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Our blue planet shines bright, large and close in the firmament of the earth's satellite. An earth rise that can be observed from the surface of the moon would be very different from a moon rise on earth. The moon sky is always black because of the lack of atmosphere. At the same time, the surface of the moon is very dark. Although the regolith floor appears very bright compared to the night sky, it has a reflectance that is only slightly higher… than that of worn asphalt.
The pencil drawing "Earth Rising" is inspired by a scientific photo from a NASA mission. The photo was taken by the astronaut William Anders, who took the photo in 1968 during the Apollo 8 mission. Wölk changes the undetailed photographic material by inventing a lunar landscape with deep crater holes. She also places stars in the sky that had disappeared in the photo due to an exposure problem. The frame is included in the price.
« 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.