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I'm fascinated by chance, the play with materials and colors—and that's how this work came about. Above the nautical chart (paper), I created another layer that only stands out from the map landscape at second glance. A new and animated landscape emerges, floating above the waterscape in the region "Longitude 40° West from Greenwich."
In this world depicted in delicate colors, elf-like figures move - are they dancing on their toes?
The colors… of the sea and the horizon are picked up and ground the image. The figures, suggested with charcoal on the folds, remain shadowy despite the intensity of the charcoal.
The work is framed in a shadow gap frame - ready to hang
Annette G. Rathjen is a versatile artist with a background in photography, painting, and printmaking. She works with a mixture of painting, collage, and drawing, layering elements upon elements. She uses acrylic paints, charcoal, chalk, but also sand, coffee grounds, marble dust, ash, and sometimes old nautical charts. This creates a tension: lines and colors assert themselves, are covered over. Something new breaks through, something old remains visible. It's like a conversation on the canvas—sometimes a dialogue, sometimes an argument.
The result is images that reveal both structure and movement. They are not linear narratives, but fragments, superimpositions that challenge us; inviting us to let go of our perception, not to stop at the first step, but to inspire us as viewers and invite our own interpretation. Her works are exhibited in France, Austria, Italy, and the USA.