expose mara 2015 (engl)
DESCRIPTION
Published to accompany paintings exhibited at Berlin Walls Art Events in cooperation with Nelumbo - the Art of CharityTRANSCRIPT
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Mara 2015Wildlife portraits by Stefanie Gendera
Published to accompany paintings exhibited at Berlin Walls Art Events in coope-ration with Nelumbo - the Art of Charity
Photo credit: nelumboart/Stefanie Gendera, page 22 left photo on the bottom Zoo Berlin/ Frederic Schweizer
A significant proportion from our sales is personally forwarded to designated charity initiatives. For more information about our current donations policy and the initiative Nelumbo - the Art of Charity:[email protected] www.nelumboart.com
For all matters concerning sales of original artwork or fine art prints:[email protected] www.berlinwalls.co.uk/
Year of publication: 2016
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Early morning, 17th December 2015, Masai Mara, Kenya
The Jeep starts moving laboriously. It is still dark, early in the day. A new morning in the Masai Mara. It seems that driver and car are struggling to go forward, like somebody who tries to find his way out of a deep narcosis. The humid mist doesn’t reveal most of the secrets that it is hiding. It is the time in which creature and creation, like satellites turning around each other, are on the point of closest convergence. The time in which the first light beams feel their way through the dense morning fog; the curtain rises. An act in which human can and always must only be a stage extra. The magic of the moment finds its way through the observers’ ether and leaves him alone with nothing less than tearful happiness. In deepest gratitude to this one world,
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Thomson‘s gazelleAcrylics on card boardoriginal 0,90m x 1,30mJanuary 2016
exhibition no Mara2015-0110
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ZebraAcrylics on paper
original 0,36m x 0,48mMarch 2016
exhibition no Mara2015-0305
GiraffeAcrylics on paperoriginal 0,36m x 0,48mMarch 2016
exhibition no Mara2015-0304
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(previous double page)TriptychAcrylics on canvasoriginal 1,00m x 0,70m/0,70m x 1,40m/1,00m x 0,70mNovember 2015
exhibition no Mara2015-1123
BuffalosAcrylics on canvas
original 1,00m x 1,40mMarch 2016
exhibition no Mara2015-0323
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TopiAcrylics on canvasoriginal 0,60m x 0,80mMarch 2016
exhibition no Mara2015-0325
BaboonsAcrylics on canvas
original 1,00m x 0,60mFebruary 2016
exhibition no Mara2015-0214
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LeopardAcrylics on canvasoriginal 0,60m x 0,80mMarch 2016
exhibition no Mara2015-0324
ElephantsAcrylics on canvas
original 1,00m x 1,60mFebruary 2016
exhibition no Mara2015-0227
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Berlin ZooAcrylics on canvasoriginal 1,60m x 2,00m
LionsAugust 2015exhibition no Mara2015-0929
(following double page)Berlin Zoo
Acrylics on canvasoriginals 1,60m x 2,00m
ElephantsJuly 2015
exhibition no Mara2015-0705
GorillasJuly 2015
exhibition no Mara2015-0723
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Berlin ZooAcrylics on canvas
original 1,60m x 2,00m
ZebrasSeptember 2015
exhibition no Mara2015-0915
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About the artist
Stefanie Gendera was born on April, 10th in 1981 and grew up in a small village, called Schackensleben, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany.Early she discovered her artistic talent and financed her university degrees through commission works. Besides her academic career in environmental studies and international cooperation she always kept on following her artistic side.
With the age of 30 art turned into something more and more important in her life. Three years of living and working in the Mekong Delta in Vietnam, from 2011 to 2014, rich in inspiration and sacrifices, enriched her art skills in ability and maturity. During those years art became her way of processing the experienced. The paintings that evolved in Asia are mirrors of her surrounding and reflections of her work as development advisor, working and living in a completely different cultural context.
Back in Germany the artistic journey continued with a cooperation with the Berlin Zoological Garden. Four big size animal portraits from the Zoo’s residents were sold during an auction in late summer 2015. Out of the proceeds, 50% was donated to the Zoo. The time after Vietnam was the end of a creative face that had a focus on human portraits, moving to the next phase on wildlife portraits. Her unquenchable hunger for inspiration took her from the Zoo in Berlin out to the wild animals in the Massai Mara in December 2015. What connects her artwork are the feeling for the right composition, the photorealism as well as the used technique; a mix out of brush and airbrush mostly in black and white. The need to care for nature and its creations runs through her works like a red thread. Charity for the good cause is a big part in her live, both in the academic as well as in the artistic profession. Out of all revenues gained through her art sales ½ to ¼ is used to support non-profit projects and institutions. More information about her initiative, which bridges the gap between art and charity is found on the artist’s website (www.nelumboart.com).