Saturday, July 18, 2026

Artist of the Day, July 18, 2026 : Thomas Schütte, a German contemporary artist, sculptor (#2582)

When Thomas Schütte made his first figurative sculpture, he discovered it couldn’t stand on its own. He might have built a simple base to anchor the feet and keep it upright, but instead Schütte melted wax in a plastic bucket and sunk the figurine up to its knees. It was a simple solution to a technical problem, but also a powerful visual metaphor. Made in 1982, Mann im Matsch (Man in Mud) was the first in what would later become a decades-long series of men and muck, realized at many scales in many materials, from modeling clay to bronze. The motif was monumentalized in 2009 with Mann im Matsch—der Suchende (Man in Mud—The Seeker), a towering sculpture permanently installed in the plaza of a bank in the artist’s birthplace of Oldenburg, Germany. Schütte transformed this symbol of inertia into one of his most generative series. The recurring figure became an example of his aptitude for leveraging the narrative possibilities of material.

Mann im Matsch was one of the first artworks Schütte created as a recent graduate of the Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf, where he had been enrolled since 1973. There he studied under artists Fritz Schwegler and Gerhard Richter, the art historian Benjamin H. D. Buchloh, and visiting lecturers like Richard Serra. Around this time, Schütte also became close with Konrad Fischer, whose gallery exhibited artists such as Hanne Darboven, Richard Long, Robert Ryman, and Bruce Nauman. There, and across West Germany, minimal and Conceptual art loomed large. Art could be anything now, but it didn’t always look like much. Schütte realized that “the most fashionable thing was not to do art, but to have some beams on the floor, or open the windows.” But after creating some early works in this vein—like Relais (Relay, 1979), for which he turned off the lights at Vitrine pour l’Art Actuel in Paris for one second every 30 seconds using an electrical relay—he eventually found himself missing narrative, imagery, and all the things these new artistic movements disavowed. Afterward, Schütte began to reimagine the conventions of painting, drawing, and sculpture while examining the social, political, and psychological conditions that he understood to be inextricably tied to art’s production and reception.

As with the mistake that gave rise to his figures of men stuck in mud, Schütte confronts failures and flaws unapologetically––be they the failures of artistic movements, nations, capitalism, or Western culture itself. Krieger, for example, depicts parodic soldiers that stand nearly 10 feet tall: mighty in stature but wearing bottle caps instead of helmets. Schütte’s artworks take on broad subjects and use scale and position to challenge and surprise, while offering audiences the opportunity to interpret through experience. “It’s better to have this dialogue [about art] without the scaffolding of too much theory or too much philosophy,” Schütte has said. “That makes it too heavy, you can’t stay afloat for long.” Instead, his work speaks through light, line, color, and volume—the artist’s primary tools—to tell stories of the world, big and small.

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Thomas Schütte, or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only


Thomas Schütte
Schiff (Ship), 1980
Liege (Lounge / Daybed), 1981
Modell für ein Museum (Model for a Museum), 1981-89
Kirschen (Cherries), 1986
Sei wachsam! (Be Vigilant!), 1988
Ochs vorm Pferdt (Ox Before the Horse), 1989
Tomatensalat- Aufzeichnungen aus der 2. Reihe-War? Was?
(Tomato Salad - Notes from the 2nd Row - Was? What?), 1991
Janus, 1993
Untitled From 'United Enemies', 1993
Untitled (from the portfolio United Enemies, A Play in Ten Scenes), 1994
Them and Us (X), 1995
Untitled, 1995
Grüner Kopf (Green Head), 1997
Blaue Augen (Blue Eyes), 1999
Urnen (Urns), 1999-2005
Welkende Rose (Wilting Rose), 2000
Bronzefrau Nr. 7, 2002
Bronzefrau Nr. 7, 2002
 Efficiency Men, 2005
One Man House II, 2005
Vater Staat (Father of State), 2007
Mann im Matsch (Man in Mud), 2009
Pringles, 2011
United Enemies, 2013
Maske (Mask), 2014
Großer Doppelkopf Nr. 6, 2015
Gartenzwerge C (Garden Gnomes C), 2017
Glass: You Nr. 25, 2018
Mann im Wind III (Man in the Wind III), 2022
Skatbruder Nr. 4, 2022

Friday, July 17, 2026

Artist of the Day, July 17, 2026 : Carrie Graber, an American emerging painter [New artist to watch in 2026] (#2581)

Carrie Graber (1975) had the pleasure of growing up in Southern California, hot summers and warm glowing colors forever romanticized their way into her work. She is a master genre painter of the Southern California contemporary school, whose depictions of light place her in the line of the Luminists. Graber is also in the line of The Hudson River School – 19th-century and early 20th-century painters from the Northeast and Midwest, whose paintings are grounded in capturing the light effects of the sun and nature in dramatic landscapes. Though this movement specialized in anything but genre pictures, Graber mixes this 19th-century fascination with light with her own Pop iconography in the tradition of post-Modern hybridizing. Indeed, the light of SoCal is so different than that of other regions, Graber does a service to the Luminist and Hudson River traditions, with her golden-white light of the skies there, executed so faithfully and fluidly. To top it off, her renditions of the world-famous Southern California lifestyle, as Pop art, are gemlike, sexy, and exacting.

She graduated with distinction, in the fall of 1997 from Art Center College of Design where she studied with such luminaries as Burne Hogarth, Harry Carmean and Richard Bunkall. Shortly thereafter, she took a position as an artist apprentice with the famous Romantic Impressionist Aldo Luongo. A short year later, Aldo sponsored her to develop a body of her own work. Carrie's first opening was in coastal Cambria, California in 1999, and a success. For the next decade, Carrie traveled the world, showing exquisitely developed oil paintings and charcoal drawings. Her admiration for figure and form, juxtaposed with observations of light and shadow and steeped in a fascination with composition materialized in hundreds of paintings.

Carrie Graber is considered to be among the most talented, exciting and well-collected artists in the market today. With her warm tones and exquisite control of illumination creating a perfect composition of light and contrast, Carrie captures the beauty and subtlety of familiar environments, which are often overlooked. Her soft, realistic but also bold approach warms the viewer's' senses and creates a feeling of intimacy. This is the link between Carrie and one of her main influences, Dutch master painter Vermeer.

© 2026. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Carrie Graber or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only


Ms. Carrie Graber
... at work!
Polarized and Solarized, 2016
August in the Desert, 2017
Bird on a Wire, 2017
Choices, 2017
Victorious, 2017
Night Cap (Swan House), 2018
Pick Me Up at The Parker, 2018
The Simple Things, 2018
Waiting for My Danseur, 2018
Glass Slivers, 2019
Gotta Wear Shades, 2018
Martini Party, 2020
Cul De Sac Party, 2021
Flora and Fauna, 2021
Palm Springs Perspective II, 2021
What the Future Holds (Sheats-Goldstein Residence), 2021
Jupiter in Merida, 2023
Coaster at Dusk, 2024
The Best Mornings, 2024
The Cove, 2024
Cheers to Friends, 2025
Ginger Blossoms, 2025
Grab a Hot Slice, 2025
Poolside, 2025
Spaces Like Dreams, 2025
Summer Bathed in Blue, 2025
The Old Pool, 2025
Blue Umbrella at the Kaufmann House, 2026
Sunday Morning, 2026
The Mixologist, 2025