Albert Mertz
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Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.This abstract artwork features a bold, minimalist composition of primary colors. The large, red triangular shape dominates the canvas, while a blue rectangular form and a smaller white square provide contrasting elements. The overall visual impact is striking, with a sense of dynamic tension created by the bold, geometric shapes and bold, flat colors. The simplicity of the forms and the use of vivid, unmixed colors suggest a Modernist approach, likely influenced by early 20th-century avant-garde art movements such as Constructivism. The artist's intention may have been to explore the interplay of shape, color, and negative space, creating a visually powerful and thought-provoking piece of contemporary art. ...
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Albert Mertz
1920, DanishAlbert Mertz was a Danish Constructivist and a leading artist in the Linien II artists association, a group of Danish artists, active in the 1930s and 1940s, that worked in symbolist and abstract styles. Mertz is best known for his systematic experiments with the colours red and blue, that he termed ‘red/blue proposition’ and began producing in 1968. Reaching its final form as a rectangle in 1971, the proposition was made up of multiple media formats and scale, found or reused materials, or painted directly onto exhibition walls. In his studies, Metrz navigated abstract purity while approaching it with humour and play by introducing figurative elements, such as a profile of a face, a house, or a chair. Challenging the painting by producing paintings, Metrz tested the essence of the medium as a means of representation, stripping off everything but colour and shape. By disrespecting the tradition of painting Metrz produced experimentations that are as bold conceptually as the two colours from which they are made. Written by Goldsmiths CCA ...
Albert Mertz: Artworks
Croy Nielsen
ViennaIn 2016 Croy Nielsen moved from Berlin to Vienna, where it is located in the beletage apartment of a historical building in the 1st district. The gallery was founded by Oliver Croy (AT) and Henrikke Nielsen (DK). Artists such as Nina Beier, Marie Lund, and Benoît Maire, have been part of the program since its inception, and were later joined by Olga Balema, Georgia Gardner Gray, and Sandra Mujinga. Vienna-based artists include Ernst Yohji Jaeger, Joanna Woś, and Soshiro Matsubara. The gallery has strong ties to the Nordic region, representing several artists from the Scandinavian contries and regularly participating in fairs and projects in the area. ...