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Easter-Bonus Discount at artSOLITAIRE. - 6.5% discount on online purchases (except gift vouchers) - 20.03.-30.03.2025
Kirsten Treis:
Picture "Wild water 3" (2019)
Proportional view
Picture "Wild water 3" (2019)
Kirsten Treis:
Picture "Wild water 3" (2019)

Quick info

Acrylic | Canvas, stretched on stretcher frame | Format 75 x 100 cm (H/W) | picture hang up | signed certificate of authenticity

incl. tax plus shipping

Delivery time: approx. 2 weeks

Picture "Wild water 3" (2019)
Kirsten Treis: Picture "Wild water 3" (2019)

Detailed description

Picture "Wild water 3" (2019)

Several years ago, we often took the children to a favorite swimming spot on the Ahr in summer. The children loved the shallower areas, fishing, sliding down a barrage and jumping into the stream from the footpath on the other bank. For us adults, there was also the opportunity to swim and enjoy the cool, clear stream water. I love lying on my back and looking up at the sky while swimming in nature. A feeling of freedom. In the "children's pool", the Ahr swirled over larger and smaller stones in small water movements and waves. I used the camera and a short exposure time to "freeze" the flowing water and the rising bubbles, so to speak, and turned them into semi-abstract, large-format paintings at home. Taken out of context, it could also be a "real" waterfall of larger dimensions. Signed and dated.

Producer: ars mundi Edition Max Büchner GmbH, Bödekerstraße 13, 30161 Hanover, Germany Email: info@arsmundi.de

About Kirsten Treis

Under the brushes of Bonn painter Kirsten Treis, colorful pictures of nature and landscape are created.
Works from the "Water Worlds" series are presented here. Fleeting everyday moments form the basis of her lively works. Leaves swirl in the water, frogs gather for a magnificent concert or small whirlpools become large waves. The pictures are sometimes representational, sometimes abstract, sometimes lifelike, sometimes more composed. Above all, they encourage you to look closely. Because these pictures are only clear at first glance. Again and again, Kirsten Treis captures the seemingly incidental and uses it to create new focal points. She is fascinated by the beauty of the moment, when light conjures up sunspots and the trivial suddenly comes into focus. The painter appreciates the light, watercolor-like quality of acrylic paint and plays with the alternation between image and abstraction. The painter donates 3% from the sale of her paintings to nature conservation projects.
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