Discover the creation in interiors
Artwork details
- Medium : Oil on Canvas
- Other details : Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
- Dimensions : 18.1x13.8in
About this artwork
The stretcher frame comes from an antique frame that is about 100 years old and the covering is from a tablecloth made of genuine antique linen from the 1950s.
A fabric of time and color: the rough, washed-out surface of the fabric becomes the canvas for an abstract play of flowers. The large, bright flower seems to grow from the depths of the material and expands beyond the boundaries of the picture. The small, delicate buds seem like hidden seeds… waiting to bloom in another time. The painting is an invitation to peel back the layers of the past and discover the beauty of the ephemeral."
The painting is an invitation to transcend the limits of perception and discover the beauty of the unknown."
#50s #antique #original #blossoms #flowers #unique #recycling #sustainable
A fabric of time and color: the rough, washed-out surface of the fabric becomes the canvas for an abstract play of flowers. The large, bright flower seems to grow from the depths of the material and expands beyond the boundaries of the picture. The small, delicate buds seem like hidden seeds… waiting to bloom in another time. The painting is an invitation to peel back the layers of the past and discover the beauty of the ephemeral."
The painting is an invitation to transcend the limits of perception and discover the beauty of the unknown."
#50s #antique #original #blossoms #flowers #unique #recycling #sustainable
Ulrike Schmitt
Germany
Credentials
- Established Artist
- International Exposure
- Covered by the Press
- Exhibited in a Museum
- Featured in gallery curations
« With my works, I want to achieve communication of the souls. I see myself as a mediator, not a sender. The viewer is the receiver. »
Ulrike Schmitt is an experienced artist based in Germany whose paintings have been exhibited nationally, in Austria, France, and Poland. Through her diverse works, she explores themes relating to love and preservation of our habitats, the longing for freedom and inner peace, as well as the perception of the essential. Schmitt primarily creates with oils, pigments, wax, pastels, and charcoal on canvas or wood.