Discover the creation in interiors
Artwork details
- Medium : Acrylic, Oil on Canvas
- Other details : Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
- Dimensions : 35.4x51.2in
About this artwork
This painting is the third variation of this motif. The poet Klopstock has here with us
An ode was written about the Schaalsee and the oak tree was supposedly planted at this spot.
It stands at the entrance to the island of Stintenburg in the Schaalsee, now a biosphere reserve. I live and work here, my house and my studio are here. It is an old cultural landscape, with rare plants and animals - the border area between West Mecklenburg and Schleswig… Holstein. In this picture, too, I tried to preserve the shape of the motif as much as possible and to place the abstraction particularly in the colors.
An ode was written about the Schaalsee and the oak tree was supposedly planted at this spot.
It stands at the entrance to the island of Stintenburg in the Schaalsee, now a biosphere reserve. I live and work here, my house and my studio are here. It is an old cultural landscape, with rare plants and animals - the border area between West Mecklenburg and Schleswig… Holstein. In this picture, too, I tried to preserve the shape of the motif as much as possible and to place the abstraction particularly in the colors.
Matthias Bargholz
Germany
Credentials
- International Exposure
- Experienced Artist
- Solo shows participant
- Favorited by galleries
- Featured in gallery curations
« The inner man cannot appear to himself without magic. »
Matthias Bargholz is an artist based in Germany whose paintings have been exhibited nationally and in Brazil. In addition, his art has been featured in publications such as the Ostsee Zeitung and the Hagenower Kreisblatt. Originally inspired by classical modernism, Bargholz views the line as an independant and active element in a composition, as well as being "the direct expression of intuition and the infinite possibilities of form". His distinctive pieces are created with acrylics and oils on canvas.