Bernd Lohaus Explained

Bernd Lohaus (1940 in Düsseldorf – 4 November 2010 in Antwerp) was a German sculptor, painter and draftsman.

Life and works

Lohaus studied from 1963 to 1966 at the Düsseldorf Academy of Fine Arts under Professor Joseph Beuys. From 1964 to 1965, together with Panamarenko, Hugo Heyman and Wout Vercammen, he edited the magazine New Happening.

During a trip to Spain he met Anny de Decker, an art history professor, whom he married in 1966. They later moved to Antwerp where they opened an avant-garde gallery in their home: Wide White Space. In the gallery they set up important exhibitions by Marcel Broodthaers in 1996 and Joseph Beuys in 1967. They also collaborated with the Danish artist Henning Christiansen, a member of the Fluxus current, with the famous action. The gallery closed in 1976.

Bernd Lohaus works mainly involve wood, stone and paper. For his works often uses beams, rods, boards and nuts of Azobe wood, the hardest wood in West Africa. In Lohaus's works we must consider the importance that the artist gives to the relationship between the work and the surrounding environment. Language also plays an important role in the works. The artistic intervention is aimed at simplicity and reduced to sensitive actions. The works of Bernd Lohaus are born with the influence of the artistic movement of Fluxus, Arte Povera, Minimal Art and materialism, creating a new style in its own right.[1]

Selected exhibitions

Bibliography and catalogs

External links

Notes and References

  1. Stephan von Wiese: Bernd Lohaus, in: Bernd Lohaus, Katalog zur Ausstellung im Musée des arts Contemporain aus Grand-Horn, 2013
  2. Web site: Artforum.com. 2020-12-13. www.artforum.com. en-US.
  3. Book: Lohaus. Bernd. Bernd Lohaus, Wand: 12. November 1980 bis 11. Januar 1981, Kunstmuseum Düsseldorf.. Kunstmuseum Düsseldorf. 1981. Kunstmuseum Düsseldorf. Düsseldorf. German. 272546235.