One another highlight from last weekend’s Drawing Now Parisian fair were some of the works presented by the Berlin-based contemporary drawings gallery Fruehsorge. Ulrich Kochinke pencil on paper drawings occupying big part of the gallery stand space were amongst …
somehow related
Blendlauf
posted: 31/12/2011
Jonas Burgert‘s new exhibition won’t open until next April @ Berlin’s BlainSouthern Gallery but 2011 saw four more theatrical pieces of this German’s attempts at explaining human life. In its impossible quest to resolve our nature origins, he …
René Daniëls @ MNCARS – Madrid
posted: 29/12/2011
Never to late to remind you of one of the best exhibitions happening right now in Madrid: An exhibition is always part of a greater whole… an open view onto the versatile nature and the complexity of the …














↓ Absurd Cinema
Rudolf, as a good contemporary painter includes many elements of our modern world to introduce not always evident criticisms of our current civilization and globalized world. Besides his real-world element impressions he also tends to explore abstract representations of the environment and the new school.
Eastern European schools you know… too hard to understand sometimes.
Inner look by Rudolf Janák
After graduating from the Academy Of Fine Arts in Prague last year, 2011 marks a particularly successful year in his extensive list of shows with the ARS 51 exhibition last summer @ Záhorská gallery. You may not buy it, but his take on colours choice for spatial objects representation is deeply engaging, then, you have some abrupt introductions of pop art elements which look anything but terrifying.
Homo Ludens by Rudolf Janák
Dangerous Game by Rudolf Janák
Native of Senice (1985) completed his undergraduate studies at AU in Banska Bystrica (doc. Stanislav Balko), and finished his Masters at the Academy in Prague with Michael Rittstein (2008-2010), where he now operates. Many more of his abstract works (including installations & mixed-media) on his page.
Imperial Foot by Rudolf Janák
Absurd Cinema by Rudolf Janák