L.M. Wintersberger: Portraits in Flux

L.M. Wintersberger: Portraits in Flux

Zell am Harmersbach, 77736, Germany Sunday, May 21, 2023–Tuesday, April 30, 2024

The portraits shown here range from the 1970s to the 2010s and are complemented by other works from Wintersberger’s oeuvre.

portrait vor gelb by lambert maria wintersberger

Lambert Maria Wintersberger

Portrait vor Gelb, 1975

9,900 EUR

selbst mit zylinder und modell by lambert maria wintersberger

Lambert Maria Wintersberger

Selbst mit Zylinder und Modell, 2007

8,900 EUR

portrait 1 by lambert maria wintersberger

Lambert Maria Wintersberger

Portrait 1, 1975

14,000 EUR

akt by lambert maria wintersberger

Lambert Maria Wintersberger

Akt, 1994

10,200 EUR

Wintersberger’s works are often mystical and evocative. They  challenge viewers, tempting them to engage and take a stand,  multifaceted as they are stylistically diverse. Always idiosyncratic and  exceedingly authentic.

Born in Munich in 1941, Wintersberger, along with Markus Lüpertz and  others, founded the producer gallery Großgörschen 35 in Berlin in the  1960s. He critically examined our society, its consumerism and its  artistic movement of Pop Art. He operated in the superficial world of  appearances, not by fitting into it but via resistance. He shoved a  mirror in its face to lay bare all its imperfections. This was the  inception of “Injury”, which brought him international recognition.  Wires, clamps, or razor blades mutilate limbs, but with clear, Pop  Art-like contours, harmonious color gradients, and sterile  aesthetic–creating distance from the human while still getting under  your skin.

His reputation as a German pop artist did not prevent him from  switching styles and thematic focus. The former became more naturalistic  in the 1970s, but never depicted objective reality. A strong subjective  emphasis reigned with expressive tendencies, bringing his own  unfiltered perception and inner attitude onto the canvas.

These recurrent shifts are actually a testimony to the fact that  Lambert Maria Wintersberger always remained true to himself,  encountering different subject matter over life’s course as we all do.  In his case, they span from the monumental mountain Matterhorn and the  examination of miniscule mushroom constellations, to sports and consumer  products, and on to mythology. The criticism of social ideals runs  through his entire body of work, as does his stubborn style.  Wintersberger never allowed himself to be guided by shallow motifs; he  dealt with his content in depth, and thus his versatile output is  convincing in its honest integrity.

A constant theme is the idealized human being reflected in numerous  portraits and self-portraits. These traverse over every creative period  and painting style. Sometimes with clarity and clean silhouettes while  others maintain a strongly gestural character with thick brushstrokes.  Those portrayed are equally complex – alienations, such as distorted  faces or displaced facial features, grotesque, mystical, or with  invented accessories. The backgrounds are often neutral, leaving no  hints to the viewer of the place or time; attention is entirely on the  subject. The portraits are never purely depictive nor pleasing and thus  set a counterweight to classical portraiture and the modern ideal of  beauty, those demands of perfection that can never be fully realized.

The portraits shown here range from the 1970s to the 2010s and are complemented by other works from Wintersberger’s oeuvre.