Tobias Stutz
Tobias Stutz does not emphasize the inaccessibility of buildings that have become museum-like. Instead, he pays tribute to the original concept of the Bauhaus - architecture as a reflection of life and the creation of a homely environment for each individual. In his condensed presentation, focusing on form and color, Tobias Stutz not only illustrates the principle of "less is more" in a tangible way, but also visualizes the fundamental idea of the Bauhaus. Similar to this movement, there is nothing superfluous in Tobias Stutz's works: a few lines and surfaces create an image that is structured by clear horizontal and vertical elements and occasionally interrupted by diagonal lines. Although his paintings appear three-dimensional, the world they depict seems to project into our own. Access to the architecture he depicts is not through doors, but through windows, which act as a kind of window to the soul of the building in question. The diversity of Bauhaus architectural styles is thus individualized, and we view them as if they represented feelings generated by the architecture for its viewers or inhabitants. The person for whom these buildings were created is not physically present in the artist's works. Nothing distracts from our view of the building, which is nevertheless indirectly filled with life: its absence is simultaneously a presence, as we are looking at its home. The architectures depicted by Tobias Stutz are reflections of his life, inhabited living environments. (Dr. Andrea Lechner, art historian & curator)
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