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Josef Albers
Karl-Heinz Adler
Horst Bartnig
Werner Bauer
Carl Buchheister
Waltraud Cooper
Camille Graeser
Joachim Grommek
Karl Duschek
Rita Ernst
Rupprecht Geiger
Inge Gutbrod
Vanessa Henn
Ottmar Hörl
Johannes Itten
Imi Knoebel
Gerold Miller
François Morellet
Aurelie Nemours
Paola Pivi
Hans Peter Reuter
Diet Sayler
Kurt Schwitters
Meg Shirayama
Anton Stankowski
Klaus Staudt
Jochen Twelker
Wolfram Ullrich
Victor Vasarely
Friedrich Vordemberge-Gildewart
Peter Weber
Martin Willing
Beat Zoderer
Martin Willing (*1958)
Quadratschichtung biaxial wachsend, 2001

Weldural, cut in one piece 225 x 50 x 50 cm
The work of the metal sculptor Martin Willing is in the tradition of Concrete Art, as defined by van Doesburg in 1924: an anti-figurative art that simultaneously distances itself from abstract art, which it regarded as too imbued with subjective emotion. Instead, art production was to be a controlled, rational procedure based on scientific, mostly mathematical methods that guarantee the works a supra-personal validity.
Working from a plinth and a square ground plan, Willing's Quadratschichtung towers up like a four-sided pyramid standing on its tip, attaining with its 225 cm considerably more than the height of its human beholders. The form of the pyramid is used on the one hand by way of contrast to the horizontally layered squares. On the other hand it produces contrasts by means of the gently slanting trapeziums that adjoin the squares. These trapeziums draw the squares piece by piece upwards while simultaneously increasing the squares' surface areas bit by bit. This progressive increase in the surface area of the trapeziums and squares is performed regularly, and directed along two axes: one running more or less directly upwards and one set slightly off vertical. Each of the trapeziums begins at a different side of the square to the preceding one, so that after every three stages upwards a trapezium will appear once again on any given side of the pyramid. As a result, the construction does not look closed in, but very light and open. The fact that the sculpture has been made in one single piece increases the impression of easy elegance and simplicity.
1958 born in Bonn
1978–85 Studies art at the Kunstakademie Münster and physics at the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster
1984 Pupil in Prof. Hans-Paul Isenrath’s master class
1985 Scholarship of the Landschaftsverband Westfalen-Lippe
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