ROMANE HOLDERRIED KAESDORF
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
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Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
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Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Born in 1922 in Biberach in Upper Swabia and married to the lawyer and painter Julius Kaesdorf, Romane Holderried Kaesdorf remained attached to her hometown throughout her life, where she lived and worked - with the exception of her years in Stuttgart - until her death in 2007.
Always in lively exchange with other contemporary artists and a keen eye on her environment, Romane Holderried Kaesdorf developed an unmistakable visual language that humorously and precisely reveals the human being and its relationship with reality. The figures drawn with free strokes, with their large, ever-busy hands and jagged faces, often wrestle with everyday objects, only to later free themselves from them and turn their attention to their own bodies.
ROMANE HOLDERRIED KAESDORF
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
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Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
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Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Romane Holderried Kaesdorf |
Born in 1922 in Biberach in Upper Swabia and married to the lawyer and painter Julius Kaesdorf, Romane Holderried Kaesdorf remained attached to her hometown throughout her life, where she lived and worked - with the exception of her years in Stuttgart - until her death in 2007.
Always in lively exchange with other contemporary artists and a keen eye on her environment, Romane Holderried Kaesdorf developed an unmistakable visual language that humorously and precisely reveals the human being and its relationship with reality. The figures drawn with free strokes, with their large, ever-busy hands and jagged faces, often wrestle with everyday objects, only to later free themselves from them and turn their attention to their own bodies.
Di–Fr 11–18, Sa 12–16 Uhr
Meierottostraße 1
10719 Berlin
T +49 30 88 71 13 71
mail@galeriefriese.de
www.galeriefriese.de
Di–Fr 11–18, Sa 12–16 Uhr
Meierottostraße 1
10719 Berlin
T +49 30 88 71 13 71
mail@galeriefriese.de
www.galeriefriese.de