Christine Dewerny – Wikipedia

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Christine Dewerny (Born March 27, 1947 in Leipzig) is a German sculptor. Many of their work can be found in public space in several places in Germany.

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Christine Dewerny was born in 1947 as the daughter of a propary in Leipzig. [first] During her apprenticeship as a crime at the German State Opera, she studied at the technical school for applied art, Berlin. From 1965 to 1968 she studied at the Dresden University of Fine Arts, specializing in theater plastic. The sculptors Walter Arnold and Otto Thielike were pioneers and teachers. From 1968 to 1986 she had engagements at the Volksbühne Berlin and the Komische Oper Berlin as a theater plastic. with the directors Walter Felsenstein, Götz Friedrich and Harry Kupfer.

Dewerny has been a freelance sculptor since 1986. In 1987 she was included in the Association of Fine Artists of the GDR and then became a member of the professional association of visual artists Berlin. From 1990 to 2016 she was a lecturer for sculpture and stone symposia at VHS Berlin Mitte. As a member of the Gedok and specialist advisory board for the new countries, she initiated the Gedok Group Brandenburg e in 1994. V.

Since 1987 she has been in the Reinhardtsdorf quarry for sculpture in the sandstone. Christine Dewerny lives and works in Berlin and is married to the musician Reimund Dewerny.

  • 1989: Museum of German History, Berlin: Thomas Müntzer, portrait stele, bronze [2]
  • 1995: Kleinsassen, Kleinsassen: Kleinsassen: Medea, Sandstone
  • 1996: Humannplatz, Berlin: game sculpture, sandstone [3]
  • 1997: Sculpture garden Weißer Hirsch, Dresden: Masks, Sandstone [4]
  • 2001: Wustrow pier: Swantewit, Sandstone
  • 2001: Victoria insurance, Berlin, ERGO insurance group, Düsseldorf since 2017: Mask heads, Sandstone
  • 2007: Siegfried-Matthus-Arena, Rheinsberg: Siegfried Matthus, portrait bust, bronze
  • 2008: Deutsche Oper Berlin: Götz Friedrich, portrait stele, bronze
  • 2009: Parchim City House: Sculpture Stele, Sandstein
  • 2010: University of Music “Hanns Eisler” Berlin: Hanns Eisler, portrait stele, bronze
  • 2013: Street of Memory, Berlin: Monument to Käthe Kollwitz, portrait bust, bronze [5] [6] [7] [8] [9]
  • 2016: Amalienpark, Berlin, honor for Christa Wolf: Mask there Medea, Sandstone [ten] [11] [twelfth] [13]
  • 2018: Street of Memory, Berlin: Monument to Helmut Kohl, portrait bust, bronze [14] [15] [16]

Solo exhibitions [ Edit | Edit the source text ]

  • 1992: “Sound figures”, Komische Oper Berlin, Berlin
  • 1993: “Spatial variations on music”, Artist Club Die Möwe , Berlin
  • 1998: Galerie Forum Amalienpark, Berlin
  • 2000: Formart Gallery, Daimler-Chrysler-Hochhaus/Potsdamer Platz, Berlin
  • 2005: “Stone masks & sculptures”, EBE Art Gallery, Parchim

Exhibition participations [ Edit | Edit the source text ]

  • 1988: Berlin art exhibition, Ephraim-Palais, Berlin
  • 1991: “Pictures of Human”, Palais on the Fortening Graben, Berlin, with Vera Krickhahn
  • 1993: “Pendant Perdu”, University of the Arts Berlin
  • 1995: Kleinsassen, Kleinsassen, Kleinsassen, with Nuria Quevedo
  • 1995: “Parallelen”, Gedok – Exhibition, From the Heydt Museum, Wuppertal
  • 2008: Skulpture Park “Beeldenpark”, Gees, Netherlands
  • 2015: Museum Burg Schönfels, Lichtenanne, with Manfred Pietsch
  • 2016: “Christa Wolf-Kassandra Medea Body”, Kurt-Tucholsky-Literaturmuseum, Schloss Rheinsberg, with u. Carlfriedrich Claus, Günther Uecker, Wieland Förster
  • 2017: “Pictures”, Kunstschau Parchim 2017, Stadthalle Parchim
  • 2018: “Resumee from 33 years”, art barn Barnstorf, Wustrow

Swantewit, Reinhardtdorfer Sandstein, Seebrück Wustrow 2001

Hartmut Behrsing and Dieter Brauer composed chamber music works in Christine Dewerny sculptures. Interpreters were Hartmut Behrsing (piano/trombone), Dieter Brauer (piano) and Reimund Dewerny (viola). [17]

  • Christine Dewerny – sculptures. Berlin 2006.
  1. Marion Pietrzok: Medea behind the mask. In: New Germany. January 6, 2003, accessed March 13, 2021.
  2. Marlis Hujer (editor): I Thomas Müntzer Eyn servant God. In: Catalog for the historical-biographical exhibition of the Museum of German History Berlin, December 8, 1989 to February 28, 1990 . Henschelverlag Art and Society, Berlin (East), ISBN 3-362-00388-5.
  3. Malwine Hörisch, Wolfgang Krause: Prenzlauer Berg Art Women . Ed.: District Office Prenzlauer Berg. Berlin 1998, ISBN 3-87584-720-2.
  4. Christine Dewerny . Sculpture garden Weißer Hirsch
  5. Helmut Engel, Gudrun Fritsch, Josephine Gabler: Käthe Kollwitz . In: Ernst Freiberger Foundation (ed.): Heroes without Degen . be.bra Science publisher, Berlin 2013, ISBN 978-3-95410-014-9.
  6. Spreebogen road of memory. Retrieved on March 11, 2021 .
  7. “A big woman of our time” – Helmut Kohl honors Käthe Kollwitz. In: N-TV. 26. June 2013, Retrieved on March 11, 2021 .
  8. Kohl and the monument of a special relationship. In: The world. 26. June 2013, Retrieved on March 11, 2021 .
  9. The war child and the mother. In: The Tagesspiegel. 27. June 2013, Retrieved on March 11, 2021 .
  10. Gerhard Wolf: Christa Wolfs Medea . Janus Press, Berlin 1998, ISBN 3-928942-53-0.
  11. Sculpture “Mask of the Medea” and plaque in memory of Christa Wolf (1929–2011). Berlin office for further training and cultural museum, Retrieved on March 11, 2021 .
  12. Art in Pankow’s public space. Retrieved on March 11, 2021 .
  13. Christa Wolf memorial plaque in Berlin-Pankow: “Mask of the Medea”. Christa Wolf Gesellschaft, November 29, 2016, Retrieved on March 11, 2021 .
  14. Spree sheet/street of memory. Retrieved on March 11, 2021 .
  15. Bust for Helmut Kohl unveiled. In: Berliner Morgenpost. 9. November 2018, Retrieved on March 11, 2021 .
  16. Monument to Helmut Kohl in Berlin. The bust on the Spreebogen honors the late ex-Federal Chancellor. In: The Tagesspiegel. 10. November 2018, Retrieved on March 11, 2021 .
  17. Dieter Brauer: Sand – (Salome) – Stein. Composition for piano and viola. Dieter Brauer (piano), Reimund Dewerny (viola). In: Sentence – new music from Brandenburg (Vol. 2). Kreuzberg-Records.

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