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This small-format work condenses key motifs from the series into a concentrated pictorial space. Lines and impulses of color create a field of tension between movement and stillness, in which several fragments of rabbits are juxtaposed.
The openness of the composition is deliberate: depending on the orientation, different figures appear. Rotating the artwork reveals new perspectives – more rabbits become visible, movements shift,… and new relationships emerge. The image remains in motion, even when at rest.
As part of the group of works, the piece functions like a silent anchor point: focused, open and full of inner dynamism.
A NOTICE:
Part of the Michi – The Jump series.
The artwork can be presented in different orientations. With each decision, the relationship between image, space, and perception changes.
Christiane Hiltrop develops open pictorial structures that exist between surface and space. Through the layering of paper, ink, acrylic, pencil, charcoal, and collage on an open wooden support, she creates dense yet breathable surfaces. Material is understood not merely as a support, but as an active component of the pictorial process. Variable orientations change the perception of the work in space and constantly open up new perspectives – the viewer can become part of this open process. In terms of content, European and Japanese visual logics merge as permeable layers. Signs, shifts in scale, and transparent planes create tensions between visibility and concealment, movement and stillness. Hiltrop has a background in visual communication, art history, and modern Japanese studies. Her academic engagement with image theory and cultural studies shapes the conceptual orientation of her work.