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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Artwork framed.
Dimensions :
19.7x15.7in
About this artwork
The lunar module is one of the iconographic images that have become engraved in the collective memory of mankind. Anne Wölk's painting "Apollo 16" shows the lunar module Orion, which landed on our moon in 1972. Brightly lit by the sun, she stands in the gray moondust. The great blackness of space spreads out behind her, from which isolated stars twinkle. Apollo 16 was the tenth manned mission in NASA's lunar flight program. For the first time, a… target was located in the lunar highlands, the cratered and therefore very old part of the lunar front. Previous missions had landed in or near the lunar seas. The crew brought back 95.8 kg of moon rock from this flight. A sample of this rock can be viewed in the Nördlinger Rieskrater Museum. The Nördlinger Ries is an old meteorite crater in southern Germany that was used to prepare for the moon landings.
« With human warmth, I try to translate the grandeur and the size of the cold, empty, and hostile universe into emotionally tangible paintings. »
Anne Wölk is a Berlin-based painter whose work explores the intersections of astronomy, speculative fiction, and contemporary landscape painting. With atmospheric color and precise lighting, she develops visionary topographies that straddle realism and imagination. She has had international solo exhibitions at the CICA Museum (South Korea) and the Casa da Cultura Ericeira Museum (Portugal). In 2025, her work was featured in the Herbstsalon of the Kunstverein Erlangen at the Kunstpalais and in the Casa da Cultura Ericeira's 2024 Retrospectiva. Her work will be published in 2025 in Issue 9 of Artsin Square magazine, curated by Galerie Droste. Wölk's painting emerges from the dialogue between scientific curiosity and the search for imaginary habitats beyond the known.