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Rineke Marsman (1955)

Rineke Marsman’s paintings, created since 1996, are dominated by figures and portraits of children. After the discovery of the monumental book “Children’s Monument”, published in France and edited by Serge Klaasfeld, Lineke Marsman long used the photographs published there as a starting point for his paintings. Did. Not to achieve a moral effect, but rather to express the concept of impermanence in a certain way. This transience was achieved in two ways for her. One concerns the content of the work and the other concerns the painting techniques used. The photographs presented in the book have been copied onto the canvas as accurately as possible. She then paints the selected images, applying layers of transparent paint, often brushing them off, to create moments when presence and disappearance are visually integrated, sometimes in diffused light. I asked for it. We hope that the new images will evoke lasting memories through the sought-after mystical power. A new painting, if the painting is good, brought back memories as a moment of respect. This series ended in February 1999 when her almost complete series Le Memorial des Enfants was exhibited at the Van Her Riecum Museum in Apeldoorn. Her current work focuses on the possibilities of painting itself, and photographs of children remain the starting point for her paintings. They are still children and are destined to live unstable lives on the margins of society. Sometimes they disappeared without a trace or died. By combining abstractions such as flowerbeds and landscapes with new subjects in more complex paintings, the possibilities of painting expand and more complex content can be expressed.

www.ftn-books.com was lucky to acquire several Marsman titles.

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Sebastiaan Bremer (1970)

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One of the sites I visited on Sebastiaan Bremer wrote that his art is a mash-up of styles and techniques and I can agree with that description.

Sebastiaan Bremer, Living and working in New York, applies everything from paint and inks to physical etchings to his photographs, creating an utterly original art piece. Many of his photos are from his own past, personal mementoes that have become like a “distorted memory or a magical dream,” as Life Lounge describes.

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Because he uses photographs and prints the size of his works is limited. The maximum size I encountered was 120 x 120 cm.  Just leaf through one of the two publications available at www.ftn-books.com and you will notice that many of hs works would be even more impressive if they were executed on a larger size.  On average they are 80 x 60 cm. Still, these are in many cases intimate and highly personal works where Bremer used his childhood and personal life as the first layer of his work of art.