Finale (around 1928)

Technique: Giclée quality print
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More about this artwork

Karl Wiener's painting "Finale," created around 1928, offers a vibrant and enigmatic exploration of abstract forms and intense color. This piece is characterized by its dynamic, flame-like red and orange lines that reach upwards, slicing through a spectrum of soft, horizontal pastel hues in the background, suggesting a sunset or the calm of twilight being pierced or perhaps invigorated by a sudden surge of energy.Beneath these central fiery streaks are rounded shapes in hues of blue and purple, clustered at the bottom of the canvas like stones or hills under a radiant sky. The interplay of these cool, earthy forms with the warmth of the energetic lines above conjures an atmosphere of a looming climax or perhaps the resolution of a day's cycle as night approaches.'Finale' engages the viewer in a contemplation of endings and renewals, the cycles of nature, and the emotional landscapes they evoke. Wiener’s use of a rich color palette and bold, expressive strokes makes this artwork a compelling piece of the abstract movement from the early 20th century, inviting interpretations that resonate with the viewer’s personal experiences and emotions.

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Karl Wiener was an Austrian draftsman , graphic artist and photo montage artist. Because of his political and time-critical montages of the 1930s and 1940s, he was posthumously referred to as the Austrian John Heartfield on the occasion of the major retrospective on his estate in the Wien Museum.