traces of art history back through many past centuries. Nevertheless, his art is exceptionally contemporary, blending the present with traditional content, techniques, and themes. Tzamouranis is as interested in current social and political topics as he is in interpersonal encounters and individual dispositions.

Born in 1967 in Kalamata on the Peloponnese peninsula, he moved to Berlin in 1990 at the age of 23, having graduated from the Fine Arts University in Thessaloniki where he majored in painting and graphic arts. For the next three years, he studied at the Berlin University of the Arts. Video soon became the central medium for him. He lived for a year in Istanbul thanks to a scholarship awarded by the Senate of Berlin. Drawing on his experience in the bustling metropolis, oscillating between modernity and tradition, the East and the West, he shot Die Flut (52 min.) in 1999. In Berlin in 2001, he shot Selbstschnitt, ein Portrait von Wolfgang Harth (Self-cut: A Portrait of Wolfgang Harth, 9 min.) in which a doctor operates on himself.

Tzamouranis’ grandfather was a church painter, and the artist was brought up in a very religious family. These two facts from his life, combined with the artist’s education, ultimately pushed him towards figurative painting. Since around 2001, he has painted very personal works using a realistic visual language. He soon ventured beyond pure imagery and introduced mysterious elements and characters into his painted scenes. Reality and dreams subtly intertwine, visualisations of the paintings seem magical, and illumination, light, and shadow add a film-like dramatic effect. A principle he continued to pursue until today in repeatedly new variations and narratives. His numerous studies of characters, portraits, and self-portraits contain an exceptional closeness and intimacy. In this slightly surreal or paradoxical depiction, the artist captures deep human fears and central themes of our lives: love, longing, hope, pain, and the search for meaning. Tzamouranis is particularly interested in the non-verbal communication between the main characters, with their encounter sometimes performed in silent motionlessness, and at other times with solemn energy.

Tzamouranis always works with models, both young and old, and often people that he is close with. With their help, he tests the constellations of several figures and specific positions to then transfer them into his works. Apart from his own imagination and the scenes he discovers through theatrical directing, he is inspired by themes from the history of art. He introduces historical, mythological, and biblical concepts, often only partially, into the present, creating an irritating yet fascinating blend of modernity and imagery that has been passed on throughout the centuries. The clothes and hairstyles of his models suggest they are people from the twenty-first century. Their poses, which we have recorded in our collective memory thanks to history’s most famous works of art, often seem strangely remote and incomprehensible in the context of a contemporary environment. Again and again, the artist creates coherent works. He has recently worked with young people taking vocational training. In the realm of non-verbal communication, Tzamouranis displays a particular interest in the interplay between the main characters. Their encounters range from moments of silent stillness to intense vitality.

When it comes to his creative process, Tzamouranis consistently collaborates with models, both young and old, often choosing individuals he has a close relationship with. With their assistance, he experiments with various compositions and specific poses, which he later incorporates into his artworks. In addition to drawing inspiration from his own imaginative mind and scenes derived from theatrical direction, Tzamouranis finds motivation in themes found within the history of art. He skillfully incorporates historical, mythological, and biblical concepts, albeit only partially, into the contemporary landscape. This creates a captivating mixture of modernity and imagery that has endured through the ages.

Despite the fact that the attire and hairstyles of his models reflect the twenty-first century, their poses possess a certain enigmatic quality, reminiscent of iconic works of art from history. Within a contemporary setting, these poses often appear distant and difficult to grasp. Nonetheless, the artist consistently produces coherent and thought-provoking pieces of art. Notably, Tzamouranis has recently worked with young individuals pursuing vocational training, further expanding his artistic horizons.

www.ftn-books.com has the galerie Michael Haas publication from 2010 now available.

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Alex van Warmerdam (1952)

Alex van Warmerdam (born in 1952) pursued his education at the Graphic School and the Gerrit Rietveld Academie. He is currently engaged in the fields of scriptwriting, acting, design, and directing for both theater and film. His notable achievements include winning the Golden Calf for Best Director twice, for Abel (1986) and The Northerners (1992), and the Golden Calf for Best Screenplay thrice, for Ober (2006), The Last Days of Emma Blank (2009), and Borgman (2013). Additionally, he has received numerous awards at international film festivals. In 2016, Alex, along with his brother Marc, was honored with the Golden Calf for Film Culture.

Regarding his directorial work in film and theater, van Warmerdam has established a strong international reputation. However, it is less well-known that he is also a fantastic all-round artist. www.ftn-books.com is now offering the monograph from 2010 that was published in conjunction with the exhibition at the Stedelijk Museum Schiedam.

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Hannes Postma (1933-2020)

Upon close examination, the experiences depicted in Hannes Postma’s drawings are not particularly pleasant. At the very least, the subjects are stretched out like sandwiches or compressed into bundles of limbs. They are constantly in intense motion, rising up, floating, or being shot across the plane, colliding, getting caught in explosions, and being torn apart by sharp-edged surfaces. Their hands and feet detach, multiply, and fly off into space. Their heads transform into balloons, which then expand back into bodies further on. They collide with all sorts of cosmic furniture (shelves, boxes, clothes hangers, hats, undulating earth crusts) that render space unsafe…It is, of course, not without significance that Hannes Postma composes with shapes that evoke our own world, rather than circles and squares. His space is a genuine space, even though near and far have become interchangeable, an immense space in which the earth appears fragmentary…The events, the sharp edges reach us through the drawn flesh. Wordless balloons float out of our field of vision, resembling smoke clouds or drops of blood. The boxes contain surprises (not only pleasant ones, Postma calls them Pandora’s boxes), embryos, pieces of landscape and water; perhaps they are also hiding places. Helpless little people confront the cosmic authority of enormous coats and hats, in a world where everything, including themselves, is simultaneously itself and something else or at least in the process of becoming something else.

“Hannes Postma is an image-maker, someone who, like a magician, conjures up people and spaces. But he is also a viewer of those images, who, with some irony, observes all that struggle and is capable of playing pranks with the mysterious. Without imposing his personality on us, he speaks a highly personal language.” This is evident in the title, Hocus Focus. The title and the lithographs make a clear statement, creating new insights through a small intervention. Postma associates a new word-meaning, demonstrating that language is a living entity. The title is a pun. The traditional magic spell is “hocus pocus pilatus pas,” wherein something briefly disappears or reappears. It is the sensation of the curtain opening, the story commencing, and the tension of the moment of wonderment being felt with a transformative power.

www.ftn-books.com has several Postma publications available.

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Jörg Herold (1965)

Born in Leipzig in 1965, Jörg Herold pursued his studies in painting at both the Academy of Visual Arts Leipzig and the Kunsthochschule Weißensee in Berlin. Throughout his career, he has displayed his artwork in various solo exhibitions at museums and Kunstvereine. Noteworthy showcases include the Museum der bildenden Künste Leipzig in 1999, the Von der Heydt-Museum Wuppertal and the Staatlichen Museum Schwerin in 2000, and the Galerie der Stadt Wolfsburg and the Kunstverein Bielefeld in 2005. In 2005, the Städtische Galerie der Stadt Wolfsburg organized a solo exhibition dedicated to Jörg Herold in honor of being awarded the art prize “Junge Stadt sieht junge Kunst” (Young city sees young art), accompanied by an extensive monograph on his works.

Jörg Herold has also actively participated in numerous exhibitions both in Germany and internationally. Notable appearances include the Venice Biennale in Venedig (1995), documenta X in Kassel (1997), exhibitions focused on 40 years of video art at the Museum der bildenden Künste Leipzig, the ZKM Karlsruhe, and the Ludwig Forum Aachen (2006, 2009), as well as showcases in South Korea at the Seong-nam Art Center and the Berlinische Galerie (2012). In addition to his exhibitions, Jörg Herold has embarked on artistic endeavors in various countries such as Georgia, Japan, Southeast Asia, Iceland, and Ukraine among others.

www.ftn-books.com has the Herold 1999 for the Kunstpreis Leipzig now available.

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David Maxim (1945)

While the adjectives “heroic” and “theatrical” have been used to describe Maxim’s work, it is the way in which he portrays the human figure that takes center stage. Maxim’s non-representational, mixed media paintings, which are monumental in size, create a strong bodily presence. These paintings often incorporate 3-dimensional elements that reach out towards the viewer. In addition, Maxim’s mixed media paintings utilize mark making and shapes that dynamically suggest the gestures of the human body. For example, a simple combination of rectangles and spheres can hint at a reclining figure.

Furthermore, Maxim’s artwork includes several pieces that feature 3-dimensional figures extending from the canvas. These figures either crawl across the canvas or engage in a tug-of-war, resembling marionettes. They are presented in front of dramatically painted canvases that evoke an emotional response and resist being tied to a specific location. Although the setting for these figurative artworks, whether they are wall pieces or sculptures, remains a mystery to the viewer, Maxim’s knowledge of art history is evident in his work. For instance, his piece “Blind Leading the Blind” references the Flemish Renaissance painter Pieter Bruegel.

The figures, especially the anonymous and faceless ones that populate Maxim’s work, metaphorically represent philosophical notions of the human condition. Maxim consciously constructs situations that depict common struggles. In “The Elusive Thought,” a figure attempts to cast a net, though the target remains uncertain. In “A View of the World,” another figure looks up into space through a framed screen that limits their vision. Despite addressing struggles, Maxim’s work exudes a classical beauty that highlights our connections rather than our differences. It is this delicate balance between theatrical expressionism and conscious serenity that establishes Maxim as an artistic legend.

David Maxim’s work has been exhibited extensively in California, across the United States, and in Europe.

www.ftn-books.com has the UNSEEN PICTURES publication now available.

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Lea Halpern (1901-1985)

Born in Poland in 1901, Lea Halpern (1901-85) was a potter who had the opportunity to pursue her studies in Berlin, Amsterdam, and Vienna. Upon arriving in New York City in 1939 to showcase her work, she decided to stay and settle in Baltimore. Unlike being recognized as a mere craftsman, Halpern saw herself and was seen as an artist, creating pottery pieces intended for visual appreciation rather than practical use. Her creations, named Stormy Sky, Drifting Clouds, Frozen Fire, and Tiger Lily, demonstrate a fusion of poetic and naturalistic elements, with evident inspiration from Asian culture. Although her mature works showcase an exceptional command over intricate reduction glazes, this impressive skill was attained through extensive hours of dedicated research and experimentation.

www.ftn-books.com has now the 1976 Baltimore Museum catalog available.

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Neil Wilkin (1959)

A lifetime dedicated to creation has been fueled by Neil Wilkin’s intense passion for the art of glassblowing and an unwavering appreciation for the beauty of the natural world and its varied formations. The seamless connection between these two elements lies at the heart of his artistic endeavors.

In Neil’s own words, “The very foundation of our surroundings, as shaped by the captivating geology beneath us, plays a paramount role in influencing the aesthetic and environmental aspects of our lives. Explorations across the vast landscapes of Madagascar and Australia, as well as the intricate terrain of the British Isles, have yielded an abundant source of inspiration; encompassing geological wonders and a multitude of stunning flora and fauna.”

Through the medium of glass and the intricate processes of its formation, Neil delves into an exploration and celebration of the extraordinary wealth of diversity that surrounds him, seeking to capture its essence in his work. The choice of colors, ranging from bold and vibrant to gentle and soft, allows for an absorbing and refracting of light, ultimately shaping both the physical and aesthetic aspects of his creations. In recent years, Neil has embarked on a new artistic journey, combining the optical properties of solid glass with the fluidity and richness of molten glass, resulting in a fresh perspective on his craft. Additionally, he ventures into the realm of stainless steel fabrication for the creation of large-scale, site-specific installations that seamlessly integrate both indoor and outdoor spaces.

www.ftn-books.com has the SEEDS CHANGE book from 2001 now available.