Markus Raetz – Zeemansblik : Landmarks of Swiss Art
by
Franz Muller
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
3039422421
ISBN-13
9783039422425
Publisher
Scheidegger und Spiess AG, Verlag
Imprint
Scheidegger und Spiess AG, Verlag
Country of Manufacture
AT
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Dec 18th, 2024
Print length
96 Pages
Weight
630 grams
Dimensions
25.60 x 22.20 x 1.50 cms
Product Classification:
Individual artists, art monographs
Ksh 4,500.00
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Art historian Franz Müller explores the complexity behind the apparent simplicity of Markus Raetz’s Zeemansblik, highlighting what makes the relief a landmark of Swiss art. Text in English and German.
A study of the meaning and materials behind Markus Raetzs famous relief series.
Representing vision is a core theme in the art of Markus Raetz (19412020). The imitation of a binocular field of vision, which he chose for Zeemansblik, is as simple as it is convincing. Raetz created more than twenty versions of this relief, made of painted and later a polished zinc sheet, in various dimensions. The Dutch term zeemansblik can be translated as a sailors view of the sea, yet blik in Dutch also means sheet metal. Raetzs wordplay refers objectively to the material and at the same time invites an interpretation to view the horizontal fold in the plate as a sea horizon. Light reflections on the curved blank material change with the viewers moving point of view, suggesting changing weather. A simple, abstract object on the wall thus becomes a seascape without painting, with the longing motif of looking into a blue distance.
In this book, art historian Franz Müller explores the complexity behind the apparent simplicity of Raetzs Zeemansblik, highlighting what makes the relief a landmark of Swiss art.
Representing vision is a core theme in the art of Markus Raetz (19412020). The imitation of a binocular field of vision, which he chose for Zeemansblik, is as simple as it is convincing. Raetz created more than twenty versions of this relief, made of painted and later a polished zinc sheet, in various dimensions. The Dutch term zeemansblik can be translated as a sailors view of the sea, yet blik in Dutch also means sheet metal. Raetzs wordplay refers objectively to the material and at the same time invites an interpretation to view the horizontal fold in the plate as a sea horizon. Light reflections on the curved blank material change with the viewers moving point of view, suggesting changing weather. A simple, abstract object on the wall thus becomes a seascape without painting, with the longing motif of looking into a blue distance.
In this book, art historian Franz Müller explores the complexity behind the apparent simplicity of Raetzs Zeemansblik, highlighting what makes the relief a landmark of Swiss art.
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