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While German painting of the postwar period essentially concerned
itself with coming to terms with the past and presenting it in
gestures ranging from the heroic to the ironic, Daniel Richter
focuses on positioning himself in the present. Time and again he
devises new ways of being "modern" in a medium that has long been
labeled old-fashioned and anachronistic. His pictures constantly
challenge the spectator by their painterly and contextually
excessive demands, but they do not lecture on moral issues. In five
chapters featuring more than 200 examples of his works, the author
Eva Meyer-Hermann traces the chronological development of Richter's
artistic output for the first time. The turns from abstraction to
figuration and back again that until now have been described as
abrupt, prove on closer examination to be a logical consequence and
a sign of conscious artistic action.
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