Erich Kissing | |
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Born | Leipzig, Germany | 27 September 1943
Nationality | German |
Education | Werner Tübke, Hans Mayer-Foreyt |
Known for | Painting and visual arts. |
Movement | Leipzig School |
Erich Carl Kissing is a German painter known for his high-precision glazing technique.[1] Erich Kissing was born in 1943 in Leipzig, Germany. He has a twin sister and a brother six years his senior. Their father worked as a plumber and in other crafts and their mother was a housewife. Kissing lives and works in the house his parents built in Leipzig in 1935.
Erich Kissing's took private drawing classes to enhance his abilities. After training to professionally retouch offset-prints he turned to study art in his hometown Leipzig from 1965 till 1970. During his studies at Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst under the hands of his teachers Hans Mayer-Foreyt and Werner Tübke he became a painter (Feinmalerei). His modern art is part of the Realist Leipzig School.
Erich Kissing is primarily known for his characteristic style of his paintings utilizing a high-precision glazing technique. This consists of several layers to complete a painting. Erich Kissing's themes are described as romantic, mystical, and bizarre. He is also known to utilize themes associated with Realism. One of his memorable motifs is the recurring hedonistic centaur.
Among his works, "Sommertag" picture link (2007–09) is notable for its large format and its reference to Diego Velázquez "The Triumph of Bacchus" [2] ("Los Borrachos", 1628–29).
References
- ↑ Erich Kissing official website
- ↑ Günter Meißner, Erich Kissing. 51°20'N12°23'E oder: Das Wunderbare in der Wirklichkeit, Kalender der Dresdner Bank 1993, Brönner Verlag Frankfurt 1993